Iridogoniodysgenesis, dominant type

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Jyostna Chouturi, M.B.B.S [2]

Overview

Iridogoniodysgenesis, dominant type (type 1, IRID1) refers to a spectrum of diseases characterized by malformations of the irido-corneal angle of the anterior chamber of the eye. Iridogoniodysgenesis is the result of abnormal migration or terminal induction of neural crest cells. These cells lead to formation of most of the anterior segment structures of the eye (corneal stroma & endothelium, iris stroma, trabeculum).[1]

Historical Prospective

Iridogoniodysgenesis, dominant type first reported by Berg (1932).[2]

Epidemiology and demographics

Transmission of Iridogoniodysgenesis, dominant type is autosomal dominant pattern with complete penetrance and variable expressivity.

Diagnosis

Symptoms

Symptoms of Iridogoniodysgenesis, dominant type is iris hypoplasis, goniodysgenesis, and juvenile glaucoma. Glaucoma phenotype that maps to 6p25 results from mutations in the forkhead transcription factor gene FOXC1

Treatment

Treatment of glaucoma in iridogoniodysgenesis is primarily surgical.

It is listed as a "rare disease" by the Office of Rare Diseases (ORD).[3] This means that Iridogoniodysgenesis, dominant type, or a subtype of Iridogoniodysgenesis, dominant type, affects less than 200,000 people in the US population.

References

  1. Dureau P.Iridogoniodysgenesis dominant type. Orphanet Encyclopedia. March 2004
  2. Berg F (1932). "Erbliches jugendliches Glaukom". Acta Ophthal. 10: 568–87. doi:10.1111/j.1755-3768.1932.tb07210.x.
  3. Template:RareDiseases

External links

Template:Transcription factor/coregulator deficiencies