Next Article in Journal
CRP Involved in Nile Tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) against Bacterial Infection
Next Article in Special Issue
Morphometric and Genetic Description of Trophic Adaptations in Cichlid Fishes
Previous Article in Journal
Anthropometrics, Performance, and Psychological Outcomes in Mixed Martial Arts Athletes
Previous Article in Special Issue
Cranial-Vertebral-Maxillary Morphological Integration in Down Syndrome
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Robustness of Distinctive Facial Features in Prader-Willi Syndrome: A Stereophotogrammetric Analysis and Association with Clinical and Biochemical Markers in Adult Individuals

by
Claudia Dolci
1,*,
Antonello E. Rigamonti
2,
Annalisa Cappella
1,3,
Daniele M. Gibelli
1,
Graziano Grugni
4,5,
Diana Caroli
5,
Chiarella Sforza
1,† and
Alessandro Sartorio
4,5,†
1
Laboratory of Functional Anatomy of the Stomatognathic System (LAFAS), Department of Biomedical Sciences for Health, Università degli Studi di Milano, 20133 Milan, Italy
2
Department of Clinical Sciences and Community Health, University of Milan, 20129 Milan, Italy
3
UO Laboratory of Applied Human Morphology, IRCCS Policlinico San Donato, 20097 San Donato Milanese, Italy
4
Division of Auxology and Metabolic Diseases, Istituto Auxologico Italiano, Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico (IRCCS), 28824 Verbania, Italy
5
Experimental Laboratory for Auxo-Endocrinological Research, Istituto Auxologico Italiano, Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico (IRCCS), 28824 Verbania, Italy
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
These authors contributed equally to this work.
Biology 2022, 11(8), 1148; https://doi.org/10.3390/biology11081148
Submission received: 19 May 2022 / Revised: 18 July 2022 / Accepted: 27 July 2022 / Published: 30 July 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Craniofacial Development and Evolution)

Abstract

:

Simple Summary

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a rare genetically determined neurodevelopmental disorder usually associated with a peculiar facial appearance. There is poor information concerning the relationships between the facial dysmorphism in PWS and other manifestations of the disease and its treatment. This exploratory study aimed to investigate this aspect, since this knowledge might aid in both diagnosis and monitoring of the disease. Three-dimensional facial images of fifteen Caucasian adult individuals with PWS were acquired through stereophotogrammetry; linear distances and angles were then calculated and compared with those of groups of healthy subjects matched for sex and age, obtained using the same noninvasive procedure. Individuals with PWS were evaluated for endocrine/metabolic dysfunction and nocturnal respiratory function, and their associations with facial features were tested. Some facial characteristics did not show any associations with other manifestations of PWS; therefore, they could constitute robust distinctive facial features and contribute to the diagnosis of the disorder. Conversely, other facial characteristics showed relationships with clinical and biochemical markers of PWS, suggesting their potentially useful role in the clinical monitoring and management of the disease. Further studies are needed to confirm these findings.

Abstract

Background: Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a rare genomic imprinting disorder associated to a complex neurodevelopmental phenotype and a distinctive facial appearance. The study investigated the relationships between the quantitative facial dysmorphism in PWS and clinical and biochemical markers of the disease and its treatment. Methods: Facial images of 15 Caucasian adult individuals with PWS (8 males, 42 ± 5 years; 7 females, 37 ± 8 years; BMI 38.87 ± 8.92 kg/m2) were acquired through stereophotogrammetry. From the 3D coordinates of 38 landmarks, linear distances and angles were calculated; they were expressed as z-score values by referring to 403 healthy subjects matched for age and sex and compared by Student’s t-test with Bonferroni correction for multiple testing. Patients underwent auxological and biochemical assessment of endocrine/metabolic dysfunction and nocturnal respiratory function. An exploratory correlation analysis was performed to investigate their associations with the facial phenotype; uncorrected p-values were used. Results and Conclusions: Individuals with PWS showed decreased bifrontal diameter, facial depths, palpebral fissures, mandibular ramus length, lower vermillion height, and modified relative position of exocanthia and nasion. Since these characteristics did not show any associations with clinical and biochemical markers of PWS, they could constitute robust distinctive facial features and contribute to the diagnosis of the disorder. Individuals with PWS showed also a larger mandibular width with smaller gonial angles, thinner upper vermillion, greater inclination of the orbit relative to the Frankfurt plane, and a smaller angle of the auricles versus the facial midplane. Relationships between these facial anthropometric features and body composition, glucidic metabolism indexes, nocturnal hypoxemia episodes, or duration of GH treatment were found, suggesting their potentially useful role in the clinical monitoring and management of the disease. However, they need to be confirmed by subsequent dedicated studies.

