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Patau syndrome

Patau syndrome, also known as trisomy 13, is a chromosomal aberration, a disease in which a patient has an additional chromosome 13. more...

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Patau syndrome is associated with severe mental retardation, small eyes that may exhibit a split in the iris (coloboma), a cleft lip and/or palate, weak muscle tone (hypotonia), an increased risk of heart defects, skeletal abnormalities, and other medical problems. Affected individuals rarely live past infancy because of the life threatening medical problems associated with this condition. Patau syndrome affects approximately 1 in 10,000 live births. The risk of having a child with Patau syndrome increases as a woman gets older.

People with Patau syndrome have additional DNA from chromosome 13 in some or all of their cells. The extra material disrupts the normal course of development, causing the characteristic features of Patau syndrome.

Most cases of Patau syndrome result from trisomy 13, which means each cell in the body has three copies of chromosome 13 instead of the usual two copies. A small percentage of cases occur when only some of the body's cells have an extra copy of chromosome 13, resulting in a mixed population of cells with a differing number of chromosomes, such cases are called mosaic Patau syndrome.

Patau syndrome can also occur when part of chromosome 13 becomes attached to another chromosome (translocated) before or at conception. Affected people have two copies of chromosome 13, plus extra material from chromosome 13 attached to another chromosome. With a translocation, the person has a partial trisomy for chromosome 13 and often the physical signs of the syndrome differ from the typical Patau syndrome.

Most cases of Patau syndrome are not inherited, but occur as random events during the formation of reproductive cells (eggs and sperm). An error in cell division called nondisjunction can result in reproductive cells with an abnormal number of chromosomes. For example, an egg or sperm cell may gain an extra copy of chromosome 13. If one of these atypical reproductive cells contributes to the genetic makeup of a child, the child will have an extra chromosome 13 in each of the body's cells.

Mosaic Patau syndrome is also not inherited. It occurs as a random error during cell division early in fetal development. As a result, some of the body's cells have the usual two copies of chromosome 13, and other cells have three copies of the chromosome.

Patau syndrome due to a translocation can be inherited. An unaffected person can carry a rearrangement of genetic material between chromosome 13 and another chromosome. This rearrangement is called a balanced translocation because there is no extra material from chromosome 13. Although they do not have signs of Patau syndrome, people who carry this type of balanced translocation are at an increased risk of having children with the condition.

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Trisomy
From Gale Encyclopedia of Childhood and Adolescence, 4/6/01

Chromosomes in the human body generally come in pairs. Most people have 23 pairs of chromosomes, for a total of 46. When an extra chromosome is present in one of the pairs (resulting in three instead of two), the abnormality is labeled trisomy. Scientists have numbered the 23 pairs of human chromosome, and the trisomy abnormality may occur in several different chromosomes. For example, when the trisomy abnormality occurs in chromosome 21, the result is Down syndrome. Babies born with Down syndrome usually survive into adulthood.

Other chromosomal abnormalities are trisomy 13, Patau's syndrome, and trisomy 18, Edward's syndrome. Both are relatively rare but serious conditions that cause severe mental retardation and physical deformities. Babies born with either of these trisomies usually do not survive beyond their first year.

Further Reading

For Your Information

  • Gale Encyclopedia of Childhood & Adolescence. Gale Research, 1998.

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