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Dive into the research topics where Rena E. Falk is active.

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Featured researches published by Rena E. Falk.


Genetics in Medicine | 2002

Genetics Evaluation Guidelines for the Etiologic Diagnosis of Congenital Hearing Loss

Walter E. Nance; Kathleen S. Arnos; John C. Carey; George C. Cunningham; Rena E. Falk; Terese Finitzo; Dynio Honrubia; Bronya Keats; William J. Kimberling; Gail Lim; Cynthia C. Morton; Arti Pandya; Mary Kay Pelias; James Skordas; Richard J.H. Smith; Michael Watson; Colleen Boyle; Aileen Kenneson; Amy M. Donahue; Michele A. Lloyd-Puryear; Marie Y. Mann; Jay Sheehan; Bradford L. Therrell; Karl R. White

The advent of hearing screening in newborns in many states has led to an increase in the use of genetic testing and related genetic services in the follow-up of infants with hearing loss. A significant proportion of those with congenital hearing loss have genetic etiologies underlying their hearing loss. To ensure that those identified with congenital hearing loss receive the genetic services appropriate to their conditions, the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the Health Resources and Services Administration funded the American College of Medical Genetics to convene an expert panel to develop guidelines for the genetic evaluation of congential hearing loss. After a brief overview of the current knowledge of hearing loss, newborn screening, and newborn hearing screening, we provide an overview of genetic services and a guideline that describes how best to ensure that patients receive appropriate genetic services. The significant contribution of genetic factors to these conditions combined with the rapid evolution of knowledge about the genetics of these conditions overlaid with the inherently multidisciplinary nature of genetic services provides an example of a condition for which a well-integrated multidisciplinary approach to care is clearly needed.The advent of hearing screening in newborns in many states has led to an increase in the use of genetic testing and related genetic services in the follow-up of infants with hearing loss. A significant proportion of those with congenital hearing loss have genetic etiologies underlying their hearing loss. To ensure that those identified with congenital hearing loss receive the genetic services appropriate to their conditions, the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the Health Resources and Services Administration funded the American College of Medical Genetics to convene an expert panel to develop guidelines for the genetic evaluation of congential hearing loss. After a brief overview of the current knowledge of hearing loss, newborn screening, and newborn hearing screening, we provide an overview of genetic services and a guideline that describes how best to ensure that patients receive appropriate genetic services. The significant contribution of genetic factors to these conditions combined with the rapid evolution of knowledge about the genetics of these conditions overlaid with the inherently multidisciplinary nature of genetic services provides an example of a condition for which a well-integrated multidisciplinary approach to care is clearly needed.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2004

Chromosome 2q terminal deletion: Report of 6 new patients and review of phenotype-breakpoint correlations in 66 individuals

Kari A. Casas; Tarja K. Mononen; Claudia N. Mikail; Susan Hassed; Shibo Li; John J. Mulvihill; Henry J. Lin; Rena E. Falk

We report a new patient with terminal deletion of chromosome 2 with breakpoint at 2q36 and five additional new patients with 2q terminal deletion with breakpoint at 2q37. Hemidiaphragmatic hernia is a novel finding in one patient with a breakpoint at 2q37.1. In comparing these patients to 60 previously reported individuals with 2q terminal deletions, certain physical abnormalities are loosely associated with positions of breakpoint. For example, facial features (e.g., prominent forehead, depressed nasal bridge, and dysmorphic ears and nose), short stature, and short hands and feet were frequent in patients with breakpoints at or proximal to 2q37.3. Reports of horseshoe kidney and Wilms tumor were limited to patients with a breakpoint at 2q37.1, and structural brain anomalies and tracheal anomalies were reported only in patients with breakpoints at or proximal to 2q37.1. Cleft palate was reported only in patients with the most proximal breakpoints (2q36 or 2q35). Neurological effects including developmental delay, mental retardation, autistic‐like behavior, and hypotonia were typical in this patient population but did not stratify in severity according to breakpoint. Terminal deletion of the long arm of chromosome 2 should be considered in the infant with marked hypotonia, poor feeding, gastroesophageal reflux, and growth delay, and the older child with developmental delay, autistic behavior, and the characteristic facial and integumentary features described herein. Assignment of clinical features to specific breakpoints and refinement of predictive value may be useful in counseling.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2007

Chromosome 2q37 deletion: clinical and molecular aspects.

