In the period of a retrospective study (1970-1984 inclusive) forty cases of sex chromosome aneuploidy were identified at amniocentesis in Oxford, England and in Kuopio, Finland; 25 of these pregnancies were subsequently terminated. A decision to continue was made more often for XYY and XXX karyotypes, by older mothers and older fathers, by couples with more previous children, and by couples living in England. A decision to terminate was made more often for XXY and non-mosaic 45,X karyotypes, by younger mothers and younger fathers, by couples with few previous children, in all cases with abnormal ultrasound findings, when post-amniocentesis counselling was given by an obstetrician, and by couples living in Finland. Previous miscarriages, or terminations of pregnancy, previous problems with infertility, marital status, or the type of counselling given before amniocentesis, appeared not to influence a couples' decision. Religious and ethical ideas were not studied systematically at the time and cannot be reported on.
We describe three unrelated patients with apparently identical interstitial deletions of the segment (18) (q12.2q21.1). They were a short and markedly mentally retarded 5 year old girl, a macrocephalic and obese 2½/ year old boy with moderate mental retardation, and a macrocephalic, severely mentally retarded 5 year old boy. Findings common to all five liveborn patients so far identified as carrying this deletion include a pattern of minor dysmorphic features (prominent forehead, ptosis of the upper eyelids, full periorbital tissue, epicanthic folds, strabismus), muscular hypotonia, seizures, behavioural disorders, and lack of major malformations.Terminal deletion of the long arm of chromosome 18, del(18)(q21qter) is frequently found, and is associated with a characteristic phenotype. ' Interstitial deletions in the long arm of chromosome 18, by contrast, are rare. Only three patients with deletions of chromosome 18 (q12.2q21.1), including one mosaic in a prenatally detected fetus, have been reported so far.2' We present three further patients with deletion of this segment.
It has been postulated that behavioural differences between normal males and those with an additional X or Y chromosome may be related to pre- or postnatal hormonal variations. The prenatal hormone status was investigated using amniotic fluid obtained at antenatal diagnosis between 16 and 20 weeks gestation from fetuses with sex chromosome abnormalities and from controls of the same gestational age. After log transformation, the (geometric) mean testosterone levels were XY 439.4 pmol/l, range 165-1,027 (n = 29), XYY 490.7 pmol/ 1, range 224-1,092 (n = 20); and XXY 419 pmol/l, range 87-1,021 (n = 20). There were no significant differences between the three male groups and all three were significantly higher than the XX fetuses at 147.0 pmol/l, range 41-474 (p < 0.001). These findings give no support to the hypothesis that prenatal testosterone levels contribute to later behavioural characteristics.
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