Further heterogeneity of the oral-facial-digital syndromes
P. L. Townes, B. P. Wood and J. V. McDonald
Two patients with polysyndactyly of the halluces and typical features of
oral-facial-digital syndrome, type I (OFS I), are described. Previously,
bilateral hallucal polysyndactyly was considered to be a distinctive
feature of OFD II, Mohr syndrome. The original classification of OFD II was
based on clinical similarities between the affected members of the
Mohr-Claussen kindred and the two siblings described by Rimoin and
Edgerton. Review of these cases deomnstrates important clinical
differences, so that justification for the original classification of OFD
II is questioned. Retrospectively, a small number of individuals have been
considered to have had OFD II, but on review these cases appear to
represent a clinically heterogeneous group of disorders.