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Apert syndrome is a congenital craniosynostosis syndrome characterized by premature fusion of cranial sutures, midfacial hypoplasia, and syndactyly of hands and feet.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vsa0dX-s-po
It represents one of the classic acrocephalosyndactylies, along with Crouzon and Pfeiffer syndromes, but is distinguished by complex syndactyly (“mitten hand” deformity).
Radiologically, it is a craniofacial dysostosis associated with FGFR2 mutation, leading to abnormal bone differentiation and early ossification of sutures.
| System | Characteristic Findings |
|---|---|
| Craniofacial | Premature closure of coronal sutures → acrocephaly (tower skull) or brachycephaly; frontal bossing, flat occiput, high forehead. |
| Facial Skeleton | Midface hypoplasia, shallow orbits → proptosis, hypertelorism, beaked nose, hypoplastic maxilla with relative mandibular prognathism. |
| Hands/Feet | Complex syndactyly (fusion of soft tissues and bones, typically digits 2–4): “mitten hand” or “spoon hand.” Feet show similar fusion of toes (“sock foot”). |
| Dental/Oral | High-arched palate, dental crowding, cleft palate (~30%). |
| CNS / development | Variable intellectual disability, hydrocephalus, Chiari I malformation, corpus callosal anomalies, and increased intracranial pressure from craniosynostosis. |
| ENT/Respiratory | Narrow nasal passages, choanal stenosis, upper airway obstruction, recurrent otitis media, possible sleep apnea. |
| Cardiovascular / genitourinary | Occasionally congenital heart or renal anomalies. |