. Genetics, Prenatal Influences & Congenital Conditions
Case 1: Inheritance Patterns & Family Counseling
Scenario
A 36-year-old mother brings her 5-year-old son for a well-child visit. She
reports that her husband was recently diagnosed with Huntington’s disease.
She is worried about her child’s risk and asks whether future pregnancies
will also be affected.
What to Focus On
1. Autosomal dominant inheritance
2. Probability of transmission
3. Recurrence risk for each pregnancy
4. Indications for genetic counseling
Clinical Reasoning
Huntington’s disease follows an autosomal dominant inheritance
pattern, meaning only one affected parent is required for transmission.
Each child has a 50% chance of inheriting the condition, and this risk
applies independently to every pregnancy.
This condition does not skip generations, which is a key exam concept.
Families should be referred for genetic counseling to discuss recurrence
risk, testing options, and future reproductive planning.
Case 2: Teratogens & Maternal Health Effects
Scenario
A 28-year-old pregnant woman presents at 12 weeks gestation. She reports
alcohol use prior to recognizing the pregnancy and has poorly controlled
diabetes. She is concerned about potential effects on fetal development.
What to Focus On
1. Teratogen exposure (alcohol)
2. Maternal disease impact
3. Timing of exposure (first trimester)
4. Environmental vs genetic causes
,Clinical Reasoning
Alcohol exposure during early pregnancy can disrupt fetal brain
development, leading to fetal alcohol spectrum disorders with long-term
neurodevelopmental consequences.
Maternal diabetes can affect fetal growth and organ development through
metabolic and vascular mechanisms.
These are environmental (non-genetic) influences, meaning they result
from the intrauterine environment rather than inherited traits.
Distinguishing genetic vs environmental causes is essential for accurate
counseling.
Case 3: Structural Abnormalities & Feeding Dysfunction
Scenario
A newborn is delivered with ambiguous genitalia and a cleft palate. During
feeding, the infant has difficulty maintaining suction, milk leaks through the
nose, and feeding sessions are prolonged with poor weight gain. The
parents ask about necessary testing and feeding strategies.
What to Focus On
1. Indications for karyotype testing
2. Structural vs genetic abnormalities
3. Feeding mechanics in cleft palate
4. Functional consequences of anatomy
Clinical Reasoning
Ambiguous genitalia is a key indication for karyotype testing to identify
chromosomal abnormalities.
A cleft palate prevents the infant from generating negative pressure needed
for effective sucking, leading to:
1. Ineffective feeding
2. Nasal regurgitation
3. Poor weight gain
Management focuses on feeding support (specialized
bottles/techniques) rather than immediate surgical correction.
This case highlights the principle that structure directly affects function.
, Case 4: Congenital Anomalies – Mechanical vs Genetic Causes
Scenario
A newborn is noted to have missing digits on one hand. The remainder of
the physical exam is normal, and there is no family history of similar
abnormalities. The parents are concerned about recurrence in future
pregnancies.
What to Focus On
1. Amniotic band syndrome
2. Mechanical vs inherited causes
3. Isolated vs systemic findings
4. Recurrence risk
Clinical Reasoning
Amniotic band syndrome results from fibrous bands constricting fetal
limbs, causing structural deformities. This is a mechanical disruption,
not a genetic disorder.
Because it is not inherited, the recurrence risk is low, which is important
for reassurance.
Distinguishing mechanical vs genetic causes is critical for counseling and
management.
Case 5: Newborn Screening & Metabolic Disorders
Scenario
A 2-week-old infant presents with lethargy, poor feeding, and constipation.
Newborn screening reveals an abnormal endocrine result.
In another case, a toddler presents with developmental delay after newborn
screening was missed at birth.
What to Focus On
1. Purpose of newborn screening
2. Congenital hypothyroidism
3. Galactosemia
4. Importance of early detection
Clinical Reasoning
Newborn screening identifies conditions that are not immediately apparent
but can lead to severe developmental consequences if untreated.