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Metopic suture in fetuses with Apert syndrome at 22–27 weeks of gestation

69

Citations

17

References

2005

Year

Abstract

In normal fetuses, cranial bones are believed to grow in response to the centrifugal pressure from the expanding brain and proximity of the dura to the suture is critical in maintaining its patency. In Apert syndrome, the frontal bossing may be a mere consequence of a genetically predetermined premature closure of the coronal suture. Alternatively, there is a genetically predetermined deformation of the brain, which in turn, through differential stretch of the dura in the temporal and frontal regions, causes premature closure of the coronal suture and impaired closure of the metopic suture.

References

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