LEOPARD syndrome
Reviewed April 2011
What is LEOPARD syndrome?
LEOPARD syndrome is a condition that affects many areas of the body. The acronym LEOPARD describes the characteristic features associated with the condition: lentigines (brown skin spots similar to freckles), ECG abnormalities (measurement of abnormal electrical heart activity), ocular hypertelorism (widely spaced eyes), pulmonary stenosis (narrowing of the artery from the heart to the lungs), abnormalities of genitalia (reproductive organs), retardation of growth (short stature), and deafness. These features vary, however, even among affected individuals in the same family. Not all individuals affected with LEOPARD syndrome have all the characteristic features of this condition.
The lentigines seen in LEOPARD syndrome typically first appear in mid-childhood, mostly on the face, neck, and upper body. Affected individuals may have thousands of lentigines by the time they reach puberty. Unlike freckles, the appearance of lentigines has nothing to do with sun exposure. In addition to lentigines, people with LEOPARD syndrome may have lighter brown skin spots called café-au-lait spots. Café-au-lait spots tend to develop before the lentigines, appearing within the first year of life in most affected people.
ECG abnormalities indicate heart problems. Of the people with LEOPARD syndrome who have heart problems, about 80 percent have hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, which is a thickening of the heart muscle that forces the heart to work harder to pump blood. The hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in affected individuals most often affects the lower left chamber of the heart (the left ventricle). Up to 20 percent of people with LEOPARD syndrome that have heart problems have pulmonary stenosis.
People with LEOPARD syndrome can have a distinctive facial appearance. In addition to ocular hypertelorism, affected individuals may have droopy eyelids (ptosis), thick lips, and low-set ears.
Abnormalities of the genitalia occur most often in males with LEOPARD syndrome. The most common abnormality in affected males is undescended testes (cryptorchidism). Other males may have a urethra that opens on the underside of the penis (hypospadias). Males with LEOPARD syndrome may have a reduced ability to have biological children (decreased fertility). Females with LEOPARD syndrome may have poorly developed ovaries and delayed puberty.
At birth, people with LEOPARD syndrome are typically of normal weight and height, but in some, growth slows over time. This slow growth results in short stature in 50 to 75 percent of people with LEOPARD syndrome.
Approximately 20 percent of individuals with LEOPARD syndrome develop hearing loss. This hearing loss is caused by abnormalities in the inner ear (sensorineural deafness) and can be present from birth or develop later in life.
Other signs and symptoms of LEOPARD syndrome include learning disorders, mild developmental delay, a sunken or protruding chest, and extra folds of skin on the back of the neck.
Many of the signs and symptoms of LEOPARD syndrome also occur in a similar disorder called Noonan syndrome. It can be difficult to tell the two disorders apart in early childhood. However, the features of the two disorders differ later in life.
full-text:
LEOPARD syndrome - Genetics Home Reference
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