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Microduplication of 4p16.3 due to an unbalanced translocation resulting in a mild phenotype.
[wolf-hirschhorn syndrome]
With
the
widespread
clinical
use
of
comparative
genomic
hybridization
chromosomal
microarray
technology
,
several
previously
unidentified
clinically
significant
submicroscopic
chromosome
abnormalities
have
been
discovered
.
Specifically
,
there
have
been
reports
of
clinically
significant
microduplications
found
in
regions
of
known
microdeletion
syndromes
.
In
general
,
these
microduplications
have
distinct
features
from
those
described
in
the
corresponding
microdeletion
syndromes
.
We
present
a
5
½
-
year
-old
patient
with
normal
growth
,
borderline
normal
IQ
,
borderline
hypertelorism
,
and
speech
and
language
delay
who
was
found
to
have
a
submicroscopic
2
.
3
 
Mb
terminal
duplication
involving
the
two
proposed
Wolf-
Hirschhorn
syndrome
(
WHS
)
critical
regions
at
chromosome
4
p
16
.
3
.
This
duplication
was
the
result
of
a
maternally
inherited
reciprocal
translocation
involving
the
breakpoints
4
p
16
.
3
and
17
q
25
.
3
.
Our
patient
's
features
are
distinct
from
those
described
in
WHS
and
are
not
as
severe
as
those
described
in
partial
trisomy
4
p
.
There
are
two
other
patients
in
the
medical
literature
with
4
p
16
.
3
microduplications
of
similar
size
also
involving
the
WHS
critical
regions
.
Our
patient
shows
clinical
overlap
with
these
two
patients
,
although
overall
her
features
are
milder
than
what
has
been
previously
described
.
Our
patient
's
features
expand
the
knowledge
of
the
clinical
phenotype
of
a
4
p
16
.
3
microduplication
and
highlight
the
need
for
further
information
about
it
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"several previously unidentified clinically significant submicroscopic chromosome abnormalities have been discovered"
symptom
wolf-hirschhorn syndrome
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