A case of atypical Werner syndrome without WRN gene mutations

2009 
Werner syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive, hereditary disease that demonstrates progeroid features and has characteristic WRN gene mutations. Atypical Werner syndrome refers to a small subset of individuals who produce the normal WRN protein, but show some signs and symptoms that sufficiently overlap with Werner syndrome. Recently, we experienced a case of atypical Werner syndrome. A 43-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital due to being severely underweight. She had an operative history of cataracts in both eyes and had suffered from multiple skin ulcers, deafness, and vision loss. Physical examination revealed short stature, low body weight, flat feet, and a scleroderma-like skin change. Laboratory and clinical tests showed that the patient had diabetes mellitus, osteoporosis, and premature atherosclerotic features. Her clinical presentation and laboratory findings were consistent with Werner syndrome. We performed a WRN, LMNA gene sequence analysis, but no mutations were detected. The patient was diagnosed with atypical Werner syndrome.
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