Rena E. Falk; Kari A. Casas

Terminal deletions of chromosome 2 with breakpoints at or within band 2q37, ranging from visible abnormalities to cryptic, subtelomeric deletions, have been recognized with increasing frequency among children with mild‐moderate mental retardation, characteristic facial appearance, and behavioral manifestations which often place them on the autism spectrum. The stereotypic facial characteristics include prominent forehead, thin, highly arched eyebrows, depressed nasal bridge, full cheeks, deficient nasal alae and prominent columella, thin upper lip, and various minor anomalies of the pinnae. Abnormal nipples, including inverted nipples, have been reported in a number of cases. CNS, ocular, cardiac, gastrointestinal, renal, and other GU anomalies have been noted in nearly one‐third of patients. Of note, coarctation or hypoplasia of the aorta has been described in several affected children. Wilms tumor, renal dysplasia, and tracheomalacia have been reported only with the most proximal breakpoint at band 2q37.1 while a range of GI anomalies, pyloric stenosis, and diaphragmatic defects have been reported with breakpoints throughout the region. A subset of patients with the most distal deletion present phenotypic features which mimic Albright hereditary osteodystrophy (AHO). In addition to the AHO‐like phenotype, later onset findings include seizures and cystic kidneys. Timely diagnosis of this recognizable syndrome provides a basis for genetic counseling, appropriate surveillance, and intervention, and avoids unnecessary and expensive diagnostic testing.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2001

Occurrence of Rett Syndrome in Boys

Helen Leonard; Jon Silberstein; Rena E. Falk; Isa Houwink-Manville; Carolyn Ellaway; Linda S. Raffaele; Ingegerd Witt Engerström; Carolyn Schanen

The neurologic disorder Rett syndrome was originally described exclusively in girls. We present two boys with clinical features of Rett syndrome. Other than head circumference deceleration, no longer considered mandatory, patient 1 meets all of the criteria. Using fluorescent in situ hybridization analysis, 97.6% of cells were found to be karyotypically normal (46,XY). No mutation was detected on screening of the coding region of the MECP2 gene. The second patient also has classic features of Rett syndrome. However, cytogenetic analysis of peripheral blood revealed a karyotype 47,XXY[23]/46,XY[7] confirming mosaicism for Klinefelters syndrome. A T158M missense mutation in the methylcytosine-binding domain of the MECP2 gene was identified. A diagnostic bias against the clinical identification of Rett syndrome in boys may exist. This presentation of the male phenotype could be more common than it would appear, although boys with MECP2 mutations might also manifest in other ways. Rett syndrome remains a clinical diagnosis that should not be dismissed in boys, and thorough evaluation including karyotype and mutation testing is warranted. (J Child Neurol 2001;16:333-338).


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

ZC4H2 Mutations Are Associated with Arthrogryposis Multiplex Congenita and Intellectual Disability through Impairment of Central and Peripheral Synaptic Plasticity

Hiromi Hirata; Indrajit Nanda; Anne van Riesen; Gai McMichael; Hao Hu; Melanie Hambrock; Marie-Amélie Papon; Ute Fischer; Sylviane Marouillat; Can Ding; Servane Alirol; Melanie Bienek; Sabine Preisler-Adams; Astrid Grimme; Dominik Seelow; Richard Webster; Eric Haan; Alastair H. MacLennan; Werner Stenzel; Tzu Ying Yap; Alison Gardner; Lam Son Nguyen; Marie Shaw; Nicolas Lebrun; Stefan A. Haas; Wolfram Kress; T. Haaf; Elke Schellenberger; Jamel Chelly; Géraldine Viot

Arthrogryposis multiplex congenita (AMC) is caused by heterogeneous pathologies leading to multiple antenatal joint contractures through fetal akinesia. Understanding the pathophysiology of this disorder is important for clinical care of the affected individuals and genetic counseling of the families. We thus aimed to establish the genetic basis of an AMC subtype that is associated with multiple dysmorphic features and intellectual disability (ID). We used haplotype analysis, next-generation sequencing, array comparative genomic hybridization, and chromosome breakpoint mapping to identify the pathogenic mutations in families and simplex cases. Suspected disease variants were verified by cosegregation analysis. We identified disease-causing mutations in the zinc-finger gene ZC4H2 in four families affected by X-linked AMC plus ID and one family affected by cerebral palsy. Several heterozygous females were also affected, but to a lesser degree. Furthermore, we found two ZC4H2 deletions and one rearrangement in two female and one male unrelated simplex cases, respectively. In mouse primary hippocampal neurons, transiently produced ZC4H2 localized to the postsynaptic compartment of excitatory synapses, and the altered protein influenced dendritic spine density. In zebrafish, antisense-morpholino-mediated zc4h2 knockdown caused abnormal swimming and impaired α-motoneuron development. All missense mutations identified herein failed to rescue the swimming defect of zebrafish morphants. We conclude that ZC4H2 point mutations, rearrangements, and small deletions cause a clinically variable broad-spectrum neurodevelopmental disorder of the central and peripheral nervous systems in both familial and simplex cases of both sexes. Our results highlight the importance of ZC4H2 for genetic testing of individuals presenting with ID plus muscle weakness and minor or major forms of AMC.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1998