1. Introduction

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a rare imprinting disorder caused by the lack of expression of genes in the paternally derived region q11–q13 on chromosome 15. Its prevalence is estimated between 1:10,000 and 1:30,000 individuals, affecting both sexes equally, with no propensity for specific ethnic groups [1,2]. The disease usually occurs sporadically, arising from three main mechanisms which identify distinct genetic subtypes. A paternal deletion (DEL) within the PWS critical region is the most common cause, being responsible for about 60–65% of cases, maternal uniparental disomy (UPD) occurs in 30–35% of cases, and imprinting defects turn off paternal genes on chromosome 15 in 1–4% of cases [3].
PWS manifests itself as a complex phenotype that significantly varies from birth to adulthood, with interindividual variability. During early childhood, PWS is characterized by severe hypotonia with feeding problems. Soon later, symptoms move toward hyperfagia, resulting in a gradual development of obesity and increasing risk of comorbidities, including type II diabetes mellitus and sleep breathing disorders. In addition to developmental delay with mild cognitive impairment and maladaptive behaviours, patients with PWS experience consequences related to hypothalamic dysfunction. Multiple endocrinopathies also occur, such as growth hormone (GH) deficiency, central hypogonadism, hypothyroidism, and central adrenal insufficiency [4,5].
Individuals suffering from PWS may also exhibit typical somatic traits, including short stature, small hands and feet, and high occurrence of scoliosis and kyphosis, together with a peculiar facial appearance [1,6]. According to consensus diagnostic criteria established by Holm et al. [7], characteristic facial features include narrow bifrontal diameter, almond-shaped palpebral fissures, and small appearing mouth with thin upper lip and down-turned corners; those features may not be clear from birth and evolve over time [8,9]. Furthermore, a dolichocephalic head shape is common in infancy. Among the major clinical diagnostic criteria for PWS [10], a typical facial phenotype was found to be the least sensitive in selecting patients with PWS, and currently it is not included among the clinical findings that should prompt diagnostic genetic testing [11]. Nevertheless, since at least a part of the overall phenotype of PWS overlaps with other disorders, an accurate examination of the face to detect specific features can support differential diagnosis.
Despite general aspects of facial dysmorphism associated with PWS having been known for a long time, they often refer to a qualitative morphological evaluation of the face, and subtle but distinctive anomalies could have been missed so far. Few studies on large numbers of subjects employed quantitative approaches to investigate linear and angular features of the face in PWS, being based on 2D photographs or radiographs, with unavoidable limits, including distortion of images, landmark identification, and reliability [12,13,14,15,16]. Direct anthropometry was also used, but only for few measurements of the craniofacial district [17]. Therefore, a detailed anthropometric description of PWS facies is not yet available. Three-dimensional (3D) optical devices have been increasingly used in the quantitative evaluation of facial dysmorphisms, both for research purposes and clinical practice. Particularly, stereophotogrammetry is gaining a leading role in clinical dysmorphology, due to its reliability, non-invasiveness, and simplicity of use [18,19].
Currently, there is poor information about the relationships between facial morphology in PWS and other clinical findings, including biochemical markers of endocrine/metabolic dysfunction and sleep breathing disorders. Indeed, specific dysmorphic facial signs could have a predictive value for more serious complications of the disease. For example, a recent study on individuals with Marfan syndrome highlighted a positive correlation between a group of oro-facial defects and systemic alterations of the disease including the aortic dilation, which predisposes to the life-threatening artery dissection and rupture [20]. Actually, improved knowledge on the relationships between facial morphometric features and other phenotypic aspects of PWS might be useful to identify which distinctive facial features are more robust and which ones are more influenced by the related clinical characteristics of the disease and its treatment, thus improving patient follow-up. For example, GH deficiency is a common condition in PWS; in addition to an overall reduction in facial growth, it might play an important role in determining craniofacial morphology. On the other hand, it has been recently demonstrated that not all facial features normalize when individuals with PWS receive recombinant human GH (rhGH) supplementation [21]. Moreover, patients with PWS are particularly susceptible to abnormalities of breathing during sleep, suffering from both central and obstructive sleep apnea. In this respect, it is well established that craniofacial alterations play a role, together with obesity, hypotonia, and hypothalamic dysfunction, in determining respiratory abnormalities [22].
The present study aimed to investigate possible associations between distinctive facial features typically occurring in patients with PWS and clinical and biochemical markers of the disease. Facial dysmorphism was evaluated through a quantitative stereophotogrammetric approach in adulthood, being the expected peculiar facial features manifested by then.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Subjects

Fifteen adult subjects with confirmed genetic diagnosis of PWS were recruited for the study between April 2019 and November 2021 while they were hospitalized at the Division of Auxology—Istituto Auxologico Italiano, IRCCS, Piancavallo-Verbania (Italy) for a three-week multidisciplinary body weight reduction program. Molecular genetic testing performed by Methylation-specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MS-MLPA) or DNA polymorphism study by microsatellite analysis revealed a paternal DEL of chromosome 15q11q13 in all subjects. Their birth weight standard deviation score ranged between −3.36 and 2.28 (mean ± SD = −1 ± 1.5); their gestational week at birth was 39 ± 3.
They were aged 28 to 48 years: 8 males (42 ± 5 years) and 7 females (37 ± 8 years), chosen among white Caucasian patients with PWS who had no previous history of craniofacial injuries or surgery. All patients but one were classified as obese (BMI > 30 kg/m2); their BMI ranged between 23.31 and 58.63 kg/m2 (38.87 ± 8.92 kg/m2). Nine patients were treated with rhGH at the time of the study or previously during adulthood. One of these and three other patients had been treated in pediatric age; three patients had never received GH therapy. Patients received rhGH treatment for a period ranging between one and twenty years.
In addition to the patients, we assessed the facial morphometric features of 403 Caucasian healthy subjects, matched with the patients for sex and age, to serve as a reference group.
The study protocol was approved by the Ethical Committee of the Istituto Auxologico Italiano, IRCCS, Milan, Italy (reference no. 01C925, acronym: STEREOCRANPWS). In accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, written informed consent about the purposes of the study, the experimental procedures, and the use of the collected parameters was obtained from all participants and patients’ legal representatives.

2.2. Anthropometric Data and Laboratory Analyses

All PWS patients underwent physical examination, evaluation of body composition, and determination of biochemical markers of endocrine/metabolic dysfunction by standardized protocols used in the endocrinological practice. Furthermore, the nocturnal respiratory function was evaluated by oximetry test.
Height (m) and weight (kg) were used to estimate the body mass index (BMI, Kg/m2). Patients were considered normal-weight, overweight, or obese with BMI values < 25, between 25 and 30, or >30 Kg/m2, respectively; obesity was categorized as severe when BMI values were 40 Kg/m2 or higher [23]. Waist and hip circumferences were used to calculate the waist to hip ratio (WHR).
Body composition was measured by bioimpedance analysis (Human-IM Scan, DS-Medigroup, Milan, Italy) after 20 min of supine resting and in accordance with international guidelines [24]. Fat mass (FM) and fat free mass (FFM) were determined by using the equations specific for this population developed by Bedogni et al. [25].
Peripheral venous blood samples were drawn for the determination of insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1, μg/L), glycaemia (mmol/L), insulin (mU/L), thyrotropin (TSH, mU/L), free thyroxine (fT4, ng/L), luteinizing hormone (LH, U/L), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH, U/L), cortisol (μg/dL), and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH, ng/L), using laboratory standardized methods. Insulin resistance was calculated using homeostasis model assessment (HOMA-IR) [26].
Frequency of nocturnal hypoxemia episodes (arterial oxygen saturation SpO2 < 88%) was recorded.

