Psychomotor delay, dysmorphsim and epilepsy with underlying genetic etiology: A case report of first child with a genetically confirmed diagnosis of Angelman Syndrome on a hospital-based setting in Iraq

Authors

  • Nebal W. Saadi Dept. of Paediatrics / College of Medicine-University of Baghdad.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32007/jfacmedbagdad.584292

Keywords:

Angelman Syndrome, Iraqi children, Clinical genetic testing.

Abstract

In this case report we discuss essential issue to be considered with regard to the clinical genetic testing in the epilepsies. The identification of genes that influence risk for the epilepsies has extremely important implications for both research and clinical practice. In a research context, information obtained may lead to the development of new treatments targeted to specific mechanisms, or even to ways of preventing epileptogenesis. In clinical practice, the use of genetic information can either clarify the diagnosis in people already known or suspected to have epilepsy (diagnostic testing), or to predict onset of epilepsy in people at risk of developing epilepsy because of a family history (predictive testing). This 8-year old girl presented because of rapid regression in the cognitive function and had disturbed consciousness which started few weeks before admission. History of delayed milestones, epilepsy, subtle facial dysmorphology, ataxic gait and happy demeanor collectively raised suspicion of genetic/metabolic disorder. Genetic study discovered a deletion involving the maternally derived chromosome 15q11 region and this deletion is associated with Angelman Syndrome.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

03.01.2016

How to Cite

1.
Saadi NW. Psychomotor delay, dysmorphsim and epilepsy with underlying genetic etiology: A case report of first child with a genetically confirmed diagnosis of Angelman Syndrome on a hospital-based setting in Iraq. J Fac Med Baghdad [Internet]. 2016 Jan. 3 [cited 2024 Nov. 22];58(4):392-6. Available from: https://iqjmc.uobaghdad.edu.iq/index.php/19JFacMedBaghdad36/article/view/292

Publication Dates

Similar Articles

21-30 of 817

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.