Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGeert Verstraeten Modified over 6 years ago
1
Cheryl Longman Consultant Clinical Geneticist
Arthrogryposis Cheryl Longman Consultant Clinical Geneticist
2
Arthrogryposis ARTHRON - joint GRYPOSIS - curvature
MULTIPLEX - multiple CONGENITA - born with it …affecting two or more different joints …symmetrical and non-progressive
3
Arthrogryposis 1 in 3-5,000 live births Male = female
Not a single condition: end result of fetal akinesia >400 conditions >150 genes
4
Non-specific features
Fusiform limbs Absent/reduced creases Dimpling Craniofacial: micrognathia, cleft palate, hypertelorism Osteoporosis and fractures Early onset merges with lethal contracture syndromes Pterygia IUGR Pulmonary hypoplasia
5
Diagnosis matters because it informs
Risk to sibs (0-100%), offspring, wider family Risk of complications Respiratory failure Malignant hyperthermia Cardiomyopathy Treatment Occasionally specific treatments Management of contractures
6
An Approach To Diagnosis
Amyoplasia Maternal factors Connective tissue/skeletal Central Peripheral neuromuscular Nerve NMJ Muscle: distal arthrogryposis & congenital myopathies
7
Amyoplasia One third of arthrogryposis Presumed vascular
Typical arm posture Forehead haemangioma Gastroschisis 10%
8
Amyoplasia: Management
Orthopaedic-led WoS MDT clinic Treat as soon after birth as possible Aim to allow milestones at the right time Judicious surgery "Lifetime" orthoses
9
Maternal Factors Illness eg Myasthenia, MS, infection, trauma …..
Hyperthermia Drugs eg cocaine, alcohol excess Uterine constraint
10
8.9M livebirths , fetal deaths from 20 wk and TOPs coded AMC over 26y
757 cases ~ 1 in 11,000 Maternal details for a third: vast majority no illnesses or drug use 2300 cases over 35 yrs 33 with uterine structural anomalies 29 had a specific recognisable form of arthrogryposis 2 where constraint likely cause- craniofacial asymmetry & early resolution > Caution in ascribing arthrogryposis to maternal factors
11
Central Clues Dysmorphic/multisystem features Cognitive involvement
Spasticity/seizures Abnormal brain imaging Genetic testing Array CGH Single gene test vs ID panels ZC4H2
12
Nerve: SMA and motor neuronopathies
Clues: Distal weakness and wasting, neurophysiology, brain MRI Phenotypic spectrum of some genes can extend to severe prenatal contractures with pterygia Some carry respiratory risk Genetic testing SMA panel covers dHMNs BICD2
13
Neuromuscular junction
Genes encode NMJ components Same genes cause “lethal pterygium syndromes” Clues: fatiguable weakness, fluctuations, ptosis, opthalmoplegia, apnoeas Neurophysiology Specific medication RAPSN
14
Distal Arthrogryposes
Common inherited cause, often dominant Characteristic patterns Overlap with congenital myopathies Genetic testing via arthrogryposis panel TNNT3
15
Congenital Myopathies
Phenotypic spectrum can be wide Wide intra-familial variability Caution in predicting prognosis early- treat the person not the gene Associated risks in some Respiratory weakness Malignant hyperthermia
16
Conclusions Arthrogryposis is a description Diagnosis informs
Recurrence risk Risk of associated complications eg respiratory weakness Management Phenotypic spectrum of many genes ranges from lethal contracture syndromes > arthrogryposis > milder phenotypes Advances in genetic testing are improving the ability to make timely genetic diagnoses
17
Thanks for listening
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.