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Kleeblattschaedel
Kleeblattschaedel | |
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Other names | Cloverleaf skull, kleeblattschädel, isolated cloverleaf skull syndrome |
1-day-old male infant with kleeblattschaedel | |
Complications | Hydrocephalus, intellectual disability |
Kleeblattschaedel is a rare malformation of the head where there is a protrusion of the skull and broadening of the face. This condition is a severe type of craniosynostosis.
The condition can be both isolated or associated with other craniofacial dysostosises. 85% of children with this condition have other anomalies. Severe forms of the condition are often a sign of syndromic craniosynostosis combined with a grotesque constriction ring of the lambdoid structure and the squamosal bone or in another area.
Name and etymology
Kleeblattschaedel (Kleeblattschädel) is German for "cloverleaf skull". The disorder was named Kleeblattschaedel syndrome in 1958. The German word is sometimes used in medical English, where it is often regarded as more or less naturalized, thus appearing in any combination of capitalized or not, with umlaut diacritic or not, and italicized or not.
History
The first case reported was back in 1849. The condition was first identified in 1960, and the first case in the United States was reported in 1965.
Causes
The condition is caused by a premature fusing of the fibrous sutures. The distinctive head shape seen in kleeblattschaedel is caused by the closure of the sagittal, coronal, and lambdoid sutures, with subsequent bulging of the cranial contents leading to a trilobate head shape. The condition is also caused by absence of the coronal and lambdoid sutures.
Conditions with kleeblattschaedel include:
- Antley-Bixler syndrome
- Apert syndrome
- Beare-Stevenson cutis gyrata syndrome
- Boston-type craniosynostosis
- Carpenter syndrome
- Cranioectodermal dysplasia
- Crouzon syndrome
- Micromelic bone dysplasia with cloverleaf skull
- Osteoglophonic dysplasia
- Pfeiffer syndrome
- Saethre-Chotzen syndrome
- Thanatophoric dysplasia
Epidemiology
The condition occurs equally in both males as in females.