Hans J. van der Harten
University of Amsterdam
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Featured researches published by Hans J. van der Harten.
American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1997
Nicolette S. den Hollander; Hans J. van der Harten; Christl Vermeij-Keers; M. F. Niermeijer; Juriy W. Wladimiroff
Blomstrand chondrodysplasia is a rare lethal skeletal dysplasia with presumed autosomal-recessive inheritance. A family with 2 affected fetuses was studied. One fetus demonstrated a severe skeletal dysplasia at routine transabdominal ultrasound examination at 18.5 weeks of gestation. The pregnancy was terminated and the diagnosis of Blomstrand chondrodysplasia was made at autopsy. A second affected fetus was identified by first-trimester transvaginal ultrasound at 12 weeks of gestation. In this case the diagnosis was confirmed by posttermination radiography and histopathology. From these observations, Blomstrand chondrodysplasia seems like a lethal rhizo/mesomelic short-limb, early-onset dysplasia with autosomal-recessive inheritance. Easy detectability by transvaginal ultrasound is demonstrated, but general applicability awaits further studies on the intra- and interfamilial variability of this disorder.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1988
Jozien T. J. Brons; Hans J. van der Harten; Juri W. Wladimiroff; Herman P. van Geijn; Piet F. Dijkstra; Niek Exalto; A. Reuss; M. F. Niermeijer; Chris J. L. M. Meijer; N.F.T. Arts
Between 1982 and 1986, osteogenesis imperfecta was diagnosed by ultrasound in seven fetuses. The known heterogeneity of osteogenesis imperfecta was confirmed by the prenatal ultrasonographic findings. Dependent on the type of osteogenesis imperfecta, the appearance of the limbs varied from severely shortened and broad, with very low echogeneity and absent acoustic shadow (type IIA), to only moderately shortened and thin, with almost normal echogeneity and acoustic shadow but clearly visible fractures causing angulation of the bone (types IIC and III). Ultrasonography offers the possibility to detect or exclude the lethal and severe forms of osteogenesis imperfecta early (type IIA) or halfway (types IIB, IIC, and III) through the second trimester. Prenatal diagnosis of the disease allows the option of elective abortion or may prevent unnecessary obstetric intervention.
Human Genetics | 1996
Antonio Rossi; Hans J. van der Harten; Frits A. Beemer; Wim J. Kleijer; R. Gitzelmann; Beat Steinmann; Andrea Superti-Furga
Abstract Mutations in the diastrophic dysplasia sulfate transporter gene DTDST have been associated with a family of chondrodysplasias that comprises, in order of increasing severity, diastrophic dysplasia (DTD), atelosteogenesis type 2 (AO2), and achondrogenesis type 1B (ACG1B). To learn more about the molecular basis of DTDST chondrodysplasias and about genotype-phenotype correlations, we studied fibroblast cultures of three new patients: one with AO-2, one with DTD, and one with an intermediate phenotype (AO2/DTD). Reduced incorporation of inorganic sulfate into macromolecules was found in all three. Each of the three patients was found to be heterozygous for a c862t transition predicting a R279W substitution in the third extracellular loop of DTDST. In two patients (DTD and AO2/DTD), no other structural mutation was found, but polymerase chain reaction amplification and single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis of fibroblast cDNA showed reduced mRNA levels of the wild-type DTDST allele: these two patients may be compound heterozygotes for the “Finnish” mutation (as yet uncharacterized at the DNA level), which causes reduced expression of DTDST. The third patient (with AO2) had the R279W mutation compounded with a novel mutation, the deletion of cytosine 418 (Δc418), predicting a frameshift with premature termination. Also the Δc418 allele was underrepresented in the cDNA, in accordance with previous observations that premature stop codons reduce mRNA levels. The presence of the DTDST R279W mutation in a total of 11 patients with AO2 or DTD emphasizes the overlap between these conditions. This mutation has not been found so far in 8 analyzed ACG1B patients, suggesting that it allows some residual activity of the sulfate transporter.
Early Human Development | 1990
Henk Wierenga; Ronald Brand; Theo Geudeke; Herman P. van Geijn; Hans J. van der Harten; S. Pauline Verloove-Vanhorick
In a nationwide prospective survey on very preterm and very-low-birthweight infants in The Netherlands, the incidence of cot death in infants discharged alive was 15%. The postnatal age at death in these infants did not differ significantly from age at death in other cot death infants. Using a case-control design, possible risk factors associated with cot death were identified: lower maternal age at first pregnancy; maternal smoking during pregnancy; hypothermia of the infant immediately after birth; decreased number of white blood cells and thrombocytes in the infant on the first day of life. Intrauterine hypoxia is hypothesized as the entity common to these factors.
Pediatric Radiology | 2001
P. G. Nikkels; Rob H. Stigter; Irma E. Knol; Hans J. van der Harten
Abstract To our knowledge this is the first report of Schneckenbecken dysplasia with the development of hydrops early in the second trimester. The radiological findings showed the typical hypoplastic iliac bones with medial extension and very flattened, on lateral view, oval-shaped vertebral bodies and short long bones. The histology showed hypercellular and hypervascular cartilage with chondrocytes with centrally located nucleus. The absence of the lacunar space as described before was also observed in some chondrocytes in our case. This male fetus was the product of consanguineous parents of Mediterranean origin compatible with autosomal recessive inheritance.
Fetal and Pediatric Pathology | 1988
Hans J. van der Harten; Jozien T. J. Brons; Piet F. Dijkstra; Chris J. L. M. Meijer; Herman P. van Geijn; N.F.T. Arts; M. F. Niermeijer
The radiologic and pathologic characteristics of 7 cases of lethal osteogenesis imperfecta (OI), diagnosed prenatally by ultrasound in the 15th to 34th week, are described. They include four variants of the Sillence classification: types IIA, IIB, IIC, and type III. The radiologic criteria that differentiate these types of OI are described. The histopathology of the bones differed only slightly in types IIA, IIB, and III; OI type IIC, however, differed markedly from the other types.
Fetal and Pediatric Pathology | 1986
Hans J. van der Harten; Dick van Velzen
A rare observation was made in a 14-day-old infant with atresia of the urethra, vagina, and anus. Keratinized squamous cells from the vagina were found on peritoneal surfaces and in the peripheral sinuses of axillary lymph nodes. The mechanism of the transport of the squamous cells is briefly discussed.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 1999
Marcel Karperien; Hans J. van der Harten; Ron van Schooten; Hetty Farih-Sips; Nicolette S. den Hollander; Sander L. J. Kneppers; P.J. Nijweide; Socrates E. Papapoulos; Clemens W.G.M. Löwik
European Journal of Immunology | 1990
Eveliene Horst; Chris J. L. M. Meijer; Adrian M. Duijvestijn; Nico G. Hartwig; Hans J. van der Harten; Steven T. Pals
Prenatal Diagnosis | 1990
Jozien T. J. Brons; Hans J. van der Harten; Herman P. van Geijn; Juri W. Wladimiroff; Martinus F. Niermeuer; Dick Lindhout; Patricia A. Stuart; Chris J. L. M. Meijer; N.F.T. Arts