Juvenile (including congenital and infantile) cataract occurs commonly as part of a more generalized or systematic condition, or as a component of a syndrome. Isolated juvenile cataract is a relatively rare disorder and the mode of inheritance is often autosomal dominant. Autosomal recessive transmission of isolated juvenile cataract is rare. The present paper is a report of 15 cases of juvenile cataract on the Aland Islands (Finland) with about 23,000 inhabitants. Twelve belong to 7 sibships of two different pedigrees and 3 cases are sporadic, of which we have found no genealogical connections in the last 6-10 generations to the two cataracta pedigrees. One of the sporadic cases presented an operated cleft palate and a chromosomal anomaly. In another sporadic case the mother probably had been infected with rubella during early gestation. In the third sporadic case the cataract was combined with partial aniridia, but he has several genealogical connections to one of the cataract pedigrees. Consanguinity between the parents was detected in 5 of the 7 sibships, in some even on various ancestral levels. Apart from the cataracts, all patients were healthy, with normal intellect, behavior, hearing, growth and development. They were neurologically intact and there were no ocular lesions apart from cataract. In the Alandic familial cases the cataracts appear to be an autosomal recessive trait. A family branch originating from southwestern Sweden and south Norway showed transmission of the cataract in three successive generations. The possibility of quasi-dominant inheritance is discussed against the background that autosomal recessive juvenile cataract may not be so rare as the small number of recorded cases would suggest.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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