Isolated postaxial polydactyly: Epidemiologic characteristics from a multicenter birth defects study
Autor: | Osvaldo M. Mutchinick, Gabriela Ortiz‐Cruz, Leonora Luna-Muñoz, Jazmín Arteaga-Vázquez |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Pediatrics Forceps Population Twins Ethnic group Consanguinity Fingers Sex Factors Pregnancy Epidemiology Ethnicity Prevalence Genetics Humans Medicine Registries education Mexico Genetics (clinical) education.field_of_study Foot business.industry Nigerians Age Factors Infant Newborn Toes Hand Parity Polydactyly Case-Control Studies Laterality Population study Female business Infant Premature |
Zdroj: | American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A. |
ISSN: | 1552-4833 1552-4825 |
DOI: | 10.1002/ajmg.a.61193 |
Popis: | Isolated postaxial polydactyly (I-PAP), as a single defect, is a frequent malformation, characterized by an extra digit placed on the ulnar or fibular side of the limbs. Worldwide prevalence varies from as high as 225/10,000 in Nigerians to so low as 6.08/10,000 in Argentinians. Genetic-ethnic background significantly affects worldwide prevalence and type of I-PAP. Herein we describe the epidemiological characteristics of I-PAP in 697 newborns, 383 males and 314 females identified in 1,178,993 examined live births from a multicenter case-control hospital-based population study, the Mexican program of Registry and Epidemiological Surveillance of Congenital Malformations (RYVEMCE). The main characteristics analyzed included total I-PAP, stratified in Types A and B, defined as complete or incomplete extra-digit formation, respectively, sex prevalence, affected limb, laterality, parity, prematurity, delivery-type, twinning, consanguinity, and parental age. Males (6.35/10,000) are significantly more frequently affected than females (5.45/10,000), hands more than feet, left more than right limbs, and Type B (74.50%) more than A (25.50%). Prematurity and forceps use were significantly more frequent in cases than controls. An evident decreasing time-trend prevalence was present. Similar findings with other studies were males, upper and left limbs more frequently affected. Findings that were not previously reported include prematurity, forceps use, a significant decreasing time trend and an inverse ethnic prevalence for Types A (75%) and B (25%) in the Mayan population in contrast to other worldwide ethnic groups. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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