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Mayo Test Catalog, (Sorted By Test Name) - Mayo Medical ...

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FMDL<br />

88533<br />

FMNCY<br />

90060<br />

6 > or =100 Strongly positive Reference values<br />

apply to all ages.<br />

Clinical References: Homburger HA: Allergic diseases. In Clinical Diagnosis and Management by<br />

Laboratory Methods. 21st edition. Edited by McPherson RA, Pincus MR. WB Saunders, Publ, New York,<br />

Chapter 53, Part VI, pp. 961-971, 2007<br />

Miller-Dieker Syndrome, 17p13.3 Deletion, FISH<br />

Clinical Information: Miller-Dieker syndrome is associated with a deletion on the short arm of<br />

chromosome 17. The syndrome can be suspected in patients with microcephaly and a prominent<br />

forehead with vertical skin furrowing and bitemporal narrowing. The phenotype includes type I<br />

lissencephaly (cerebral agyria or smooth brain with a 4-layer cortex), profound electroencephalogram<br />

(EEG) abnormality, seizures, hypotonia, severe-to-profound mental retardation, and pre- and postnatal<br />

growth retardation. Facial features include ptosis (droopy eyelid), upturned nares, long philtrum<br />

(vertical groove on the midline of the upper lip) with thin upper lip, mild micrognathia (small jaw), and<br />

malformed ears. Heart and kidney defects are common. Most patients die in infancy. High-resolution<br />

chromosome studies (CMS/8696 Chromosome Analysis, for Congenital Disorders, Blood) are<br />

recommended for patients suspected of having Miller-Dieker syndrome to detect the deletion and to rule<br />

out other chromosome abnormalities or translocations. FISH studies are also recommended to detect<br />

cryptic translocations involving 17p13.3 that are not demonstrated by conventional chromosome<br />

studies.<br />

Useful For: Aids in the diagnosis of 17p13.3 deletion (Miller-Dieker syndrome or type I<br />

lissencephaly), in conjunction with high-resolution chromosome studies (CMS/8696 Chromosome<br />

Analysis, for Congenital Disorders, Blood)<br />

Interpretation: Any individual with a normal signal pattern (2 signals) in each metaphase is<br />

considered negative for a deletion in the region tested by this probe. Any patient with a FISH signal<br />

pattern indicating loss of the critical region will be reported as having a deletion of the regions tested by<br />

this probe. This is consistent with a diagnosis of 17p13.3 deletion (Miller-Dieker syndrome or type 1<br />

lissencephaly).<br />

Reference Values:<br />

An interpretive report will be provided.<br />

Clinical References: 1. Van Dyke DL, Wiktor A: Clinical cytogenetics. In Laboratory Medicine.<br />

2nd edition. Chapter 26. Edited by K McClatchey. Baltimore, Williams & Wilkins, 2002 2. Jones K:<br />

Miller-Dieker syndrome (Lissencephaly syndrome). In Smith's Recognizable Patterns of Human<br />

Malformation. 5th edition. Philadelphia, WB Saunders Company, 1997 3. Cardoso C, Leventer RJ,<br />

Ward HL, et al: Refinement of a 400 kb critical region allows genotypic differentiation between isolated<br />

lissencephaly, Miller-Dieker syndrome, and other phenotypes secondary to deletions of 17p13.3. Am J<br />

Hum Genet 2003;72:918-930<br />

Minocycline Level, BA<br />

Reference Values:<br />

Single dose peak (1-4 hrs): 100 mg: 2.1 - 5.1 mcg/mL<br />

Mean Steady State<br />

135 mg/day: 2.9 mcg/mL<br />

Any undisclosed antimicrobials might affect the results.<br />

<strong>Test</strong> Performed <strong>By</strong>: Focus Diagnostics, Inc.<br />

5785 Corporate Avenue<br />

Cypress, CA 90630-4750<br />

Current as of January 3, 2013 2:22 pm CST 800-533-1710 or 507-266-5700 or <strong>Mayo</strong><strong>Medical</strong>Laboratories.com Page 1219

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