2.3. 3D Facial Acquisition

Facial anthropometric data for both patients with PWS and healthy subjects were collected through stereophotogrammetry; participants did not experience any discomfort. Before the acquisition of the 3D facial image, an expert morphologist identified 50 facial soft-tissue anatomical landmarks by visual inspection or palpation of the face, marking the last ones on the skin with a common eyeliner. Landmarks were chosen according to international criteria [27]; a specific protocol was devised to describe the face as a whole and its different portions (facial thirds, orbital region, nose, ears, lips) and to investigate dysmorphisms associated to syndromes and genetic disorders [28,29]. The following landmarks were used in the present study:
-
midline landmarks: tr, trichion; n, nasion; prn, pronasale; sn, subnasale; ls, labiale superius; sto, stomion; li, labiale inferius; pg, pogonion;
-
paired landmarks: ex, exocanthion; en, endocanthion; os, orbitale superius; or, orbitale; ft, frontotemporale; zy, zygion; tr, tragion; al, alare; cph, crista philtri; ch, cheilion; go, gonion; pra, preaurale; sa, superaurale; pa, postaurale; sba, subaurale.
Subjects subsequently underwent facial 3D photograph, through a commercial stereophotogrammetric device, while sitting with a natural head position and neutral facial expression, closed mouth, and lips in a relaxed position. Healthy subjects and 13 patients with PWS were acquired at LAFAS lab, University of Milan, Italy, through a fixed system (VECTRA M3, Canfield Scientific, Fairfield, NJ, USA). The instrument consists of two cameras for each of three pods that image the face simultaneously from different points of view, thus allowing a detailed 3D reconstruction of the facial surface (capture time: 3.5 ms; geometric resolution: 1.2 mm). Due to COVID-19 restrictions, the faces of the remaining two patients were acquired at Istituto Auxologico Italiano, IRCCS, Piancavallo (VB), Italy using a portable stereophotogrammetric system (VECTRA H2, Canfield Scientific, Fairfield, NJ, USA); the instrument takes three images of the face some seconds apart, from the specific angulations suggested by the manufacturer. Three-dimensional reconstruction of all the acquired faces was obtained by VAM elaboration software (Canfield Scientific, Fairfield, NJ, USA).
Anatomical landmarks were then manually digitized off-line on each 3D facial image and their x, y, and z coordinates were extracted, thus obtaining a geometric model of the face. From the landmark coordinates, anthropometric measurements were automatically calculated by custom computer software: 42 linear distances, 9 distance ratios, and 30 angles in all 3 spatial directions. Intra- and interobserver repeatability and accuracy of the data collection procedure were verified for both fixed and portable VECTRA devices in previous studies [30,31]. In addition, different validation studies demonstrated, through magnitude error statistics, the high comparability between facial images obtained with portable stereophotogrammetric systems and those obtained with the fixed ones, particularly when linear distances and angles are evaluated, as in the present study [31,32].

2.4. Statistical Analysis

All individual patients’ anthropometric variables were converted into age- and sex-specific z-scores, through the comparison with corresponding data obtained from healthy subjects (PWS patient value minus the appropriate reference group mean value, divided by the SD of the reference group value); the larger the z-score in absolute value, the more deviated the patient value from the healthy subjects one. Firstly, they were calculated separately for males and females; except for the relative position of exocanthia and nasion, respective values did not show statistically significant sex-related differences (Mann–Whitney U test, p > 0.05) and were pooled. Mean z-scores of patients and healthy subjects were compared using a paired Student’s t test, after checking for normal distribution of individual values. The Bonferroni correction was used to account for multiple testing (0.05/81 comparisons = p < 0.0006 as a threshold for statistical significance). Facial anthropometric measurements with mean z-scores at least of 1 in absolute value were considered noteworthy, since, by definition, the mean z-score of the reference group is 0 and its SD is 1. The association of each one of them with the clinical and biochemical variables was investigated by Pearson or Spearman correlation analysis, after verifying the normality of data. Given the exploratory nature of the study, and to avoid losing potential associations for unpowered analyses, the significance threshold was set at p < 0.05, and no correction was applied to mitigate potential false positives.

3. Results

Measurements concerning anthropometric characteristics, body composition, and biochemical parameters in patients with PWS are summarized in Table 1.
Row data concerning facial anthropometric characteristics for both male and female individuals with PWS are available within Supplementary Material (Table S1).
Analysis of facial anthropometric features revealed several significant differences when comparing patients with PWS and matched healthy subjects (Figure 1, Table 2 and Table 3).

3.1. Face as a Whole

Patients with PWS showed a significantly smaller bifrontal diameter than control subjects of comparable age, ethnicity, and sex. On the contrary, a larger width of the lower face was detected. Patients with PWS showed a gradual top down decrease in facial depths, with significantly smaller middle and lower facial depths; facial convexities on the horizontal plane showed a corresponding and expected increase, with significantly larger values for lower facial convexity. Analysis of the relative position of the exocanthia and nasion, which is a morphometric measurement related to upper face convexity, detected an increase in values, with significantly greater z-scores in males than in females. Considering the facial heights on the frontal plane, only the upper portion of the face showed a slight decrease. In addition, the posterior facial height, corresponding to the mandibular ramus length, was reduced in patients. Consistently, patients did not show any significant variations in facial divergence, facial height index (FHI), and facial width/height ratio values when compared to healthy subjects.

3.2. Mandible

Despite the shorter mandibular ramus, the mandibular body was slightly longer in patients with PWS than in healthy subjects. Furthermore, patients showed significantly smaller gonial angles.

3.3. Orbital Region

Patients with PWS showed a decreased biocular width due to a significantly smaller palpebral fissure length. Furthermore, a significantly greater inclination of their orbits relative to the Frankfurt plane was detected.

3.4. Ears

Patients with PWS showed a smaller angle of the auricle versus the facial midplane; the left side mean z-score differed more from the reference value than the right side one. Both height and width of the ears were not different in patients and reference subjects.

3.5. Lips

Patients with PWS showed a significantly smaller height of the upper vermillion, as well as a decreased lower vermillion height. In addition, the mouth height/width ratio was reduced.
No other significant difference between patients and healthy subjects was detected concerning total mouth height and width or philtrum features.

