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Jennifer R. Niebyl
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David A. Blake
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Laura E. Rocco
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Rosemary Baumgardner
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E. David Mellits
Abstract
We studied metabolic, endocrine, and environmental factors in 59 women who had delivered a child with cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL 1 CP) and compared these values with those of 56 mothers of unaffected children. There was no significant nt difference between the two groups with respect to race, age, weight, height, education, parity, menstrual history, medical illnesses, or the use of contraceptives, tobacco, alcohol, or caffeine. All patients had a normal XX karyotype confirmed by the fluorescent banding technique. The two groups demonstrated no significant difference in test results of serum chemistries, glucose tolerance, serum or erythrocyte folate, vitamin A, carotene, corticoids, prolactin T4, free T4, urine 17—ketosteroids, 17—hydroxysteroids, total es-trogens, or pregnanediol. Urinalyses revealed no group differences in the presence of barbiturates, amphetamines, salicy-lates, or benzodiazepines. The percentage of immunologic studies reflecting susceptibility to toxoplasmosis, rubella, cy-tomegalic inclusion disease, and herpes was not different between the two groups. The only statistically significant metabolic differences between the two groups were serum alkaline phosphatase, creatinine, creatinine clearance, and creatinine clearance/m2. Phenytoin pharmacokinetics and urinary metabolic patterns were compared in a subgroup of ten mothers of affected children and ten mothers from the control group. No significant differences were observed. However, a brief course of pheny-toin treatment induced a greater inhibition of the folate tolerance test in controls than in mothers of children with clefts. Cleft lip, with or without cleft palate, (CL i CP) is the second most common type of birth defect in the United States, occurring in l to 2 per 1000 live births. A The authors are affiliated with the