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Category: 14. Physical health, conventional medicine, and
folk medicine
ABEL001. Abel, David E., and Chad A.
Grotegut. King Syndrome in pregnancy. Obstetrics
& Gynecology 101 no. 5 part 2 (May 2003):
1146-1149 .
Publication type: Journal article
Electronic access: Full text available in ScienceDirect
DOI: 10.1016/S0029-7844(02)02507-3
This article discusses a case of King Syndrome (which
the authors define as ". . . dysmorphic features including craniofacial
and skeletal anomalies, myopathy, and a predisposition to malignant
hyperthermia" (p. 1146)) in a young, pregnant Lumbee woman. She
had had, from birth, a cleft palate, ptosis, and muscle weakness. Her
first cousin had Noonan Syndrome (a condition similar to King Syndrome),
and three relatives had a history of malignant hyperthermia. She had
had respiratory failure three years before her pregnancy and had a gastrostomy
tube inserted, which she used for a year. Afterwards, she had pneumonia
frequently and used a ventilator at night.
She was admitted to the hospital 34 weeks into her
pregnancy because an ultrasound revealed intrauterine growth restriction.
Doctors feared the growth restriction might, later in the pregnancy,
cause respiratory deterioration. The infant was delivered prematurely;
it showed no dysmorphic features and had no postpartum respiratory problems.
The authors note that "There is no diagnostic
test available for King Syndrome or Native American myopathy. The diagnosis
relies on obtaining a personal or family history of malignant hyperthermia
in the setting of the characteristic clinical features" (p. 1148).
Additional Subjects: King Syndrome
| Malignant hyperthermia | Pregnancy
This annotation was written on: May
2, 2003; edited on May 2, 2003.
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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