3.6. Nose

None of the analyzed morphometric features of the nose showed significant differences between patients and healthy subjects.

3.7. Correlation Analysis

Table 4 summarizes the correlation analysis between facial anthropometric measurements and other clinical features.
Mandible width showed a positive association with BMI, FM, glycaemia, insulin, and HOMA-IR values, while, among the other anthropometric measurements related to the mandible, the gonial angle was inversely associated with FM, glycaemia, and insulin, yet showed a positive association with the duration of GH treatment. When considering the orbital region, a relationship was observed between the inclination of the orbit and the frequency of nocturnal hypoxemia episodes. The angle of the auricle versus the facial midplane showed an inverse association with BMI values. Finally, the upper vermillion height was positively associated with insulin levels and HOMA-IR values.
Scatter plots showing the relationship between facial anthropometric measurements and biochemical/clinical parameters are available within Supplementary Material (Figure S1).

4. Discussion

Unlike other disorders associated with facial features typical enough to establish diagnosis, individuals with PWS show peculiar facial features, yet which are partly overlapping those of other diseases. Furthermore, they are not always evident enough to be detected through a visual inspection of the face; they manifest over time, they vary significantly among affected individuals, and they could be influenced by concurrent endocrinopathies or the related treatments. Therefore, a detailed and objective definition of facial dysmorphism associated with PWS is important both for the diagnosis and the management of the disease.
Facial phenotypic differences among genetic subtypes have been investigated in several studies, with contrasting results, differences having been detected for some features [33,34,35] or for none [36]. In the present study, a homogeneous group of patients was investigated, all of them having a paternal DEL of chromosome 15q11q13.
In nearly half of the patients participating in the study, a small birth weight for gestational age was found; this was not an unexpected finding, since a mild prenatal growth retardation with lower birth weight and length in comparison with unaffected siblings is common in PWS [1]. Nevertheless, in a recent multicentric study by Salvatoni et al. [37] on 496 newborns with PWS, lower birth weights but similar birth lengths and head circumferences were found in comparison to normative data, and a prenatal impairment in nutrition rather than in growth was suggested. The evidence of growth retardation in the physical phenotype of PWS, including the craniofacial district, is usually attributed to the relative GH deficiency associated with the syndrome [21]. Indeed, it would be interesting to investigate the possible contribution of perinatal history to the facial features in PWS.
Analysis of facial features associated with PWS showed a remarkable reduction in the bifrontal diameter when comparing patients to reference subjects, meeting the current diagnostic criteria for disease [7]. In literature, a narrow bifrontal diameter was observed in between 40% and 100% of the individuals with PWS [38]. Z-score values of the bifrontal diameter were negative in all patients examined in the current study, suggesting its usefulness for the diagnosis of the disease. Furthermore, although the correlation analysis carried out in this study should be considered exploratory due to the small sample size, no significant associations between the bifrontal diameter and PWS morbidities that could affect facial morphology emerged. This facial anthropometric feature seems to be a robust distinctive facial feature of PWS, not or scarcely influenced by coexisting endocrinopathies or their treatment.
Patients with PWS exhibited a larger lower facial width (or mandible width). The finding is in contrast with studies based on cephalometric assessments in which a smaller mandible width was reported, both in children and adult individuals with PWS [12,14,15]. Indeed, it should be noted that cephalometry evaluates skeletal characteristics of the head, while stereophotogrammetry explores the facial surface, inevitably modified by the amount of subcutaneous fat. Almost all patients examined in the present study were obese and 6 out of 15 were suffering from severe obesity. In a stereophotogrammetric study on facial features of obese subjects, Sforza et al. [39] documented an increased mandibular width. Therefore, that feature might not be a characteristic of PWS per se, but of obesity associated with it. Actually, the correlation analysis showed a significant relationship between mandible width and both BMI and FM. A positive association also emerged with glycemia, insulin levels, and insulin resistance. On the other hand, regardless of PWS, the relationship between obesity and type 2 diabetes is well known.
No significant differences were detected in facial heights when comparing PWS patients and reference subjects, except for a slight reduction in the forehead height (or upper facial height). Several cephalometric studies demonstrated smaller facial heights in PWS patients never treated with hGH [12,14,15,16]. On the other hand, studies on the effects of replacement therapy with hGH on facial growth of patients with PWS observed an increased vertical facial growth [21,40,41]. Since more than three-quarters of the patients who participated in this study were under replacement therapy with hGH or had been treated with hGH at an earlier stage of life, facial heights similar to those of healthy subjects were expected.
Patients with PWS showed smaller facial depths, more evident in its middle and lower parts, with a corresponding increase in facial convexities on the horizontal plane, in agreement with findings of the cephalometric studies already mentioned above [12,14,15,16]. Patients with PWS also showed a variation in the relative position of exocanthia and nasion with increased convexity, more marked in males, and never detected so far. Indeed, a study by de Souza et al. [21] showed that in individuals with PWS never treated with hGH, the position of the orbit changed, especially in its closest portion to the nasal root. That facial anthropometric feature might be a distinctive characteristic of PWS if it was confirmed in further studies on a larger number of affected individuals untreated with hGH therapy.
Patients with PWS showed a reduced mandibular ramus length, in accordance with cephalometric studies [12,14,15,16]; conversely, they showed a mild increase in mandibular body length, which could be due to the effect of the hGH treatment carried out by most patients. Actually, Kiellberg et al. [41] demonstrated an accelerating effect on the growth rate of the mandibular corpus length in GH-deficient boys treated with replacement therapy.
The reciprocal position of the mandibular ramus and mandibular body was also modified in patients with PWS, being the observed reduction in the gonial angle influenced by both mandibular features themselves and smaller facial depths and heights. Gonial angle was positively associated with the duration of hGH replacement therapy, gradually approaching the values of normal subjects. The angle was inversely associated with FM glycaemia and insulin levels, in accordance with the effects of GH treatment on body composition [42].
Patients with PWS showed a significantly smaller palpebral fissure length, in agreement with the quantitative data available in the literature [13,21]. This anthropometric measure could be a robust feature of PWS, as it was not associated with other clinical and biochemical markers. Within the orbital region, an increase in the inclination of the orbit versus the Frankfurt plane was also observed, never having been detected so far. This anthropometric surface measurement might be influenced by the amount of subcutaneous fat in the infraorbital region; indeed, it deserves further studies on larger and more homogeneous samples of patients, having detected an interesting association with the frequency of nocturnal hypoxemia episodes.
Auricles of patients with PWS showed no abnormalities, except for a lesser inclination versus the facial midplane, never described so far. This feature might be influenced by an increased subcutaneous fat accumulation. In fact, the inclination of the auricle was inversely associated with the BMI.
Regarding the anthropometric assessment of the mouth, patients with PWS showed a significant reduction in upper vermillion height, as expected with reference to diagnostic criteria for the disease [7]. Upper vermillion height was found to be positively associated with insulin levels and HOMA-IR. It is difficult to hypothesize the reasons for these relationships, also considering that no associations emerged with either glycemia, BMI, or FM. Interestingly, patients with PWS also showed a decreased lower vermillion height, although less evident than the upper lip, never observed before. It could be a distinctive feature of the syndrome, perhaps missed from a simple visual inspection of the face thus far, but the influence of hGH therapy cannot be excluded.
The main limitations of the study concern the size and composition of the sample. Due to the rarity of the syndrome and COVID-19 restrictions, it was possible to evaluate only a small group of patients with PWS. However, it must be considered that PWS is a rare disease, and enrolment of these patients is extremely difficult. For this reason alone, the findings of the study should be considered preliminary. On the other hand, the group of patients being small, it may be possible that the tests were underpowered and some effects not detected. We acknowledge, as another main weakness, that the patients were recruited for the study independently from hGH replacement therapy, BMI, body composition, and biochemical markers of endocrine/metabolic dysfunction. As a consequence, the non-homogeneity of the sample only allowed us to hypothesize that facial features never described so far but detected in this study through a quantitative 3D approach could be typical traits of PWS. In order to evaluate peculiar facial features, patients with PWS were compared to healthy subjects. The last ones were matched for age and sex but not for BMI, since obesity is a pathological condition, per se. The possible influence of BMI on some detected facial features was discussed; nevertheless, it should be a further limitation of the study.
The relevance of the findings is limited by the exploratory nature of the study, and subsequent dedicated studies need to be conducted for their confirmation.
The strength of our study is that all patients involved in the study were recruited and followed by a single center, with the same well-trained medical staff and the same laboratory.

