Steroid 21-hydroxylase deficiency is the underlying cause in over 90% of patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia, an inherited metabolic disorder of adrenal steroidogenesis. We have characterized 94 mutant alleles from 47 unrelated Mexican patients and the corresponding mutant alleles in their parents by amplification of the functional CYP21 gene by PCR, followed by direct sequence analysis. The study included patients diagnosed with the three clinical forms of the disease. Our results revealed: (1) the presence of relatively few mutations or combinations of mutations associated with particular phenotypes; (2) the presence of putative new mutations; (3) the finding of identical genotypes in patients displaying discordant phenotypes; (4) the identification of patients lacking all previous reported mutations; and (5) an apparent high frequency of germ-line mutations. The absence of previously reported mutations in about 22% of the disease alleles, the finding of putative new mutations in some of the patients lacking previously known mutations, and the apparent high prevalence of germ-line mutations make evident the differences in the genetic background leading to this disorder between the Caucasian and the Mexican populations.
CH was present in 1:2,426 NB, with a female predominance (2:1); an ectopic thyroid was the most common finding, and its prominent clinical features were umbilical hernia and jaundice.
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