Pectus excavatum and heritable disorders of the connective tissue

<em>Pectus excavatum</em>, the most frequent congenital chest wall deformity, may be rarely observed as a sole deformity or as a sign of an underlying connective tissue disorder. To date, only few studies have described correlations between this deformity and heritable connective tissue...

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Main Authors: Francesca Tocchioni, Marco Ghionzoli, Antonio Messineo, Paolo Romagnoli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-09-01
Series:Pediatric Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/pr/article/view/4874
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spelling doaj-831bd9f1d6db4f2eb219c1e28dc9e3e32021-01-02T14:43:47ZengMDPI AGPediatric Reports2036-749X2036-75032013-09-0153e15e1510.4081/pr.2013.e152623Pectus excavatum and heritable disorders of the connective tissueFrancesca Tocchioni0Marco Ghionzoli1Antonio Messineo2Paolo Romagnoli3Department of Pediatric Surgery, Children’s Hospital A. Meyer, FlorenceDepartment of Pediatric Surgery, Children’s Hospital A. Meyer, FlorenceDepartment of Pediatric Surgery, Children’s Hospital A. Meyer, FlorenceDepartment of Anatomy, Histology and Forensic Medicine, University of Florence, Florence<em>Pectus excavatum</em>, the most frequent congenital chest wall deformity, may be rarely observed as a sole deformity or as a sign of an underlying connective tissue disorder. To date, only few studies have described correlations between this deformity and heritable connective tissue disorders such as Marfan, Ehlers-Danlos, Poland, MASS (Mitral valve prolapse, not progressive Aortic enlargement, Skeletal and Skin alterations) phenotype among others. When concurring with connective tissue disorder, cardiopulmonary and vascular involvement may be associated to the thoracic defect. Ruling out the concomitance of <em>pectus excavatum</em> and connective tissue disorders, therefore, may have a direct implication both on surgical outcome and long term prognosis. In this review we focused on biological bases of connective tissue disorders which may be relevant to the pathogenesis of <em>pectus excavatum</em>, portraying surgical and clinical implication of their concurrence.http://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/pr/article/view/4874pectus excavatum, Marfan syndrome, MASS, fibrillin, fibrillinopathies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesca Tocchioni
Marco Ghionzoli
Antonio Messineo
Paolo Romagnoli
spellingShingle Francesca Tocchioni
Marco Ghionzoli
Antonio Messineo
Paolo Romagnoli
Pectus excavatum and heritable disorders of the connective tissue
Pediatric Reports
pectus excavatum, Marfan syndrome, MASS, fibrillin, fibrillinopathies
author_facet Francesca Tocchioni
Marco Ghionzoli
Antonio Messineo
Paolo Romagnoli
author_sort Francesca Tocchioni
title Pectus excavatum and heritable disorders of the connective tissue
title_short Pectus excavatum and heritable disorders of the connective tissue
title_full Pectus excavatum and heritable disorders of the connective tissue
title_fullStr Pectus excavatum and heritable disorders of the connective tissue
title_full_unstemmed Pectus excavatum and heritable disorders of the connective tissue
title_sort pectus excavatum and heritable disorders of the connective tissue
publisher MDPI AG
series Pediatric Reports
issn 2036-749X
2036-7503
publishDate 2013-09-01
description <em>Pectus excavatum</em>, the most frequent congenital chest wall deformity, may be rarely observed as a sole deformity or as a sign of an underlying connective tissue disorder. To date, only few studies have described correlations between this deformity and heritable connective tissue disorders such as Marfan, Ehlers-Danlos, Poland, MASS (Mitral valve prolapse, not progressive Aortic enlargement, Skeletal and Skin alterations) phenotype among others. When concurring with connective tissue disorder, cardiopulmonary and vascular involvement may be associated to the thoracic defect. Ruling out the concomitance of <em>pectus excavatum</em> and connective tissue disorders, therefore, may have a direct implication both on surgical outcome and long term prognosis. In this review we focused on biological bases of connective tissue disorders which may be relevant to the pathogenesis of <em>pectus excavatum</em>, portraying surgical and clinical implication of their concurrence.
topic pectus excavatum, Marfan syndrome, MASS, fibrillin, fibrillinopathies
url http://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/pr/article/view/4874
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