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Retinal detachment and occipital encephalocele (disorder)
Retinal detachment and occipital encephalocele
Knobloch syndrome
Knobloch syndrome is defined by vitreoretinal and macular degeneration, and occipital encephalocele. The disease has characteristics of early-onset severe myopia (usually becoming apparent in the first year of life), vitreoretinal degeneration with retinal detachment, macular abnormalities, and midline encephalocele (mainly in the occipital region). The syndrome is clinically and genetically heterogeneous with three forms, KNO1, KNO2 and KNO3, being defined. KNO1 is caused by inactivating mutations in the collagen XVIII/endostatin gene (COL18A1) mapped to 21q22.3. The KNO2 form was defined when linkage to the KNO1 locus was excluded in a family reported from New Zealand. Recently, a novel type of KS (KNO3) was mapped to chromosome 17q11.2. Inherited as an autosomal recessive trait.
syndroom van ablatio retinae en occipitale encephalocele
syndroom van Knobloch
syndroom van Knobloch-Layer
syndroom van netvliesloslating en occipitale encefalokèle
Id703542000
StatusPrimitive
Associated morphologyAtrophy
Finding sitePeripheral retina
Associated morphologyHernia
Finding siteBrain structure
OccurrenceCongenital
Pathological processPathological developmental process
Associated morphologyDegenerative abnormality
Finding siteMacula lutea structure
Associated morphologyAtrophy
Finding siteVitreous body structure
DHD Diagnosis thesaurus reference set
ICD-10 complex map reference set
TargetQ15.8
RuleTRUE
AdviceALWAYS Q15.8
CorrelationSNOMED CT source code to target map code correlation not specified