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Case Reports
. 1997 Oct 17;72(2):222-6.
doi: 10.1002/(sici)1096-8628(19971017)72:2<222::aid-ajmg18>3.0.co;2-p.

Stüve-Wiedemann syndrome and defects of the mitochondrial respiratory chain

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Case Reports

Stüve-Wiedemann syndrome and defects of the mitochondrial respiratory chain

B Chabrol et al. Am J Med Genet. .

Abstract

The Stüve-Wiedemann syndrome (SWS) comprises short stature, congenital bowing of the long bones, respiratory distress, and recurrent episodes of unexplained hyperthermia. The skeletal radiographic changes include short and broad long bones, large metaphyses, internal cortical thickening, and angulation primarily of tibiae and femora, but also of humeri and forearm bones. We report 3 cases of SWS from 2 different unrelated consanguineous gypsy families. All 3 cases fulfilled the clinical and radiological criteria of SWS. Two patients died shortly after birth, whereas the third one was alive at the age of one year. Besides hyperthermic episodes, one patient had hyperaminoaciduria, hepatic failure, and megaloblastic anemia which prompted us to investigate mitochondrial respiratory chain in 2 cases. Abnormal results consisting of decreased activities of complex I and IV were found in both. The simultaneous occurrence of both SWS phenotype and abnormal mitochondrial metabolism in two unrelated cases strongly supports the hypothesis of a pathogenetic relationship between the two events. These cases may also be related to recent reports on the effects of the mitochondrial respiratory chain defects on embryogenesis.

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