U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

Clitoral hypoplasia

MedGen UID:
336198
Concept ID:
C1844527
Finding
Synonym: Hypoplastic clitoris
 
HPO: HP:0000060

Definition

Developmental hypoplasia of the clitoris. [from HPO]

Conditions with this feature

Focal dermal hypoplasia
MedGen UID:
42055
Concept ID:
C0016395
Disease or Syndrome
PORCN-related developmental disorders include a spectrum of highly variable multisystem disorders caused by developmental abnormalities in mesodermal and ectodermal structures primarily involving the skin, limbs, eyes, and face. The manifestations vary among affected individuals, and many have only a subset of the characteristic features. Skin manifestations present at birth include atrophic and hypoplastic areas of skin; cutis aplasia; fat nodules in the dermis manifesting as soft, yellow-pink cutaneous nodules; and pigmentary changes. Verrucous papillomas of the skin and mucous membranes may appear later. The nails can be ridged, dysplastic, or hypoplastic; hair can be sparse or absent. Limb malformations include oligo- and syndactyly and split hand/foot. Developmental abnormalities of the eye can include anophthalmia/microphthalmia, iris and chorioretinal coloboma, and lacrimal duct abnormalities. Craniofacial findings can include facial asymmetry, notched alae nasi, cleft lip and palate, pointed chin, and small, underfolded pinnae. Dental anomalies can include hypodontia, enamel defects, and/or abnormally shaped teeth. Occasional findings include abdominal wall defects, diaphragmatic hernia, and renal anomalies. Psychomotor development is usually normal; some individuals have cognitive impairment and/or behavioral issues.
Prader-Willi syndrome
MedGen UID:
46057
Concept ID:
C0032897
Disease or Syndrome
Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is characterized by severe hypotonia, poor appetite, and feeding difficulties in early infancy, followed in early childhood by excessive eating and gradual development of morbid obesity (unless food intake is strictly controlled). Motor milestones and language development are delayed. All individuals have some degree of cognitive impairment. Hypogonadism is present in both males and females and manifests as genital hypoplasia, incomplete pubertal development, and, in most, infertility. Short stature is common (if not treated with growth hormone). A distinctive behavioral phenotype (temper tantrums, stubbornness, manipulative behavior, and obsessive-compulsive characteristics) is common. Characteristic facial features, strabismus, and scoliosis are often present.
11q partial monosomy syndrome
MedGen UID:
162878
Concept ID:
C0795841
Disease or Syndrome
Jacobsen syndrome (JBS) is a contiguous gene deletion syndrome with major clinical features of growth retardation, psychomotor retardation, trigonocephaly, divergent intermittent strabismus, epicanthus, telecanthus, broad nasal bridge, short nose with anteverted nostrils, carp-shaped upper lip, retrognathia, low-set dysmorphic ears, bilateral camptodactyly, hammertoes, and isoimmune thrombocytopenia (Fryns et al., 1986, Epstein, 1986).
Peters plus syndrome
MedGen UID:
163204
Concept ID:
C0796012
Disease or Syndrome
Peters plus syndrome is characterized by anterior chamber eye anomalies, short limbs with broad distal extremities, characteristic facial features, cleft lip/palate, and variable developmental delay / intellectual disability. The most common anterior chamber defect is Peters' anomaly, consisting of central corneal clouding, thinning of the posterior cornea, and iridocorneal adhesions. Cataracts and glaucoma are common. Developmental delay is observed in about 80% of children; intellectual disability can range from mild to severe.
Brachyphalangy, polydactyly, and tibial aplasia/hypoplasia
MedGen UID:
355340
Concept ID:
C1864965
Disease or Syndrome
Autosomal dominant omodysplasia
MedGen UID:
413823
Concept ID:
C2750355
Disease or Syndrome
Omodysplasia-2 (OMOD2) is a rare autosomal dominant skeletal dysplasia characterized by shortened humeri, dislocated radial heads, shortened first metacarpals, craniofacial dysmorphism, and variable genitourinary anomalies (Saal et al., 2015). For a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of OMOD, see 258315.
Short stature-onychodysplasia-facial dysmorphism-hypotrichosis syndrome
MedGen UID:
762199
Concept ID:
C3542022
Disease or Syndrome
SOFT syndrome is characterized by severely short long bones, peculiar facies associated with paucity of hair, and nail anomalies. Growth retardation is evident on prenatal ultrasound as early as the second trimester of pregnancy, and affected individuals reach a final stature consistent with a height age of 6 years to 8 years. Relative macrocephaly is present during early childhood but head circumference is markedly low by adulthood. Psychomotor development is normal. Facial dysmorphism includes a long, triangular face with prominent nose and small ears, and affected individuals have an unusual high-pitched voice. Clinodactyly, brachydactyly, and hypoplastic distal phalanges and fingernails are present in association with postpubertal sparse and short hair. Typical skeletal findings include short and thick long bones with mild irregular metaphyseal changes, short femoral necks, and hypoplastic pelvis and sacrum. All long bones of the hand are short, with major delay of carpal ossification and cone-shaped epiphyses. Vertebral body ossification is also delayed (summary by Sarig et al., 2012).
Autosomal dominant Robinow syndrome 3
MedGen UID:
907878
Concept ID:
C4225164
Disease or Syndrome
