We report on the complication of gastroesophageal reflux (GER) in four patients with lower brainstem dysfunction. These patients suffered from perinatal asphyxia, cerebellar hemorrhage, or congenital dysphagia of unknown origin and showed facial nerve palsy, inspiratory stridor due to vocal cord paralysis, central sleep apnea, and dysphagia, in various combinations. Naso-intestinal tube feeding was introduced in all of the patients due to recurrent vomiting and aspiration pneumonia resulting from GER. T2-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) imaging revealed symmetrical high intensity lesions in the tegmentum of the lower pons and the medulla oblongata in two of the patients, and pontomedullary atrophy in another patient. In normal subjects, lower esophageal sphincter contraction is provoked by distension of the gastric wall, through a vago-vagal reflex. Since this reflex arc involves the solitary tract nucleus, where the swallowing center is located, the association of dysphagia and GER in the present patients is thought to result from the lesions in the tegmentum of medulla oblongata. We propose the term "dysphagia-GER complex" to describe the disturbed motility of the upper digestive tract due to lower brainstem involvement. In children with brainstem lesions, neurological assessment of GER is warranted, in addition to the examination of other signs of brainstem dysfunction, including dysphagia and respiratory disturbance.
A 34-month-old boy presented with clinical manifestations of Teebi hypertelorism syndrome including prominent forehead with frontal bossing, hypertelorism, exophthalmos due to shallow orbits, a short and broad nose with anteverted nares, small hands and feet with interdigital webbing, umbilical hernia, and shawl scrotum. In addition, he had previously undescribed manifestations including tetralogy of Fallot, bilateral inguinal testes, and bifid scrotum. His phenotypically normal mother showed splayed labiae majora during her pregnancy, a possible manifestation of the syndrome.
The authors describe an association of atrial septal defect with partial symptoms of the Poland-Moebius syndrome. Both are thought to be caused by developmental disorders of the mesenchyme and ectodermal derivatives. This anomalous association can be accepted as one concept of the subclavian artery blood supply disruption sequence during embryo-genesis.
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