Menkes Syndrome (Kinky Hair Disease; Trichothiodystrophy)

Related Research units

Abstract

Menkes disease, also known as kinky hair disease (OMIM 309400), is a lethal X-linked recessive neurodegenerative disease of impaired copper transport. Menkes first described the disease in 1962, followed by Danks’ keen observation in 1973. The incidence of Menkes disease in Europe is approximately 1 in 300,000 live births, caused by mutations in the Xq13.3 gene ATP7A. Clinical symptoms, in addition to pili torti (kinky hair), begin at 2–3 months of age with loss of developmental milestones, truncal hypotonia, seizures, urologic problems, recurrent infections, and failure to thrive. Milder variants of Menkes disease include the occipital horn syndrome (also known as X-linked cutis laxa or Ehlers-Danlos type 9). The clinical characteristics, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management options are reviewed in this chapter.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationNeurocutaneous Disorders : A Clinical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Approach
EditorsChristos Panteliadis, Ramsis Benjamin, Christian Hagel
REQUIRED books only: Number of pages9
Place of PublicationZürich
PublisherSpringer International Publishing
Publication date04.02.2022
Edition3
Pages435-443
ISBN (Print)978-3-030-87892-4
ISBN (Electronic)978-3-030-87893-1
Publication statusPublished - 04.02.2022