Autosomal dominant Robinow syndrome (ADRS) is characterized by skeletal findings (short stature, mesomelic limb shortening predominantly of the upper limbs, and brachydactyly), genital abnormalities (in males: micropenis / webbed penis, hypoplastic scrotum, cryptorchidism; in females: hypoplastic clitoris and labia majora), dysmorphic facial features (widely spaced and prominent eyes, frontal bossing, anteverted nares, midface retrusion), dental abnormalities (including malocclusion, crowding, hypodontia, late eruption of permanent teeth), bilobed tongue, and occasional prenatal macrocephaly that persists postnatally. Less common findings include renal anomalies, radial head dislocation, vertebral abnormalities such as hemivertebrae and scoliosis, nail dysplasia, cardiac defects, cleft lip/palate, and (rarely) cognitive delay. When present, cardiac defects are a major cause of morbidity and mortality. A variant of Robinow syndrome, associated with osteosclerosis and caused by a heterozygous pathogenic variant in DVL1, is characterized by normal stature, persistent macrocephaly, increased bone mineral density with skull osteosclerosis, and hearing loss, in addition to the typical features described above.
Autosomal dominant Robinow syndrome 2
MedGen UID:
897039
Concept ID:
C4225363
Disease or Syndrome
Autosomal dominant Robinow syndrome (ADRS) is characterized by skeletal findings (short stature, mesomelic limb shortening predominantly of the upper limbs, and brachydactyly), genital abnormalities (in males: micropenis / webbed penis, hypoplastic scrotum, cryptorchidism; in females: hypoplastic clitoris and labia majora), dysmorphic facial features (widely spaced and prominent eyes, frontal bossing, anteverted nares, midface retrusion), dental abnormalities (including malocclusion, crowding, hypodontia, late eruption of permanent teeth), bilobed tongue, and occasional prenatal macrocephaly that persists postnatally. Less common findings include renal anomalies, radial head dislocation, vertebral abnormalities such as hemivertebrae and scoliosis, nail dysplasia, cardiac defects, cleft lip/palate, and (rarely) cognitive delay. When present, cardiac defects are a major cause of morbidity and mortality. A variant of Robinow syndrome, associated with osteosclerosis and caused by a heterozygous pathogenic variant in DVL1, is characterized by normal stature, persistent macrocephaly, increased bone mineral density with skull osteosclerosis, and hearing loss, in addition to the typical features described above.
Autosomal dominant Robinow syndrome 1
MedGen UID:
1641736
Concept ID:
C4551475
Disease or Syndrome
Autosomal dominant Robinow syndrome (ADRS) is characterized by skeletal findings (short stature, mesomelic limb shortening predominantly of the upper limbs, and brachydactyly), genital abnormalities (in males: micropenis / webbed penis, hypoplastic scrotum, cryptorchidism; in females: hypoplastic clitoris and labia majora), dysmorphic facial features (widely spaced and prominent eyes, frontal bossing, anteverted nares, midface retrusion), dental abnormalities (including malocclusion, crowding, hypodontia, late eruption of permanent teeth), bilobed tongue, and occasional prenatal macrocephaly that persists postnatally. Less common findings include renal anomalies, radial head dislocation, vertebral abnormalities such as hemivertebrae and scoliosis, nail dysplasia, cardiac defects, cleft lip/palate, and (rarely) cognitive delay. When present, cardiac defects are a major cause of morbidity and mortality. A variant of Robinow syndrome, associated with osteosclerosis and caused by a heterozygous pathogenic variant in DVL1, is characterized by normal stature, persistent macrocephaly, increased bone mineral density with skull osteosclerosis, and hearing loss, in addition to the typical features described above.
Gonadal dysgenesis, dysmorphic facies, retinal dystrophy, and myopathy
MedGen UID:
1679397
Concept ID:
C5193085
Disease or Syndrome
Myoectodermal gonadal dysgenesis syndrome (MEGD) is characterized by 46,XY complete or partial gonadal dysgenesis, or 46,XX gonadal dysgenesis, in association with extragonadal anomalies, including low birth weight, typical facies, rod and cone dystrophy, sensorineural hearing loss, omphalocele, anal atresia, renal agenesis, skeletal abnormalities, dry and scaly skin, severe myopathy, and neuromotor delay. Dysmorphic facial features along with muscular habitus are the hallmarks of the syndrome. Abnormal hair patterning with frontal upsweep and additional whorls, eyebrow abnormalities comprising broad, arched, and sparse or thick eyebrows, underdeveloped alae nasi, smooth philtrum, and low-set ears with overfolded helices facilitate a gestalt diagnosis. (Guran et al., 2019; Altunoglu et al., 2022).
Autosomal recessive Robinow syndrome
MedGen UID:
1770070
Concept ID:
C5399974
Disease or Syndrome
ROR2-related Robinow syndrome is characterized by distinctive craniofacial features, skeletal abnormalities, and other anomalies. Craniofacial features include macrocephaly, broad prominent forehead, low-set ears, ocular hypertelorism, prominent eyes, midface hypoplasia, short upturned nose with depressed nasal bridge and flared nostrils, large and triangular mouth with exposed incisors and upper gums, gum hypertrophy, misaligned teeth, ankyloglossia, and micrognathia. Skeletal abnormalities include short stature, mesomelic or acromesomelic limb shortening, hemivertebrae with fusion of thoracic vertebrae, and brachydactyly. Other common features include micropenis with or without cryptorchidism in males and reduced clitoral size and hypoplasia of the labia majora in females, renal tract abnormalities, and nail hypoplasia or dystrophy. The disorder is recognizable at birth or in early childhood.

