Renal tubular dysgenesis: delayed onset of oligohydramnios

Two premature sibs had Potter sequence and died of respiratory failure within the first day. Ultrasonography at 26 weeks during the earlier of the two pregnancies showed complete absence of amniotic fluid, and the urinary bladder was not visualized. Ultrasound examinations during the second pregnanc...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAmerican journal of medical genetics Vol. 32; no. 1; p. 127
Main Authors Swinford, A E, Bernstein, J, Toriello, H V, Higgins, J V
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.01.1989
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Summary:Two premature sibs had Potter sequence and died of respiratory failure within the first day. Ultrasonography at 26 weeks during the earlier of the two pregnancies showed complete absence of amniotic fluid, and the urinary bladder was not visualized. Ultrasound examinations during the second pregnancy showed adequate amniotic fluid at 16 and 20 weeks, with a subsequent reduction in fluid volume. Two older sibs had also died of respiratory failure shortly after birth. Postmortem histopathologic studies showed all four sibs to have severely deficient renal tubular development. However, the presence of numerous glomeruli indicated prolific nephrogenesis. Most of the tubules in sections of cortex had the lectin-binding and immunohistochemical characteristics of collecting ducts; proximal tubules were not identified by lectin-binding. Electron-microscopic examination showed a general absence of differentiated characteristics in cortical tubular epithelium, except that rare tubules contained rudimentary proximal tubular brush borders. Three of the sibs were boys, one a girl. The three children that were studied had normal chromosomes. Two unaffected sibs are alive and well. Neither parent has any clinical evidence of renal disease. These studies support the interpretation that renal tubular dysgenesis is autosomal recessive with pleiotropy. However, the relatively late appearance of oligohydramnios makes early diagnosis difficult, even when the condition is suspected.
ISSN:0148-7299
1096-8628
DOI:10.1002/ajmg.1320320127