Currarino syndrome (CS) is a peculiar form of caudal regression syndrome [also known as autosomal dominant sacral agenesis (OMIM no. 176450)] characterised by (1) partial absence of the sacrum with intact first sacral vertebra, (2) a pre-sacral mass and (3) anorectal anomalies (Currarino triad). We studied a 3-year-old girl with Currarino triad who had additional systemic features and performed array comparative genomic hybridisation to look for chromosomal abnormalities. This girl had the typical spectrum of anomalies of the CS including (a) partial sacral agenesis (hemisacrum with remnants of only sacral S1-S2 vertebrae and a residual S3 vertebral body) associated with complete coccygeal agenesis, (b) pre-intrasacral dermoid, (c) intra-dural lipoma, (d) ectopic anus and (e) tethered cord. She had, in addition, pre- and post-natal growth impairment (<3rd percentile), severe microcephaly (
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Pavone, P., Ruggieri, M., Lombardo, I., Sudi, J., Biancheri, R., Castellano-Chiodo, D., … Dobyns, W. B. (2010). Microcephaly, sensorineural deafness and Currarino triad with duplication-deletion of distal 7q. European Journal of Pediatrics, 169(4), 475–481. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-009-1061-6
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