Professional guidelines

PubMed

Kataoka A, Hirakawa S, Iwamoto M, Sakumura Y, Yoshinaga R, Ohba T
Kurume Med J 2011;58(4):127-30. doi: 10.2739/kurumemedj.58.127. PMID: 23047142
Radman HM, Bhagavan BS
Am J Obstet Gynecol 1970 Apr 15;106(8):1187-90. PMID: 4314521
Kaufman SL
Mod Treat 1968 Jan;5(1):218-40. PMID: 4871924

Recent clinical studies

Etiology

Wei X, Li S, He Y
Medicine (Baltimore) 2023 Dec 29;102(52):e36725. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000036725. PMID: 38206718Free PMC Article
Baskin LS
Semin Perinatol 2017 Jun;41(4):227-231. Epub 2017 May 20 doi: 10.1053/j.semperi.2017.03.011. PMID: 28535944
Shetty MV, Bhaskaran A, Sen TK
Afr J Paediatr Surg 2011 May-Aug;8(2):215-7. doi: 10.4103/0189-6725.86066. PMID: 22005369
Miranda ML, Oliveira-Filho AG, Lemos-Marini SH, Guerra G Jr, Bustorff-Silva JM
J Pediatr Surg 2004 Jul;39(7):1030-3. doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2004.03.060. PMID: 15213892
Joseph VT
J Pediatr Surg 1997 Jan;32(1):62-5. doi: 10.1016/s0022-3468(97)90095-6. PMID: 9021571

Diagnosis

Sharma AP, Kumar S, Jangra K, Parmar KM
Urology 2020 Jul;141:e5-e6. Epub 2020 Apr 22 doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2020.04.063. PMID: 32333989
Nigam A, Elahi AA, Varun N, Gupta N
BMJ Case Rep 2018 Sep 30;2018 doi: 10.1136/bcr-2018-226122. PMID: 30275027Free PMC Article
Shetty MV, Bhaskaran A, Sen TK
Afr J Paediatr Surg 2011 May-Aug;8(2):215-7. doi: 10.4103/0189-6725.86066. PMID: 22005369
Acimi S
Urology 2008 Sep;72(3):669-71. Epub 2008 Jul 2 doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2008.02.077. PMID: 18597836
Capraro VJ
Clin Obstet Gynecol 1971 Dec;14(4):988-1012. doi: 10.1097/00003081-197112000-00004. PMID: 5146982

