Volume 25, Issue 1 pp. 1-9
Clinical Teratology
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Unusual cardiac malformations in splenogonadal fusion-peromelia syndrome: Relationship to normal development

Karl F. Loomis

Karl F. Loomis

Department of Pathology of The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland 21205

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G. William Moore

G. William Moore

Department of Pathology of The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland 21205

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Grover M. Hutchins

Grover M. Hutchins

Department of Pathology of The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland 21205

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First published: February 1982
Citations: 18

Abstract

A male newborn infant, studied at autopsy, showed continuous splenogonadal fusion and severe peromelia associated with an unusual, possibly unique, cardiac malformation complex. The cardiac lesions included multiple right ventricular diverticula, tricuspid atresia, mitral to semilunar valve discontinuity, and absent muscular outflow tract septum. Tabulation of the time of appearance of relevant anatomic features in 351 normal human embryos of Carnegie stages 9 through 23 showed that the teratogenic influence in the present case probably occurred by stages 16–17. The nature and distribution of lesions observed suggest that proliferating undifferentiated mesenchme was the target of the unknown injury.

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