Mosaic trisomy 16 ascertained through amniocentesis: Evaluation of 11 new cases

Wei Tong Hsu; Dmitriy A. Shchepin; Rong Mao; Elizabeth Berry-Kravis; Ann P. Garber; Nathan Fischel-Ghodsian; Rena E. Falk; Dru E. Carlson; Elizabeth Roeder; Elizabeth A. Leeth; M. J. Hajianpour; Jin Chen C Wang; Lynne S. Rosenblum-Vos; Sucheta Bhatt; Evelyn M. Karson; Charles H. Hux; Carolyn Trunca; Martin G. Bialer; Sandra K. Linn; Rhona Schreck

Trisomy 16, once thought to result uniformly in early pregnancy loss, has been detected in chorionic villus samples (CVS) from on-going pregnancies and was initially ascribed to a second, nonviable pregnancy. Prenatally detected trisomy 16 in CVS and its resolution to disomy has led to the reexamination of the viability of trisomy 16. This study evaluates 11 cases of mosaic trisomy 16 detected through second trimester amniocentesis. In 9 of the 11 cases, amniocenteses were performed in women under the age of 35 because of abnormal levels of maternal serum alpha-fetoprotein (MSAFP) or maternal serum human chorionic gonadotropin (MShCG). The other two amniocenteses were performed for advanced maternal age. Five of the 11 pregnancies resulted in liveborn infants, and six pregnancies were electively terminated. The liveborn infants all had some combination of intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), congenital heart defects (CHD), or minor anomalies. Two of them died neonatally because of complications of severe congenital heart defects. The three surviving children have variable growth retardation, developmental delay, congenital anomalies, and/or minor anomalies. In the terminated pregnancies, the four fetuses evaluated by ultrasound or autopsy demonstrated various congenital anomalies and/or IUGR. Cytogenetic and fluorescent in situ hybridization studies identified true mosaicism in 5 of 10 cases examined, although the abnormal cell line was never seen in more than 1% of cultured lymphocytes. Placental mosaicism was seen in all placentas examined and was associated with IUGR in four of seven cases. Maternal uniparental disomy was identified in three cases. Mosaic trisomy 16 detected through amniocentesis is not a benign finding but associated with a high risk of abnormal outcome, most commonly IUGR, CHD, developmental delay, and minor anomalies. The various outcomes may reflect the diversity of mechanisms involved in the resolution of this abnormality. As 80% of these patients were ascertained because of the presence of abnormal levels of MSAFP or MShCG, the increased use of maternal serum screening should bring more such cases to clinical attention.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2016

Clinical course of sly syndrome (mucopolysaccharidosis type VII)

Adriana M. Montaño; Ngu Lock-Hock; Robert D. Steiner; Brett H. Graham; Marina Szlago; Robert M. Greenstein; M. Pineda; Antonio Gonzalez-Meneses; Mahmut Çoker; Dennis Bartholomew; Mark S. Sands; Raymond Y. Wang; Roberto Giugliani; Alfons Macaya; Gregory M. Pastores; Anastasia K. Ketko; Fatih Süheyl Ezgü; Akemi Tanaka; Laila Arash; Michael Beck; Rena E. Falk; Kaustuv Bhattacharya; José Francisco da Silva Franco; Klane K. White; Grant A. Mitchell; Loreta Cimbalistiene; Max Holtz; William S. Sly

