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SHOX Deficiency in Argentinean Cohort: Long-Term Auxological Follow-Up and a Family's New Mutation.

Mariana Del PinoMiriam Aza-CarmonaDavid Medino-MartínAbel GomezKaren E HeathVirginia FanoMaría Gabriela Obregon
Published in: Journal of pediatric genetics (2019)
A cohort study on the growth of 19 Argentinean children, aged 0 to 18 years, and 11 of their first-degree relatives with alterations in the SHOX gene or its regulatory regions is reported. Children are born shorter and experience a growth delay during childhood with a stunted pubertal growth spurt. Body disproportion, with a sitting height/height ratio above +2 standard deviation score (SDS), was already present as early as 2 years old. Hand length was normal. Shortening of the radius, with a length below -1.9 SDS, was the earliest and most frequent radiological sign detected as early as 45 days old. We found a previously unreported mutation in a family with a highly variable phenotype, the boy had a severe phenotype with a milder presentation in other affected members of the family. We conclude that body disproportion and a shorter radius length on X-ray are useful tools for selecting children to undergo SHOX molecular studies.
Keyphrases
  • body mass index
  • young adults
  • high resolution
  • genome wide
  • early onset
  • computed tomography
  • physical activity
  • preterm infants
  • mass spectrometry
  • dna methylation
  • low birth weight
  • gene expression
  • drug induced