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Seckel Syndrome

Seckel Syndrome is a birth defect syndrome with severe short stature.

A child can have some or all of the following symptoms:

Seckel syndrome has been called "bird-headed dwarfism" (a descriptive term that has come to be regarded as pejorative). Inside the small head, unfortunately, there is a very small brain. This usually means developmental delay and, later, mentally ill. About half of Seckel children have IQ below 50. Most children with Seckel syndrome are "friendly and pleasant" but "often hyperkinetic (hyperactive) and easily distracted".

This disease is genetic. It is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. It is not a single homogeneous genetic disease and can be due to genes on chromosomes 3 and 18.

Helmut G.P. Seckel (1900-60) was a pediatrician who fled his native Germany in 1936 for the USA where he became professor and eventually chairman of Pediatrics at the University of Chicago. Dr. Seckel did not discover the syndrome now named for him but he did, in 1960, produce the definitive publication describing the clinical condition based on 2 children he had personally seen with it and 13 reliable + 11 less reliable cases from the medical literature.

Alternative names for Seckel Syndrome (aside from "bird-headed dwarfism") include: Seckel type dwarfism, nanocephalic dwarfism, and microcephalic primordial dwarfism.

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25/06/2008 - Are you an individual or family affected by MOPDII or Primordial Dwarfism. If you are, the Walking With Giants Foundation would love to hear from. Please click here to contact us.


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