5. Conclusions

In conclusion, this exploratory study allowed us to detail information about known distinctive features associated with PWS. Additional facial anomalies never reported in literature so far were detected; they could represent phenotypic traits of PWS, when confirmed by dedicated studies on homogeneous and larger groups of patients. Facial anthropometric features that did not show associations with clinical and biochemical markers of the disorder such as bifrontal diameter, the relative position of exocanthia and nasion, lower facial depth, mandibular ramus length, palpebral fissure length, and lower vermillion height could constitute robust distinctive facial features associated with PWS and make an important contribution to the diagnosis of the disease. Conversely, facial characteristics probably influenced by the consequences of the hypothalamic dysfunction in PWS, such as mandibular width, gonial angle, inclination of the orbit, and inclination of auricle, might have a useful role in the clinical monitoring and management of the disease.

Supplementary Materials

The following supporting information can be downloaded at: https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/biology11081148/s1. Table S1: 3D anthropometric measurements describing the face in toto and its parts in subjects with PWS. Figure S1: Scatter plots with linear trend line showing the relationships between facial anthropometric measurements and biochemical/clinical parameters in individuals with PWS.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, C.D., A.E.R., C.S. and A.S.; methodology, C.D., A.C., D.M.G. and C.S., formal analysis, C.D.; investigation, C.D., A.E.R., A.C., D.M.G., G.G., D.C., C.S. and A.S.; resources, C.S., G.G. and A.S.; data curation, C.D. and D.C.; writing—original draft preparation, C.D.; writing—review and editing, A.E.R., A.C., D.M.G. and G.G.; supervision, C.S. and A.S.; project administration, C.D., A.E.R., C.S. and A.S.; funding acquisition, C.S. and A.S. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

Research funded by the Italian Ministry of Health.

Institutional Review Board Statement

The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and approved by the Ethical Committee of the Istituto Auxologico Italiano, IRCCS, Milan, Italy (reference no. 01C925, acronym: STEREOCRANPWS; date of approval: 26 February 2019).

Informed Consent Statement

Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study and patients’ legal representatives. The subject depicted in Figure 1 gave written consent for the publication of her own images.

Data Availability Statement

The data that support the findings of this study are available on request from the corresponding author. The data are not publicly available due to privacy and ethical restrictions.

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful to all the subjects who volunteered for the study.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors have no conflict of interest related to the current investigation.

