What is trisomy 18?
Trisomy 18, also called Edwards
syndrome, is a chromosomal condition associated with abnormalities in many
parts of the body. Individuals with trisomy 18 often have slow growth before
birth (intrauterine growth retardation) and a low birth weight. Affected
individuals may have heart defects and abnormalities of other organs that
develop before birth. Other features of trisomy 18 include a small, abnormally
shaped head; a small jaw and mouth; and clenched fists with overlapping
fingers. Due to the presence of several life-threatening medical problems, many
individuals with trisomy 18 die before birth or within their first month. Five
to 10 percent of children with this condition live past their first year, and
these children often have severe intellectual disability.
Trisomy 18 occurs in about 1 in
5,000 live-born infants; it is more common in pregnancy, but many affected
fetuses do not survive to term. Although women of all ages can have a child
with trisomy 18, the chance of having a child with this condition increases as
a woman gets older.
Most cases of trisomy 18 result
from having three copies of chromosome 18 in each cell in the body instead of
the usual two copies. The extra genetic material disrupts the normal course of
development, causing the characteristic features of trisomy 18.
Approximately 5 percent of people
with trisomy 18 have an extra copy of chromosome 18 in only some of the body's
cells. In these people, the condition is called mosaic trisomy 18. The severity
of mosaic trisomy 18 depends on the type and number of cells that have the
extra chromosome. The development of individuals with this form of trisomy 18
may range from normal to severely affected.
Very rarely, part of the long (q)
arm of chromosome 18 becomes attached (translocated) to another chromosome
during the formation of reproductive cells (eggs and sperm) or very early in
embryonic development. Affected individuals have two copies of chromosome 18,
plus the extra material from chromosome 18 attached to another chromosome.
People with this genetic change are said to have partial trisomy 18. If only
part of the q arm is present in three copies, the physical signs of partial
trisomy 18 may be less severe than those typically seen in trisomy 18. If the
entire q arm is present in three copies, individuals may be as severely
affected as if they had three full copies of chromosome 18.
Most cases of trisomy 18 are not
inherited, but occur as random events during the formation of eggs and sperm.
An error in cell division called nondisjunction results in a reproductive cell
with an abnormal number of chromosomes. For example, an egg or sperm cell may
gain an extra copy of chromosome 18. If one of these atypical reproductive
cells contributes to the genetic makeup of a child, the child will have an
extra chromosome 18 in each of the body's cells.
Mosaic trisomy 18 is also not
inherited. It occurs as a random event during cell division early in embryonic
development. As a result, some of the body's cells have the usual two copies of
chromosome 18, and other cells have three copies of this chromosome.
Partial trisomy 18 can be
inherited. An unaffected person can carry a rearrangement of genetic material
between chromosome 18 and another chromosome. This rearrangement is called a
balanced translocation because there is no extra material from chromosome 18.
Although they do not have signs of trisomy 18, people who carry this type of
balanced translocation are at an increased risk of having children with the
condition.
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