Background Mucopolysaccharidosis VII (MPS VII) is an ultra-rare disease characterised by the deficiency of β-glucuronidase (GUS). Patients’ phenotypes vary from severe forms with hydrops fetalis, skeletal dysplasia and mental retardation to milder forms with fewer manifestations and mild skeletal abnormalities. Accurate assessments on the frequency and clinical characteristics of the disease have been scarce. The aim of this study was to collect such data. Methods We have conducted a survey of physicians to document the medical history of patients with MPS VII. The survey included anonymous information on patient demographics, family history, mode of diagnosis, age of onset, signs and symptoms, severity, management, clinical features and natural progression of the disease. Results We collected information on 56 patients from 11 countries. Patients with MPS VII were classified based on their phenotype into three different groups: (1) neonatal non-immune hydrops fetalis (NIHF) (n=10), (2) Infantile or adolescent form with history of hydrops fetalis (n=13) and (3) Infantile or adolescent form without known hydrops fetalis (n=33). Thirteen patients with MPS VII who had the infantile form with history of hydrops fetalis and survived childhood, had a wide range of clinical manifestations from mild to severe. Five patients underwent bone marrow transplantation and one patient underwent enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant human GUS. Conclusions MPS VII is a pan-ethnic inherited lysosomal storage disease with considerable phenotypical heterogeneity. Most patients have short stature, skeletal dysplasia, hepatosplenomegaly, hernias, cardiac involvement, pulmonary insufficiency and cognitive impairment. In these respects it resembles MPS I and MPS II. In MPS VII, however, one unique and distinguishing clinical feature is the unexpectedly high proportion of patients (41%) that had a history of NIHF. Presence of NIHF does not, by itself, predict the eventual severity of the clinical course, if the patient survives infancy.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2010

Cognitive-behavioral features of Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome and other subtelomeric microdeletions†

Gene S. Fisch; Paul Grossfeld; Rena E. Falk; Agatino Battaglia; Janey Youngblom; Richard Simensen

Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) is a complex congenital malformation produced by a loss of genomic material at the locus 4p16.3. In addition to its dysmorphic features, the deletion produces a range of intellectual disability (ID). Many clinical aspects of WHS are well‐characterized; however, the cognitive‐behavioral characteristics have been rarely examined in a systematic fashion. The purpose of our study was to examine the cognitive‐behavioral features of WHS and to compare them to children with other subtelomeric deletions that also produce ID. We recruited 45 children with subtelomeric deletions and examined their cognitive‐behavioral abilities using a neuropsychological assessment battery composed of standardized instruments. Nineteen children were diagnosed with WHS and 26 children with one of three other subtelomeric deletions—11q25 (Jacobsen syndrome), deletion 2q37, and inversion duplication deletion 8p21–23. We found children with WHS to be more severely impacted cognitively than children from any of the other groups. Their overall adaptive behavior was lower as well. However, children with WHS exhibit strengths in socialization skills comparable to the levels attained by the other groups we assessed. Importantly, the proportion of children with WHS with autism or autistic‐like features is significantly lower than the rates of autism found in the other subtelomeric disorders we examined.


Ophthalmic Genetics | 2000

Corneal transplantation in a patient with mucopolysaccharidosis type VII (Sly disease).

Katherine L. Bergwerk; Rena E. Falk; Ben J. Glasgow; Yaron S. Rabinowitz

Purpose: To illustrate a good visual outcome following penetrating keratoplasty in a patient with Sly disease, a rare mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) caused by a deficiency of ß-glucuronidase. Methods: A 15-year-old male with progressive bilateral corneal opacification had a complete medical, genetic, and ophthalmic evaluation followed by a penetrating keratoplasty. Results: The cornea has remained clear for two years following surgery. Histopathology of the corneal button demonstrated vacuoles and granular inclusions consistent with this lysosomal storage disease. Conclusion: While research is ongoing in the fields of enzyme replacement and bone marrow transplantation, these treatments may not alleviate or reverse the corneal clouding. This case illustrates that cornea transplantation may be a valuable treatment option for visually rehabilitating such patients.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1992

Screening for Down syndrome with the femur length/biparietal diameter ratio: A new twist of the data

Lawrence D. Platt; Arnold L. Medearis; Dru E. Carlson; Rena E. Falk; Greggory R. DeVore; Janet Horenstein; Catherine A. Walla

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to determine the value of discordant morphometric measurements as identifiers of Down syndrome by evaluating the relationship of biparietal diameter, femur length, biparietal diameter/femur length ratio, and cephalic index between a group of fetuses with trisomy 21 and a control population. STUDY DESIGN Biometric measurements from 48 fetuses with trisomy were reviewed and compared with 107 normal fetuses of similar gestational age. Data were analyzed in 2-week gestational age intervals to determine the effect of gestational age on ultrasonographic detection of Down syndrome. Outcome measures were subject to least-squares linear regression and the t test for analysis. RESULTS A positive relationship between abnormal morphometric measurements and fetuses with Down syndrome was detected but only during specific weeks of pregnancy. CONCLUSION Although it appears that biometric measurements may be useful for Down syndrome, further study is needed before its widespread introduction into clinical practice.

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Arti Pandya

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Dru E. Carlson

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Kari A. Casas

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Rhona Schreck

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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