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Items: 3

1.

Coloboma, ocular, autosomal dominant

Coloboma is an ocular birth defect resulting from abnormal development of the eye during embryogenesis. It is defined as a congenital defect in any ocular tissue, typically presenting as absent tissue or a gap, at a site consistent with aberrant closure of the optic fissure. Failure of fusion can lead to coloboma of one or multiple regions of the inferior portion of the eye affecting any part of the globe traversed by the fissure, from the iris to the optic nerve, including the ciliary body, retina, and choroid. Coloboma is also frequently associated with small (microphthalmic) or absent (anophthalmic) eyes as part of an interrelated spectrum of developmental eye anomalies, and can affect either one or both eyes (summary by Kelberman et al., 2014). Microphthalmia/coloboma-12 (MCOPCB12) is characterized by inter- and intrafamilial variability. In addition to microphthalmia and coloboma, other ocular anomalies include iris hypoplasia, aphakia or small lens, lens subluxation, congenital cataract, microcornea, and sclerocornea. Some patients also exhibit neurodevelopmental anomalies (Deml et al., 2016; Williamson et al., 2020). For a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of colobomatous microphthalmia, see MCOPCB1 (300345). [from OMIM]

MedGen UID:
1859952
Concept ID:
C5886785
Disease or Syndrome
2.

Familial clubfoot due to PITX1 point mutation

An autosomal dominant condition caused by mutation(s) in the PITX1 gene, encoding pituitary homeobox 1. It is characterized by clubfoot, and may have associated long bone deformity and/or polydactyly. [from NCI]

MedGen UID:
1814442
Concept ID:
C5679943
Congenital Abnormality
3.

Clubfoot

Clubfoot is a congenital limb deformity defined as fixation of the foot in cavus, adductus, varus, and equinus (i.e., inclined inwards, axially rotated outwards, and pointing downwards) with concomitant soft tissue abnormalities (Cardy et al., 2007). Clubfoot may occur in isolation or as part of a syndrome (e.g., diastrophic dysplasia, 222600). Clubfoot has been reported with deficiency of long bones and mirror-image polydactyly (Gurnett et al., 2008; Klopocki et al., 2012). [from OMIM]

MedGen UID:
3130
Concept ID:
C0009081
Congenital Abnormality
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