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June
7, 2001
Contact: Jennifer Day, (313) 577-1058, jday@med.wayne.edu
WSU School of Medicine to host
international symposium on genetic disorder in children
Wayne State University’s School of
Medicine and the Children’s Hospital of Michigan along with the SLO Syndrome
Advocacy and Exchange will host the Fourth International Symposium on Smith-Lemli-Opitz
Syndrome June 22 and 23.
SLOS is an inherited condition that
causes multiple birth defects, growth retardation and mental retardation. It
affects 1/30,000 children in the United States. About 40 families from 20 states
and New Zealand as well as physicians from 10 institutions across the country
are expected to attend the symposium.
“The greater the understanding of
SLOS, the greater the potential for effective therapy, innovative treatment and
possible cure,” said Dr. Erawati Bawle, a WSU pediatrician at Children’s
Hospital. “Meetings like this, where families and physicians come together,
play an essential part in furthering the treatment of these children.”
The symposium, from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. on
Friday, June 22, is targeted to physicians and families of children with SLOS.
It will provide an update on the detection and treatment of SLOS as well as a
forum for clinicians and researchers to discuss their work.
Presentations at the symposium, which
will be in the Crowne Plaza Pontchartrain, will include information on
behavioral aspects of SLOS and recommended educational intervention; the
biochemistry and physiology of SLOS; and treatment of SLOS.
The second day of the event, June 23,
will be a SLOS Family-Physician Clinic Day, which will allow families to discuss
their children’s condition with doctors who have expertise in managing SLOS.
The clinic day will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Marie Carls Building of the
Children’s Hospital of Michigan. Transportation to the hospital from the hotel
will be provided.
To register for the event, please call
Joan Conard at (313) 745-4513. Although the event is free, participants must
pre-register and be families or physicians SLOS patients. March of Dimes and the
Fondest Wish Foundations are supporters of the event.
With more than 1,000 medical students,
WSU is among the nation’s largest medical schools. Together with the Detroit
Medical Center, the school is a leader in patient care and medical research in a
number of areas including cancer, genetics, pediatrics and the neurosciences.
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