Retinitis pigmentosa, metaphyseal chondrodysplasia, and brachydactyly: An affected brother and sister

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Abstract

A brother and sister, children of normal parents, are described. They had retinitis pigmentosa, causing near-blindness as a result of very narrow fields of vision, associated with metaphyseal chondrodysplasia and marked shortening of the metacarpals and terminal phalanges. Autosomal recessive inheritance is suggested with a common biochemical cause for all these defects. This apparently new association of retinitis pigmentosa with a systemic bone dysplasia emphasises that this not uncommon clinical diagnosis has a variety of different possible causes.

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Phillips, C. I., Wynne-Davies, R., Stokoe, N. L., & Newton, M. (1981). Retinitis pigmentosa, metaphyseal chondrodysplasia, and brachydactyly: An affected brother and sister. Journal of Medical Genetics, 18(1), 46–49. https://doi.org/10.1136/jmg.18.1.46

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