References

  1. Cassidy, S.B.; Schwartz, S.; Miller, J.L.; Driscoll, D.J. Prader-Willi syndrome. Genet. Med. 2012, 14, 10–26. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  2. Angulo, M.A.; Butler, M.G.; Cataletto, M.E. Prader-Willi syndrome: A review of clinical, genetic, and endocrine findings. J. Endocrinol. Invest. 2015, 38, 1249–1263. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  3. Butler, M.G.; Hartin, S.N.; Hossain, W.A.; Manzardo, A.M.; Kimonis, V.; Dykens, E.; Gold, J.A.; Kim, S.J.; Weisensel, N.; Tamura, R.; et al. Molecular genetic classification in Prader-Willi syndrome: A multisite cohort study. J. Med. Genet. 2019, 56, 149–153. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  4. Emerick, J.E.; Vogt, K.S. Endocrine manifestations and management of Prader-Willi syndrome. Int. J. Pediatr. Endocrinol. 2013, 2013, 14. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  5. Butler, M.G.; Manzardo, A.M.; Forster, J.L. Prader-Willi syndrome: Clinical genetics and diagnostic aspects with treatment approaches. Curr. Pediatr. Rev. 2016, 12, 136–166. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Crinò, A.; Armando, M.; Crostelli, M.; Mazza, O.; Bruzzese, D.; Convertino, A.; Fintini, D.; Bocchini, S.; Ciccone, S.; Sartorio, A.; et al. High prevalence of scoliosis in a large cohort of patients with Prader-Willi syndrome. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 1574. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Holm, V.A.; Cassidy, S.B.; Butler, M.G.; Hanchett, J.M.; Greenswag, L.R.; Whitman, B.Y.; Greenberg, F. Prader-Willi syndrome: Consensus diagnostic criteria. Pediatrics 1993, 91, 398–402. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Cassidy, S.B. Prader-Willi syndrome. J. Med. Genet. 1997, 34, 917–923. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Crinò, A.; Di Giorgio, G.; Livieri, C.; Grugni, G.; Beccaria, L.; Bosio, L.; Corrias, A.; Chiumello, G.; Trifirò, G.; Salvatoni, A.; et al. Genetic Obesity Study Group; Italian Society of Pediatric Endocrinology and Diabetology. A survey on Prader-Willi syndrome in the Italian population: Prevalence of historical and clinical signs. J. Pediatr. Endocrinol. Metab. 2009, 22, 883–893. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Gunay-Aygun, M.; Schwartz, S.; Heeger, S.; O’Riordan, M.A.; Cassidy, S.B. The changing purpose of Prader-Willi syndrome clinical diagnostic criteria and proposed revised criteria. Pediatrics 2001, 108, E92. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  11. Driscoll, D.J.; Miller, J.L.; Schwartz, S.; Cassidy, S.B. Prader-Willi Syndrome. In GeneReviews ®; Adam, M.P., Ardinger, H.H., Pagon, R.A., Eds.; University of Washington: Seattle, WA, USA, 2022. [Google Scholar]
  12. Schaedel, R.; Poole, A.E.; Cassidy, S.B. Cephalometric analysis of the Prader-Willi syndrome. Am. J. Med. Genet. 1990, 36, 484–487. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  13. Butler, M.G.; Levine, G.J.; Le, J.Y.; Hall, B.D.; Cassidy, S.B. Photoanthropometric study of craniofacial traits of individuals with Prader-Willi syndrome. Am. J. Med. Genet. 1995, 58, 38–45. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Belengeanu, D.; Bratu, C.; Stoian, M.; Motoc, A.; Ormerod, E.; Podariu, A.C.; Farcaş, S.; Andreescu, N. The heterogeneity of craniofacial morphology in Prader-Willi patients. Rom. J. Morphol. Embryol. 2012, 53, 527–532. [Google Scholar]
  15. Giuca, M.R.; Inglese, R.; Caruso, S.; Gatto, R.; Marzo, G.; Pasini, M. Craniofacial morphology in pediatric patients with Prader-Willi syndrome: A retrospective study. Orthod. Craniofac. Res. 2016, 19, 216–221. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Vasconcelos, G.; Stenehjem, J.S.; Axelsson, S.; Saeves, R. Craniofacial and dentoalveolar morphology in individuals with Prader-Willi syndrome: A case-control study. Orphanet J. Rare. Dis. 2022, 17, 77. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Meaney, F.J.; Butler, M.G. Craniofacial variation and growth in the Prader-Labhart-Willi syndrome. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 1987, 74, 459–464. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Andrade, L.M.; Rodrigues da Silva, A.M.B.; Magri, L.V.; Rodrigues da Silva, M.A.M. Repeatability study of angular and linear measurements on facial morphology analysis by means of stereophotogrammetry. J. Craniofac. Surg. 2017, 28, 1107–1111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Gibelli, D.; Dolci, C.; Cappella, A.; Sforza, C. Reliability of optical devices for three-dimensional facial anatomy description: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Int. J. Oral. Maxillofac. Surg. 2020, 49, 1092–1106. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Docimo, R.; Maturo, P.; D’Auria, F.; Grego, S.; Costacurta, M.; Perugia, C.; Chiariello, L. Association between oro-facial defects and systemic alterations in children affected by Marfan syndrome. J. Clin. Diagn. Res. 2013, 7, 700–703. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. De Souza, M.A.; McAllister, C.; Suttie, M.; Perrotta, C.; Mattina, T.; Faravelli, F.; Forzano, F.; Holland, A.; Hammond, P. Growth hormone, gender and face shape in Prader-Willi syndrome. Am. J. Med. Genet. A 2013, 161A, 2453–2463. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Gillett, E.S.; Perez, I.A. Disorders of Sleep and Ventilatory Control in Prader-Willi Syndrome. Diseases 2016, 4, 23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  23. World Health Organization. Obesity and Overweight. 2021. Available online: http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs311/en/ (accessed on 15 May 2022).
  24. Deurenberg, P. International consensus conference on impedance in body composition. Age Nutr. 1994, 5, 142–145. [Google Scholar]
