Abstract

We report a fifteen month old Egyptian male child, the third in order of birth of healthy non consanguineous parents, who has normal mentality, normal upper limbs and left lower limb. The right lower limb has short femur, and tibia with anterior bowing, and an overlying skin dimple. The right foot has also oligosyndactyly (three toes), and the foot is in vulgus position. There is limited abduction at the hip joint, full flexion and extension at the knee, limited dorsiflexion and plantar flexion at the ankle joint. The X-ray of the lower limb and pelvis shows proximal focal femoral deficiency, absent right fibula with shortening of the right tibia and anterior bowing of its distal third. The acetabulum is shallow. He has a family history of congenital cyanotic heart disease. Our patient represents most probably the first case of femur fibula ulna syndrome (FFU) in Egypt with unilateral right leg affection. We suggest that the condition in our patient may be due to a rare autosomal dominant mutation with possible gonadal mosaicism and with variable expression in the family, as limb anomaly in one child and cyanotic congenital heart disease in another child.

Highlights

  • Production and hosting by ElsevierFibular hemimelia is a congenital deficiency or absence of the fibula, and it is one of the rare congenital malformations

  • Fibular hemimelia ranges from mild hypoplasia to aplasia and may be unilateral or bilateral

  • There is a family history of cyanotic congenital heart disease in a previous female sib who died at the ICU before surgical operation at the age of one month

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Summary

Introduction

Fibular hemimelia is a congenital deficiency or absence of the fibula, and it is one of the rare congenital malformations It is the most frequent reduction malformation of long bones [1]. Type II includes cases with unilateral absence of the fibula, anterior bowing of the tibia with skin dimpling, and foot deformity with absent rays and marked shortening of the leg (35% of cases). Type III has unilateral or bilateral absence of the fibula, with same leg and foot deformities and multiple skeletal defects (55% of cases) [2]. Other associated abnormalities of the knee, leg, ankle and foot are related to the fibular field of the lower limb bud [6]. The right femur is short and its ossific center is small compared to the left, its long axis is oval in shape and longitudinally oriented

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