RETT-SYNDROME - THE SWEDISH GENEALOGIC RESEARCH-PROJECT - NEW DATA AND PRESENT POSITION

Authors
Citation
Ho. Akesson, RETT-SYNDROME - THE SWEDISH GENEALOGIC RESEARCH-PROJECT - NEW DATA AND PRESENT POSITION, European child & adolescent psychiatry, 6, 1997, pp. 96-98
Citations number
5
ISSN journal
10188827
Volume
6
Year of publication
1997
Supplement
1
Pages
96 - 98
Database
ISI
SICI code
1018-8827(1997)6:<96:R-TSGR>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
Using the genealogical method on both classical and atypical cases of Rett syndrome (RS) the assumption that atypical RS are true variants o f the classical or nuclear group of RS was investigated. Also common a ncestry, common geographical origins, and consanguinity were investiga ted. The pedigrees of 96 classical and 32 atypical (''forme fruste'') RS individuals were examined. None of the RS females was born to first -cousin couples, but 7.3 +/- 1.9% of the classical and 6.6 +/- 3.2% of the atypical RS females had grandparents who were consanguineous. Ele ven or 33% of the atypical RS females and 49 or 51% of the classical R S females could be traced to the same small, Separate ''Rett area''. F urthermore, no less than 6 (19%) of the atypical and 28 (29%) of the c lassical RS females had originated in the same homestead as another RS female examined by us. Nineteen of the explored pedigrees of RS femal es belonged to 8 pedigrees. The pedigrees contained a mixture of typic al and atypical farms of RS indicating that many or most of the varian ts of RS and the classical types have a common genetic background The data gathered suggest that transmission starts with a premutation that can result over generations in a full mutation giving rise to RS. Bot h the X-chromosomes and an autosome pair of chromosomes may be involve d.