Pediatric Reports (Jun 2017)

Adams-Oliver syndrome with unusual central nervous system findings and an extrahepatic portosystemic shunt

  • Carlos Pérez-García,
  • Yolanda Ruíz Martín,
  • Alejandra Aguado del Hoyo,
  • Carlos Marín Rodríguez,
  • Minia Campos Domínguez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4081/pr.2017.7211
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2

Abstract

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We report a case of a premature neonate girl with scalp and skull defects and brachydactyly of the feet consistent with an Adams-Oliver syndrome (AOS). The patient had central nervous system abnormalities, such as periventricular calcifications, hypoplastic corpus callosum, and bilateral hemispheric corticosubcortical hemorrhagic lesions. A muscular ventricular septal defect and a portosystemic shunt were diagnosed. To our knowledge, this is the first report of congenital supratentorial grey-white matter junction lesions without dural sinus thrombosis in association with AOS. Some of these lesions may be secondary to birth trauma (given the skull defect) whilst others have a watershed location, perhaps as further evidence of vascular disruption and decreased perfusion during critical periods of fetal brain development as the previously proposed pathogenesis of this syndrome.

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