  25. Bedogni, G.; Grugni, G.; Tringali, G.; Tamini, S.; Marzullo, P.; Sartorio, A. Assessment of fat-free mass from bioelectrical impedance analysis in men and women with Prader-Willi syndrome: Cross-sectional study. Int. J. Food Sci. Nutr. 2019, 70, 645–649. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  26. Matthews, D.R.; Hosker, J.P.; Rudenski, A.S.; Naylor, B.A.; Treacher, D.F.; Turner, R.C. Homeostasis model assessment: Insulin resistance and beta-cell function from fasting plasma glucose and insulin concentrations in man. Diabetologia 1985, 28, 412–419. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  27. Farkas, L.G. Anthropometry of the Head and Neck, 2nd ed.; Raven Press: New York, NY, USA, 1994; pp. 1–427. [Google Scholar]
  28. Dolci, C.; Pucciarelli, V.; Gibelli, D.M.; Codari, M.; Marelli, S.; Trifirò, G.; Pini, A.; Sforza, C. The face in Marfan syndrome: A 3D quantitative approach for a better definition of dysmorphic features. Clin. Anat. 2018, 31, 380–386. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Dolci, C.; Sansone, V.A.; Gibelli, D.; Cappella, A.; Sforza, C. Distinctive facial features in Andersen-Tawil syndrome: A three-dimensional stereophotogrammetric analysis. Am. J. Med. Genet. A 2021, 185, 781–789. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Dindaroğlu, F.; Kutlu, P.; Duran, G.S.; Görgülü, S.; Aslan, E. Accuracy and reliability of 3D stereophotogrammetry: A comparison to direct anthropometry and 2D photogrammetry. Angle Orthod. 2016, 86, 487–494. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  31. Gibelli, D.; Pucciarelli, V.; Cappella, A.; Dolci, C.; Sforza, C. Are portable stereophotogrammetric devices reliable in facial imaging? A validation study of VECTRA H1 device. J. Oral. Maxillofac. Surg. 2018, 76, 1772–1784. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  32. Camison, L.; Bykowski, M.; Lee, W.W.; Carlson, J.C.; Roosenboom, J.; Goldstein, J.A.; Losee, J.E.; Weinberg, S.M. Validation of the Vectra H1 portable three-dimensional photogrammetry system for facial imaging. Int. J. Oral. Maxillofac. Surg. 2018, 47, 403–410. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  33. Cassidy, S.B.; Forsythe, M.; Heeger, S.; Nicholls, R.D.; Schork, N.; Benn, P.; Schwartz, S. Comparison of phenotype between patients with Prader-Willi syndrome due to deletion 15q and uniparental disomy 15. Am. J. Med. Genet. 1997, 68, 433–440. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Oldzej, J.; Manazir, J.; Gold, J.A.; Mahmoud, R.; Osann, K.; Flodman, P.; Cassidy, S.B.; Kimonis, V.E. Molecular subtype and growth hormone effects on dysmorphology in Prader-Willi syndrome. Am. J. Med. Genet. A 2020, 182, 169–175. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  35. Mahmoud, R.; Leonenko, A.; Butler, M.G.; Flodman, P.; Gold, J.A.; Miller, J.L.; Roof, E.; Dykens, E.; Driscoll, D.J.; Kimonis, V. Influence of molecular classes and growth hormone treatment on growth and dysmorphology in Prader-Willi syndrome: A multicenter study. Clin. Genet. 2021, 100, 29–39. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  36. Varela, M.C.; Kok, F.; Setian, N.; Kim, C.A.; Koiffmann, C.P. Impact of molecular mechanisms, including deletion size, on Prader-Willi syndrome phenotype: Study of 75 patients. Clin. Genet. 2005, 67, 47–52. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Salvatoni, A.; Moretti, A.; Grugni, G.; Agosti, M.; Azzolini, S.; Bonaita, V.; Cianci, P.; Corica, D.; Crinò, A.; Delvecchio, M.; et al. Anthropometric characteristics of newborns with Prader-Willi syndrome. Am. J. Med. Genet. A 2019, 179, 2067–2074. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  38. Hurren, B.J.; Flack, N.A. Prader-Willi syndrome: A spectrum of anatomical and clinical features. Clin. Anat. 2016, 29, 590–605. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Sforza, C.; Bertoli, S.; Leone, A.; Rosati, R.; de Menezes, M.; Battezzati, A. Three-dimensional soft-tissue facial morphometry in Caucasian obese adults. Pesqui. Bras. Odontopediatria Clin. Integr. 2019, 19, e4550. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  40. Butler, M.G.; Hovis, C.L.; Angulo, M.A. Photoanthropometric study of craniofacial traits in individuals with Prader-Willi syndrome on short-term growth hormone therapy. Clin. Genet. 1998, 53, 268–275. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  41. Kjellberg, H.; Wikland, K.A. A longitudinal study of craniofacial growth in idiopathic short stature and growth hormone-deficient boys treated with growth hormone. Eur. J. Orthod. 2007, 29, 243–250. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  42. Carrel, A.L.; Myers, S.E.; Whitman, B.Y.; Eickhoff, J.; Allen, D.B. Long-term growth hormone therapy changes the natural history of body composition and motor function in children with Prader-Willi syndrome. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 2010, 95, 1131–1136. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
Figure 1. 3D facial image of a subject with PWS. Black dots correspond to the anatomical landmarks used in the study; landmarks are associated with their acronyms. Anthropometric measurements with remarkable differences from healthy subjects (mean z score ≥ |1|) are highlighted. Dotted lines and angles: decreased measurements. Continuous lines and angles: increased measurements.
Figure 1. 3D facial image of a subject with PWS. Black dots correspond to the anatomical landmarks used in the study; landmarks are associated with their acronyms. Anthropometric measurements with remarkable differences from healthy subjects (mean z score ≥ |1|) are highlighted. Dotted lines and angles: decreased measurements. Continuous lines and angles: increased measurements.
Biology 11 01148 g001
Table 1. Auxological and biochemical characteristics of the PWS study group.
Table 1. Auxological and biochemical characteristics of the PWS study group.
WC (cm) HIP (cm)WHRFM%FFM%
112.8 ± 18.3123.9 ± 18.90.92 ± 0.145.7 ± 8.453.6 ± 7.9
Glycaemia (mmol/L)Insulin (mU/L)HOMA-IRfT4 (ng/L)TSH (mU/L)
5.9 ± 1.811.2 ± 7.33.2 ± 2.511.9 ± 1.52.2 ± 0.7
IGF-1 (μg/L)LH (U/L)FSH (U/L)Cortisol (μg/dL)ACTH (ng/L)
120.6 ± 59.75.7 ± 7.118.0 ± 20.413.9 ± 6.823.4 ± 7.2
