Clinical features and natural history of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome: presentation of 74 new cases
- PMID: 7820926
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1399-0004.1994.tb04219.x
Clinical features and natural history of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome: presentation of 74 new cases
Abstract
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) is a congenital overgrowth syndrome with variable expression. To define the range and frequency of complications in BWS, we have studied a cohort of 76 affected patients (two previously reported). The most frequent complications were macroglossia (97%), abdominal wall defect (80%) and birth weight or postnatal growth > 90th centile (88%). Other common features were ear creases/pits (76%), facial naevus flammeus (62%), nephromegaly (59%) and hypoglycaemia (63%). Rarer complications included hemihypertrophy (24%), moderate/severe developmental delay (4%), congenital heart defects (6.5%), polydactyly (4%), neoplasia (4%) and cleft palate (2.5%). Pre-term labour occurred in 53% and polyhydramnios in 33% of BWS pregnancies. The six deaths all occurred in babies born pre-term, three of whom had major congenital abnormalities. Five patients (6.5%) from four kindreds had an unequivocal family history of BWS, but 15 of 68 apparently sporadic cases had a relative with possible BWS (minor features only). Incomplete penetrance may lead to familial BWS being underdiagnosed.
Comment in
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Clinical features in the Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome.Clin Genet. 1996 Oct;50(4):272-4. Clin Genet. 1996. PMID: 9001817 No abstract available.
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