2 resultados para Mosaicismo
em Universidad del Rosario, Colombia
Resumo:
Se caracterizan las malformaciones renales y urinarias (MRU), y cardiovasculares (CV), así como la función renal (FR) y la presión arterial (PA) en pacientes con Sindrome de Turner (ST) mediante un estudio retrospectivo entre 1999 y 2009 en Bogotá. Se encontró 10 pacientes con algún grado de insuficiencia renal crónica (IRC). Además 4 pacientes presentaron prehipertensión arterial, y 5 (HTA); en ellos se encontró hidronefrosis y riñón poliquístico. Las MRU más frecuentes fueron únicas; en ellas las mayores alteraciones cromosómicas son la monosomía y el mosaicismo. La mayor malformación CV fué la válvula aórtica bicúspide. El ST amerita seguimiento de FR y PA para prevenir complicaciones a largo plazo por IRC e HTA.
Frequency of Low-level Mosaicism in X-Cromosome in Couples with Antecedent of Recurrent Miscarriages
Resumo:
Recurrent miscarriage occurs in around 1 to 7 percent of couples. The etiology involves genetic, immunologic, anatomic, hormonal, metabolic, thrombophilic and infectious factors. With the aim of establishing the frequency of low-level mosaicism in the X-chromosome, in a population of couples with prior recurrent miscarriages, a prospective case-control cytogenetic study took place on 20 couples, at the biogenetic laboratory in CECOLFES (Colombian Center of Fertility and Sterility). Clinical pathologic evaluation, anatomic, hormonal, infectious, andrologic and genetic studies were performed. As a conventional method in cytogenetic techniques, banding GTG was used for the study of structural and numeric chromosomal abnormalities whereas the molecular method of Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (FISH) was used to confirm the mosaicism in sexual chromosomes. According to paraclinic results from the participating couples, diagnosis showed immunologic (75%), anatomic (30%), hormonal (25%), male (25%), infectious (25%), genetic (15%) and idiophatic factors (10%). Results from the cytogenetic analysis, were 10% of low-level mosaicism in the X-chromosome in two women whose final diagnosis included genetic and infectious factors for one and genetic and immunologic factors for the other. Only 10 % of the total miscarriages from the couples were evaluated. Conclusions include aspects such as multifactorial evidence of pathogenesis in recurrent miscarriage, the sub-diagnosis of genetic factors and the need to focus future investigations on cytogenetic interpretation and the clinicalpathological association between low-level mosaicism in the X-cromosome and recurrent miscarriage.