Ring chromosome 9 is a rare chromosomal abnormality. The severity and nature of symptoms vary according to the structural abnormalities. Here, we report a case of a patient with neurological and malformative syndrome caused by a ring of chromosome 9 associated with partial 9p deletion. The 1-year-old child had a general hypotonia at birth regressed to peripheral hypotonia and normal axial tonus, psychomotor retardation, weight retardation, microcephaly and trigonocephaly, facial dysmorphia, flattened neck, abnormal nipple spread, dorsal kyphosis, white line hernia, ectopic testis and cardiac malformation cured at the age of 1 year, no other signs detectable. The standard constitutional karyotype revealed a ring of chromosome 9 with a deletion of the region pter-22p: 46,XY,r(9)(p22;q34). The chromosomal abnormality was homogeneous. The genetic counseling remains incomplete due to the absence of the parents’ karyotype. The cardinal traits reported in the ring chromosome 9 and chromosome 9p deletion syndrome were observed in our patient such as hypotonia, psychomotor retardation, microcephaly and trigonocephaly. Indeed, the deleted region contains numerous genes involved in the neurological manifestations and cranial dysmorphia including: CER1, FREM1, NFIB, GLDC, VLDLR, FOXD4, SMARCA2 and KANK1. Microarray analysis is important in order to detect the deleted segment and thereby the deleted genes.
 The ring chromosome 9 is characterized by a genotype heterogeneity and a phenotype variability that can be due to multiple factors: loss or gain of genetic material, mitotic disruption, ring chromosome instability. Genotype-phenotype correlation could provide reliable information for genetic diagnosis, genetic counseling and clinical management.
 
 Keywords: Chromosome 9, Ring, Deletion, Phenotype, Genotype.