Skip to content

Marfan syndrome

Videos

Notes

Genetics

Genetics

Population genetics
Genetic disorders
Down syndrome (Trisomy 21)
Edwards syndrome (Trisomy 18)
Patau syndrome (Trisomy 13)
Fragile X syndrome
Huntington disease
Myotonic dystrophy
Friedreich ataxia
Turner syndrome
Klinefelter syndrome
Prader-Willi syndrome
Angelman syndrome
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome
Cri du chat syndrome
Williams syndrome
Alagille syndrome (NORD)
Achondroplasia
Polycystic kidney disease
Familial adenomatous polyposis
Familial hypercholesterolemia
Hereditary spherocytosis
Huntington disease
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
Marfan syndrome
Multiple endocrine neoplasia
Myotonic dystrophy
Neurofibromatosis
Treacher Collins syndrome
Tuberous sclerosis
von Hippel-Lindau disease
Albinism
Polycystic kidney disease
Cystic fibrosis
Friedreich ataxia
Gaucher disease (NORD)
Glycogen storage disease type I
Glycogen storage disease type II (NORD)
Glycogen storage disease type III
Glycogen storage disease type IV
Glycogen storage disease type V
Hemochromatosis
Mucopolysaccharide storage disease type 1 (Hurler syndrome) (NORD)
Krabbe disease
Leukodystrophy
Niemann-Pick disease types A and B (NORD)
Niemann-Pick disease type C
Primary ciliary dyskinesia
Phenylketonuria (NORD)
Sickle cell disease (NORD)
Tay-Sachs disease (NORD)
Alpha-thalassemia
Beta-thalassemia
Wilson disease
Fragile X syndrome
Alport syndrome
X-linked agammaglobulinemia
Fabry disease (NORD)
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency
Hemophilia
Mucopolysaccharide storage disease type 2 (Hunter syndrome) (NORD)
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
Muscular dystrophy
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
Mitochondrial myopathy
Autosomal trisomies: Pathology review
Muscular dystrophies and mitochondrial myopathies: Pathology review
Miscellaneous genetic disorders: Pathology review

Assessments
Marfan syndrome

Flashcards

0 / 11 complete

Questions

0 / 2 complete
High Yield Notes
6 pages
Flashcards

Marfan syndrome

11 flashcards
Questions

USMLE® Step 1 style questions USMLE

2 questions
Preview

A 25-year-old woman comes to an outpatient clinic to establish care. The patient has not seen a physician in several years but overall feels healthy except for blurry vision. She attributes this symptom to myopia caused by “spending too many hours in front of the laptop.” Past medical history is significant for pelvic inflammatory disease successfully treated with antibiotics. The patient was adopted as a young child and has never met her biological parents. Vitals are within normal limits. Slit-lamp examination is notable for bilateral upward lens subluxation. Physical examination reveals a patient at the 90th percentile for height and 50th percentile for weight. The patient also has long, tapering fingers and a prominent, protruding sternum. Oropharyngeal examination shows a high-arched palate with crowded teeth. This patient is most likely to develop which of the following complications?

External References
Transcript

Content Reviewers:

Rishi Desai, MD, MPH

Contributors:

Tanner Marshall, MS

Marfan syndrome is a genetic disorder that results in defective connective tissue, which can affect a person’s skeleton, heart, blood vessels, eyes, and lungs.

Normally, the interstitial space of various body tissues is full of microfibrils - which are strong rope-like structures that provide tissue integrity and form connective tissue.

Each microfibril is made of cellulose as well as glycoproteins including the protein fibrillin. In some structures microfibrils form a scaffold for additional proteins like elastin.

Elastin fibers are highly cross-linked, and that gives them a rubber-band-like quality, which allows tissues to stretch and then spring back to their original shape.

Tissues that have elastin fibers are the arteries, skin, and lungs, and tissues that have microfibrils but no overlying layer of elastin are like tendons and the ciliary zonules that hold the eye lens in place.

These tissues are less stretchable, but still have considerable tensile strength.

In addition to being part of microfibrils, fibrillin also regulates tissue growth.

Fibrillin sequesters or removes transforming growth factor beta, or TGF-β, which stimulates tissue growth, so fibrillin therefore lowers how much TGF-β is available to stimulate growth.

Marfan syndrome is caused by mutations in a gene called FBN1, or fibrillin 1, on chromosome 15.

It’s autosomal dominant, which means that even if there’s a normal copy of the gene, a single mutated copy of the gene – in other words a heterozygous mutation – is sufficient to cause the disease.

The FBN1 gene encodes Fibrillin-1 protein, one of three fibrillin subtypes.

In Marfan syndrome, fibrillin-1 is either less abundant or it is dysfunctional. As a result, there are fewer functioning microfibrils in the extracellular matrix, and that means there’s less tissue integrity and elasticity.

Connective tissue is found throughout the body, so this can affect nearly every body system.

Additionally, TGF-β doesn’t get effectively sequestered, so TGF-β signaling is excessive in these tissues - meaning more growth.

The most obvious physical features of Marfan syndrome involve the skeleton.

The long bones grow excessively, so individuals are tall with long arms and legs – this is called a Marfanoid body habitus.

They have long, thin fingers and toes too, called arachnodactyly, a reference to the long legs of spiders.

Finally, overgrowth of ribs can cause pectus excavatum, where the chest sinks in, or pectus carinatum, where the chest points out.

Other bone and joint features include scoliosis where the spine has a sideways curve, an inability to extend the elbows all the way to 180 degrees, flexible joints, a downward slant to the eyes, and a narrow palate that crowds the teeth.

In the skin, Marfan syndrome can cause stretch marks, and in the lungs it can cause bullae to form. These are large spaces that replace the normal architecture of the lungs and can cause a pneumothorax to form.

In the eyes, Marfan syndrome is a risk factor for retinal detachment and a dislocation of the lens, which is usually in an upward direction.