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Hirschsprung disease, susceptibility to, 4

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Description

The disorder described by Hirschsprung (1888) and known as Hirschsprung disease or aganglionic megacolon is characterized by congenital absence of intrinsic ganglion cells in the myenteric (Auerbach) and submucosal (Meissner) plexuses of the gastrointestinal tract. Patients are diagnosed with the short-segment form (S-HSCR, approximately 80% of cases) when the aganglionic segment does not extend beyond the upper sigmoid, and with the long-segment form (L-HSCR) when aganglionosis extends proximal to the sigmoid. Total colonic aganglionosis and total intestinal HSCR also occur (Amiel et al., 2008). Isolated HSCR appears to be of complex nonmendelian inheritance with low sex-dependent penetrance and variable expression according to the length of the aganglionic segment, suggestive of the involvement of one or more genes with low penetrance (Amiel et al., 2008). For a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of susceptibility to Hirschsprung disease, see 142623.

OMIM

  • Mode of Inheritance

  • Autosomal dominant inheritance

VARIANTS

62

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Genes

External Links

  • OMIM

    613712

  • Orphanet
  • HPO
  • Medgen

    C3150975

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