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      Advances in Mutagenesis Research 

      The Surveillance of Birth Defects in South America: I. The Search for Time Clusters: Epidemics

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      Springer Berlin Heidelberg

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          The birth prevalence rates for the skeletal dysplasias.

          This study was undertaken to establish the prevalence rates at birth of the skeletal dysplasias that can be recognised in the perinatal period. Using the data base of the Latin-American Collaborative Study of Congenital Malformations (ECLAMC), for the years 1978 to 1983, on 349 470 births (live and stillbirths), a crude prevalence rate of 2.3/10 000 was observed. However, several indications of under-registration suggest that the real value is about twice that observed. The most frequent types of skeletal dysplasia were achondroplasia, with a prevalence rate between 0.5 and 1.5/10 000 births, the thanatophoric dysplasia/achondrogenesis group (0.2 and 0.5/10 000 births), and osteogenesis imperfecta (0.4/10 000 births). The mutation rate for autosomal dominant achondroplasia was estimated at between 1.72 and 5.57 X 10(-5) per gamete per generation.
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            Epidemiology of congenital pigmented naevi: I. Incidence rates and relative frequencies.

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              Malformations due to presumed spontaneous mutations in newborn infants.

              We conducted hospital-based surveillance of congenital malformations to determine the rate of apparently spontaneous single mutations leading to recognized phenotypes. Through surveillance of 69,277 infants with gestational ages of at least 20 weeks, we identified 48 infants (0.07 percent) with major malformations, with phenotypes that suggested that the malformations were due to single mutant genes. Family studies suggested that 11 of these infants (10 with autosomal dominant disorders and 1 with an X-linked condition) were affected as the result of a new (spontaneous) genetic mutation. The spontaneous mutation rates per gene were 0.7 x 10(-5) and 1.44 x 10(-5) for the disorders in which one and two infants were affected, respectively. In addition, 5 of the 10 infants with autosomal recessive malformations had negative family histories, but we were unable to infer the presence of spontaneous mutations in these cases. Because the family history was negative in 44.4 percent of the infants with disorders considered due to autosomal or X-linked genes, counseling should include the understanding that genetic disorders often occur unexpectedly among children of healthy parents.
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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                1990
                : 191-210
                10.1007/978-3-642-75599-6_6
                e60b9294-732d-4641-8a97-e7fc066cab39
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