Therapy

Nigam A, Elahi AA, Varun N, Gupta N
BMJ Case Rep 2018 Sep 30;2018 doi: 10.1136/bcr-2018-226122. PMID: 30275027Free PMC Article
Bierich JR
Helv Paediatr Acta 1974;Suppl 34:87-97. PMID: 4616023
Hendren WH, Crawford JD
Curr Probl Surg 1972 Nov:1-64. doi: 10.1016/s0011-3840(72)80014-5. PMID: 4565144
Dmowski WP, Greenblatt RB
JAMA 1970 Apr 13;212(2):308-11. PMID: 5467232
Williamson JA, Dewhurst CJ
J Obstet Gynaecol Br Commonw 1970 Apr;77(4):356-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-0528.1970.tb03532.x. PMID: 5464043

Prognosis

Baskin LS
Semin Perinatol 2017 Jun;41(4):227-231. Epub 2017 May 20 doi: 10.1053/j.semperi.2017.03.011. PMID: 28535944
Shetty MV, Bhaskaran A, Sen TK
Afr J Paediatr Surg 2011 May-Aug;8(2):215-7. doi: 10.4103/0189-6725.86066. PMID: 22005369
Miranda ML, Oliveira-Filho AG, Lemos-Marini SH, Guerra G Jr, Bustorff-Silva JM
J Pediatr Surg 2004 Jul;39(7):1030-3. doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2004.03.060. PMID: 15213892
Joseph VT
J Pediatr Surg 1997 Jan;32(1):62-5. doi: 10.1016/s0022-3468(97)90095-6. PMID: 9021571
Garcia-Bunuel R, Berek JS, Woodruff JD
Obstet Gynecol 1975 Apr;45(4):407-14. PMID: 164641

Clinical prediction guides

Cunha GR, Li Y, Mei C, Derpinghaus A, Baskin LS
Differentiation 2021 Mar-Apr;118:107-131. Epub 2020 Oct 17 doi: 10.1016/j.diff.2020.10.001. PMID: 33176961Free PMC Article
Alaei M, Rohani F, Norouzi E, Hematian Boroujeni N, Tafreshi RI, Salehiniya H, Soheilipour F
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) 2020;11:297. Epub 2020 Jun 3 doi: 10.3389/fendo.2020.00297. PMID: 32582020Free PMC Article
Sreenivasan R, Gordon CT, Benko S, de Iongh R, Bagheri-Fam S, Lyonnet S, Harley V
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 2017 Jun;170:28-38. Epub 2016 Oct 29 doi: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2016.10.009. PMID: 27989796
Gole LA, Lim J, Crolla JA, Loke KY
Singapore Med J 2008 Apr;49(4):349-51. PMID: 18418530
Haaf T, Hofmann R, Schmid M
Am J Med Genet 1991 Sep 15;40(4):444-6. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.1320400413. PMID: 1746609

Recent systematic reviews

Carvalho C, Morandi A, Samuk I, Gine C, Gorter R, Martinez-Urrutia MJ, Vilanova-Sánchez A
Eur J Pediatr Surg 2024 Dec;34(6):482-487. Epub 2024 Jan 12 doi: 10.1055/a-2244-4551. PMID: 38216143
Almasri J, Zaiem F, Rodriguez-Gutierrez R, Tamhane SU, Iqbal AM, Prokop LJ, Speiser PW, Baskin LS, Bancos I, Murad MH
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2018 Nov 1;103(11):4089-4096. doi: 10.1210/jc.2018-01863. PMID: 30272250

Supplemental Content

Table of contents

    Clinical resources

    Practice guidelines

    • PubMed
      See practice and clinical guidelines in PubMed. The search results may include broader topics and may not capture all published guidelines. See the FAQ for details.
    • Bookshelf
      See practice and clinical guidelines in NCBI Bookshelf. The search results may include broader topics and may not capture all published guidelines. See the FAQ for details.

    Consumer resources

    Recent activity

    Your browsing activity is empty.

    Activity recording is turned off.

    Turn recording back on

    See more...