reviewJournal of Endocrinological InvestigationJun 11, 2015HYBRID OA

Prader-Willi syndrome: a review of clinical, genetic, and endocrine findings

Winthrop-University Hospital · University of Kansas Medical Center

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Introduction

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a multisystemic complex genetic disorder caused by lack of expression of genes on the paternally inherited chromosome 15q11.2-q13 region. There are three main genetic subtypes in PWS: paternal 15q11-q13 deletion (65-75 % of cases), maternal uniparental disomy 15 (20-30 % of cases), and imprinting defect (1-3 %). DNA methylation analysis is the only technique that will diagnose PWS in all three molecular genetic classes and differentiate PWS from Angelman syndrome. Clinical manifestations change with age with hypotonia and a poor suck resulting in failure to thrive during infancy. As the individual ages, other features such as short stature, food seeking with excessive weight gain, developmental delay, cognitive disability and behavioral problems become evident. The phenotype is likely due to hypothalamic dysfunction, which is responsible for hyperphagia, temperature instability, high pain threshold, hypersomnia and multiple endocrine abnormalities including growth hormone and thyroid-stimulating hormone deficiencies, hypogonadism and central adrenal insufficiency. Obesity and its complications are the major causes of morbidity and mortality in PWS.

Methods

An extensive review of the literature was performed and interpreted within the context of clinical practice and frequently asked questions from referring physicians and families to include the current status of the cause and diagnosis of the clinical, genetics and endocrine findings in PWS.

Citation impact

600
total citations
FWCI
33.92
Percentile
100%
References
149
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Failure to thrive
  • Hypotonia
  • Short stature
  • Genomic imprinting
  • Medicine
  • Context (archaeology)
  • Uniparental disomy
  • Obesity
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