Data are expressed as mean ± SD. WC, waist circumference; HIP, hip circumference; WHR, waist to hip ratio; FM, fat mass; FFM, fat free mass; HOMA-IR, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance; fT4, free thyroxine; TSH, thyroid stimulating hormone; IGF-1, insulin-like growth factor-1; LH, luteinizing hormone; FSH, follicle stimulating hormone; ACTH, adrenocorticotropic hormone.
Table 2. 3D anthropometric measurements describing the face in toto in subjects with PWS as compared to healthy subjects.
Table 2. 3D anthropometric measurements describing the face in toto in subjects with PWS as compared to healthy subjects.
Anthropometric DefinitionMeasurement Mean Z-scoreSDp
Facial widthsBifrontal diameterft-ft −1.50.40.0001 *
Upper facial widthzy-zy −0.91.10.0011
Cranial base widtht-t 0.01.30.9087
Lower facial width (mandibular width)go-go 1.11.50.0045
Facial heightsUpper facial heighttr-n −0.91.20.0062
Middle facial heightn-sn −0.20.80.4305
Lower facial heightsn-pg −0.61.20.0620
Facial depthsUpper facial depthtm-n −0.81.00.0070
Middle facial depthtm-sn −1.10.80.0001 *
Lower facial depthtm-pg −1.31.00.0002 *
Facial convexitiesRelative position of the exocanthia and nasionex-n-exF1.10.60.0032
M2.20.60.0003 *
Upper facial convexityt-n-t 0.71.30.0487
Middle facial convexityt-prn-t 0.71.10.0207
Lower facial convexityt-pg-t 1.20.90.0002 *
Facial divergenceFacial divergence(t-n)/(pg-go) 0.00.70.9077
RatiosFacial width/height(t-t)/(n-pg) 0.51.10.1128
Posterior/anterior facial height (FHI)(t-go)/(sn-pg) −0.40.80.1082
F, females; M, males; m, mid-landmark; SD, standard deviation; p, probability value of paired two-sided Student’s t test; *, p < 0.0006 (significance threshold after the Bonferroni correction). Mean z scores ≥ |1| are highlighted in bold.
Table 3. 3D anthropometric measurements describing parts of the face in subjects with PWS as compared to healthy subjects.
Table 3. 3D anthropometric measurements describing parts of the face in subjects with PWS as compared to healthy subjects.
Anthropometric DefinitionMeasurement Mean Z-scoreSDp
MandibleMandibular ramus lengthtm-gom −1.00.90.0009
Mandibular body lengthpg-gom 0.81.00.0143
Gonial anglet-go-pgR−1.61.10.0001 *
L−1.81.30.0001 *
EyesBiocular widthex-ex −0.91.10.0035
Interocular widthen-en 0.11.00.6350
Palpebral fissure lengthen-exR−1.10.60.0001 *
L−1.20.90.0001 *
Inclination of orbit
versus the Frankfurt plane
os-or-tR0.80.90.0038
L1.00.70.0001 *
EarsAuricle heightsa-sbaR0.21.00.5520
L0.51.10.1094
Auricle widthpra-paR−0.11.20.7973
L0.31.10.3345
Inclination of the auricle
versus the facial midplane
ear angleR−0.81.00.0075
L−1.21.20.0014
MouthMouth widthch-ch −0.31.40.4543
Philtrum lengthsn-ls −0.31.20.3905
Philtrum widthcph-cph −0.50.80.0281
Upper vermillion heightls-sto −1.10.90.0002 *
Lower vermillion heightli-sto −1.01.30.0049
Mouth height/width(ls-li)/(ch-ch) −0.91.10.0013
NoseNasal heightn-sn −0.20.80.4305
Nasal widthal-al 0.71.00.0225
Nasal protrusionprn-sn 0.10.80.6889
Nasal tip anglen-prn-sn −0.21.00.3714
R, right side; L, left side; m, mid-landmark; SD, standard deviation; p, probability value of paired two-sided Student’s t test; *, p < 0.0006 (significance threshold after the Bonferroni correction). Mean z scores ≥ |1| are highlighted in bold.
Table 4. Correlation between facial anthropometric measurements with mean z-scores of at least |1| and other clinical features in patients with PWS.
Table 4. Correlation between facial anthropometric measurements with mean z-scores of at least |1| and other clinical features in patients with PWS.
Anthropometric MeasurementBMI (kg/m2)FM (%)GH
Treatment (years)
Glycaemia (mmol/L)Insulin (mU/L)HOMA IRHypoxemia Episodes
(SpO2 < 88%)
Pearson rSpearman ρ
Bifrontal diameter0.180.25−0.160.310.110.150.41
Relative position of exocanthia and nasion0.12−0.160.370.040.090.070.06
Middle facial depth−0.14−0.130.130.090.080.110.05
Lower facial depth0.24−0.060.170.390.210.280.28
Lower facial convexity0.320.500.200.190.230.25−0.08
Mandibular ramus length−0.21−0.02−0.28−0.21−0.19−0.27−0.03
Mandibular width0.62 *0.52 *−0.120.67 **0.67 **0.74 **0.26
Gonial angle−0.32−0.62 *0.53 *−0.55 *−0.50−0.56 *−0.10
Palpebral fissure length0.06−0.220.220.020.110.09−0.05
Inclination of the orbit/Frankfurt plane−0.260.07−0.160.010.050.100.52 *
Inclination of the auricle/facial midplane−0.51 *−0.24−0.36−0.300.11−0.03−0.27
Upper vermillion height0.260.40−0.180.370.61 *0.60 *−0.50
Lower vermillion height0.230.37−0.10−0.040.180.15−0.50
Pearson or Spearman exploratory correlation analysis: significant correlations are highlighted in bold (uncorrected p-values); ** p < 0.01; * p < 0.05. No significant correlations were found between the listed anthropometric measurements and WHR, TSH, fT4, Cortisol, ACTH, IGF-1, LH, and FSH.
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Dolci, C.; Rigamonti, A.E.; Cappella, A.; Gibelli, D.M.; Grugni, G.; Caroli, D.; Sforza, C.; Sartorio, A. Robustness of Distinctive Facial Features in Prader-Willi Syndrome: A Stereophotogrammetric Analysis and Association with Clinical and Biochemical Markers in Adult Individuals. Biology 2022, 11, 1148. https://doi.org/10.3390/biology11081148

AMA Style

Dolci C, Rigamonti AE, Cappella A, Gibelli DM, Grugni G, Caroli D, Sforza C, Sartorio A. Robustness of Distinctive Facial Features in Prader-Willi Syndrome: A Stereophotogrammetric Analysis and Association with Clinical and Biochemical Markers in Adult Individuals. Biology. 2022; 11(8):1148. https://doi.org/10.3390/biology11081148

Chicago/Turabian Style

Dolci, Claudia, Antonello E. Rigamonti, Annalisa Cappella, Daniele M. Gibelli, Graziano Grugni, Diana Caroli, Chiarella Sforza, and Alessandro Sartorio. 2022. "Robustness of Distinctive Facial Features in Prader-Willi Syndrome: A Stereophotogrammetric Analysis and Association with Clinical and Biochemical Markers in Adult Individuals" Biology 11, no. 8: 1148. https://doi.org/10.3390/biology11081148

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop