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GTR Home > Tests > Chime syndrome testing (PIGL)

Overview

Test name

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Chime syndrome testing (PIGL)

Purpose of the test

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This is a clinical test intended for Help: Risk Assessment, Screening, Monitoring, Diagnosis, Pre-symptomatic

Condition

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How to order

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All samples should be shipped via overnight delivery at room temperature. No weekend or holiday deliveries. Label each specimen with the patient’s name, date of birth and date sample collected. Send specimens with complete requisition and consent form, otherwise, specimen processing may be delayed.
Order URL Help: http://dnatesting.uchicago.edu/submitting-sample

Specimen source

Peripheral (whole) blood
Amniocytes
Frozen tissue
Saliva
Product of conception (POC)
Chorionic villi
Amniotic fluid
Cord blood
Fetal blood
Cell culture
Fibroblasts
Buccal swab
Fresh tissue

Methodology

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Molecular Genetics
DDeletion/duplication analysis
Next-Generation (NGS)/Massively parallel sequencing (MPS)
CSequence analysis of the entire coding region
Next-Generation (NGS)/Massively parallel sequencing (MPS)

Summary of what is tested

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Clinical utility

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Establish or confirm diagnosis

Citations
  • Mutations in the glycosylphosphatidylinositol gene PIGL cause CHIME syndrome. - PubMed ID: 22444671

Clinical validity

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Ng et al. (2012) identified compound heterozygous mutations in the PIGL gene (phosphatidylinositol glycan, class L) [OMIM #605947] in 6/6 (100%) patients with a clinical diagnosis of CHIME syndrome.

Citations
  • Mutations in the glycosylphosphatidylinositol gene PIGL cause CHIME syndrome. - PubMed ID: 22444671

Test services

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  • Clinical Testing/Confirmation of Mutations Identified Previously
  • Confirmation of research findings
  • Custom Prenatal Testing
  • Custom mutation-specific/Carrier testing

IMPORTANT NOTE: NIH does not independently verify information submitted to the GTR; it relies on submitters to provide information that is accurate and not misleading. NIH makes no endorsements of tests or laboratories listed in the GTR. GTR is not a substitute for medical advice. Patients and consumers with specific questions about a genetic test should contact a health care provider or a genetics professional.