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Journal of Neurosurgery
 
Journal of Neurosurgery: Spine
 
Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics
 
Neurosurgical Focus

A genetic hypothesis for Chiari I malformation with or without syringomyelia

Marcy C. Speer, Ph.D., Timothy M. George, M.D., David S. Enterline, M.D., Amy Franklin, B.A., Chantelle M. Wolpert, PA-C., and Thomas H. Milhorat, M.D.
Center for Human Genetics, Pediatric Neurosurgery Service, Department of Surgery, and Division of Neuroradiology, Department of Radiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina; and Department of Neurosurgery, State University of New York, Brooklyn, New York

Abbreviations used in this paper: CM1 = Chiari 1 malformation; CM1/S = CM1 with associated syringomyelia; MR = magnetic resonance.

Address reprint requests to: Marcy C. Speer, Ph.D., Duke University Medical Center, Box 3445, Durham, North Carolina 27710. email: .

The authors received support of the American Syringomyelia Alliance Project (http://www.asap4sm.com/), the Bobby Jones Open Fund, and a grant from the National Institutes of Health (No. NS26630). Additional information regarding the collaborative study to characterize the genetic basis of Chari 1 malformation with or without syringomyelia is available at http://www2.mc.duke.edu/depts/medicine/medgen.

DOI: 10.3171/foc.2000.8.3.12

In several reports the authors have suggested occasional familial aggregation of syringomyelia and/or Chiari 1 malformation (CM1). Familial aggregation is one characteristic of traits that have an underlying genetic basis. The authors provide evidence for familial aggregation of CM1 and syringomyelia (CM1/S) in a large series of families, establishing that there may be a genetic component to CM1/S in at least a subset of families. The authors observed no cases of isolated familial syringomyelia in their family studies, suggesting that familial syringomyelia is more accurately classified as familial CM1 with associated syringomyelia.

These data, together with the cosegregation of the trait with known genetic syndromes, support the authors' hypothesis of a genetic basis for some CM1/S cases.

KEYWORDS: Chiari 1 malformation; syringomyelia; genetic basis; familial aggregation.

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