We report a case with polydactyly and ostium primum type ASD with appropriate surgical treatment.
Figure 1: Polydactyly and fingernails on the short hand.
Figure 2: 10-25% of cases in feet symmetrical postaxial polydactyly.
The EVC phenotype is labile and affects many organ systems. Clinical features after birth can be summarized as a disproportionate, short body type, polydactyly that affects the hands and sometimes the feet, and congenital heart defects. Congenital heart defects are found in 50-60% of patients, with ventricular septal defect, patent ductus arteriosus, mitral and tricuspid valve disorder, hypoplastic left heart syndrome, single ventricle, atrioventricular channel defects, transposition of the large arteries, aortic coarctation and a totally abnormal pulmonary vein being exhibited.[4,8] Almost half of the patients die from cardiac and respiratory complications in childhood.[5,6]
The most prominent symptoms in the skeleton system are the shortness of the long bones and ribs (disproportionate dwarfism), nail and teeth disorders, and polydactyly. Patients have been reported with extra digits ranging between 1.15 and 1.50 cm in length.[6]
Mouth s ymptoms o f E VC s yndrome, s uch a s multiple frenula, a short upper lip, and broad alveolar ridges, are common. Dental anomalies, including partial anodontia, neonatal teeth, small teeth, and enamel hypoplasia, are also possible.[9] Most patients have normal intelligence.[5,6,10]
As far as the molecular genetic diagnosis is concerned, it is understood that these patients have a mutation in two genes called EVC1-EVC2 that is located in the short part of the fourth chromosome,[11] but few research centers conduct a genetic analysis for a differential diagnosis because of the rarity of the disease and the high cost. Our patient was not tested.
In the literature, most patients are treated for EVC in childhood, and the number of adults who have surgery for this condition is very limited. Our case presented a very rare occurrence of this syndrome in an adult and demonstrates that adults with EVC and concurrent ostium primum defects can be safely operated on for total correction.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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