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Definition:
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Waardenburg syndrome is a group of conditions passed down through families that involve deafness and pale skin, hair, and eye color.
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Alternative Names:
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Klein-Waardenburg syndrome; Waardenburg-Shah syndrome
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Causes, incidence, and risk factors:
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Waardenburg syndrome is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait, meaning only one parent has to pass on the faulty gene for a child to be affected.
There are four main types of Waardenburg syndrome. The most common are type I and type II.
Type III (Klein-Waardenburg syndrome) and type IV (Waardenburg-Shah syndrome) are more rare.
The multiple types of this syndrome result from defects in different genes. Most people with this disease have a parent with the disease, but the symptoms in the parent can be quite different from those in the child.
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Symptoms:
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Symptoms may include:
- Cleft lip (rare)
- Constipation
- Deafness (more common in type II disease)
- Extremely pale blue eyes or eye colors that don't match (heterochromia)
- Pale color skin, hair, and eyes (partial albinism)
- Difficulty completely straightening joints
- Possible slight decrease in intellectual function
- Wide-set eyes (in type I)
- White patch of hair or early graying of the hair
Less common types of this disease may cause problems with the arms or intestines.
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Signs and tests:
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Tests may include:
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Treatment:
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There is no specific treatment. Symptoms will be treated as appropriate. Special diets and medicines to keep the bowel moving are prescribed to those patients who have constipation.
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Expectations (prognosis):
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Once hearing problems are corrected, most people with this syndrome should be able to lead a normal life. Those with rarer forms of the syndrome may have other complications.
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Complications:
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- Constipation severe enough to require part of large bowel to be removed
- Hearing loss
- Self-esteem problems, or other problems related to appearance
- Slight decreased intellectual functioning (possible, unusual)
- Slight increased risk for muscle tumor called rhabdomyosarcoma
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Calling your health care provider:
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Genetic counseling may be helpful if you have a family history of Waardenburg syndrome and plan to have children. Call for a hearing test if you or your child has deafness or decreased hearing.
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References:
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Morelli JG. Hypopigmented lesions. In: Kliegman RM, Behrman RE, Jenson HB, Stanton BF, eds. Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics. 18th ed. Philadelphia, Pa: Saunders Elsevier; 2007:chap 652.
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