Related to this topic: Support | Patient+ | Equipment | Books | Your Experience | Other resources | Glossaries
Print options: Printer friendly version of this leaflet (html)     Other options:  AddThis Social Bookmark Button (what's this?)

PatientPlus articles are written for doctors and so the language can be technical. However, some people find that they add depth to the articles found in the other sections of this website which are written for non-medical people.

Kartagener's Syndrome

Synonyms: Afzelius' syndrome, Kartagener's triad, Siewert's syndrome, Dextrocardia-bronchiectasis-sinusitis syndrome, primary ciliary dyskinesia

This is described as autosomal recessive inherited syndrome. Primary (genetic) defects in the structure and function of sensory and motile cilia result in multiple ciliopathies.

It consists of a triad of features:

  • Situs inversus (transposition of the viscera)
  • Abnormal frontal sinuses (producing sinusitis and bronchiectasis)
  • Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD).1

The defective cilia lining the respiratory tract are unable to clear the airways of secretions and pathogenic bacteria, resulting in mucus retention and chronic or recurrent respiratory tract infection - leading to damage to airways walls. Approximately half of patients with PCD have the full triad of Kartagener's syndrome.2 There may also be a link with retinitis pigmentosa and hearing loss.3,4

Epidemiology

The incidence of the genetic disorder is estimated to be between 1 in 15,000 and 1 in 30,000.5

Presentation

History

In children, wheezing with a chronic loose or productive cough, chronic or recurring upper and lower respiratory tract infections, sinusitis and otitis media. Male infertility, and decreased fertility in females may also occur.

Examination

Findings may include dextrocardia and situs inversus, asplenia, nasal polyps, rhinitis, corneal abnormalities, conductive deafness. Extremities may exhibit distal clubbing.

Differential diagnosis4

Conditions which may need to be considered include:

  • Allergic rhinitis
  • Adenoid hyperplasia
  • Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
  • Bronchial obstruction
  • Chronic aspiration
  • Congenital cartilage deficiency
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Idiopathic nasal polyposis
  • Inhalation of toxic substances
  • Postinfectious bronchiectasis
  • Pulmonary sequestration
  • Samter triad (asthma, aspirin sensitivity, and nasal/ethmoidal polyposis)
  • Severe atopy
  • Tracheobronchomegaly
  • Yellow nail syndrome
Investigations4
  • Chest X-ray may show dextrocardia, lung over-inflation, bronchial wall thickening and peribronchial infiltrates. Right-sided heart disease with chronic respiratory tract symptoms is highly indicative and occurs in half of patients.
  • CT for bronchiectasis and to demonstrate involvement of paranasal sinuses (poorly aerated mastoids ±absence of frontal sinuses).
  • Transmission electron microscopy of cilia from airway biopsy (nasal mucosa or tracheal mucosa taken when the patient is not acutely ill). The specimen is examined for ciliary movement, beat frequency, coordination and amplitude.The most common ultrastructural defect is an absence or decrease in the number of inner or outer dynein arms. This investigation is helpful in differentiating primary from secondary ciliary dysfunction.
  • Semen analysis in post-pubertal males may reveal abnormal sperm motility and ultrastructure.
  • The saccharin test is only used occasionally due to pragmatic difficulties. Saccharin is placed in the nose, and the speed of transport to the nasopharynx is measured.
  • Measurement of nasal nitrous oxide is a useful screening test, which has the advantage of being non-invasive.6

Efforts to standardise the clinical criteria for the diagnosis of Kartagener's Syndrome have centred on dextrocardia, a ciliary beat frequency of less than 10 Hz/s, and a mean cross-section dynein arm count of less than 2. If the patient does not have dextrocardia, the identification of primary ciliary dyskinesia becomes the mainstay of diagnosis. Genetic testing ultimately may become the principal means of establishing this diagnosis.7

Management4

Medical care

  • Antibiotics, intravenous or oral, intermittent or continuous, are used to treat upper and lower airway infections. Long-term low-dose prophylactic antibiotics may be necessary in children.
  • Obstructive lung disease/bronchiectasis should be treated with inhaled bronchodilators, mucolytics and chest physiotherapy.8 The evidence base is largely anecdotal, but there may also be a role for inhaled antibiotics, inhaled and oral corticosteroids, and recombinant DNAs.
  • Influenza and pneumococcal vaccination should be encouraged.

Surgical care

  • Tympanostomy tubes will reduce recurrent infections and conductive hearing loss. Repeated insertions may be required, and chronic suppurative otitis media can be annoying complication. Aural hygiene measures such as acetic acid irrigations, otomicroscopy, or topical or systemic antibiotic therapy may be required.
  • Endoscopic sinus surgery and the formation of a nasal antral window underneath the inferior turbinate, may afford a transient improvement in upper and lower respiratory tract symptoms.
  • Lobectomy is sometimes required for the associated bronchiectasis.9 Lung transplantation and heart-lung transplantation has occasionally been tried in severe cases, with some success.10,11
Complications12

Complications include bronchiectasis, pneumonia, conductive deafness, and communicating hydrocephalus.

Prognosis4

Treatment with antibiotics, physiotherapy and appropriate surgical intervention have improved the prognosis in these patients, and in some cases lifespan may be normal.


Document references
  1. Zariwala MA, Knowles MR, Omran H; Genetic defects in ciliary structure and function. Annu Rev Physiol. 2007;69:423-50. [abstract]
  2. Guichard C, Harricane MC, Lafitte JJ, et al; Axonemal dynein intermediate-chain gene (DNAI1) mutations result in situs inversus and primary ciliary dyskinesia (Kartagener syndrome). Am J Hum Genet. 2001 Apr;68(4):1030-5. Epub 2001 Feb 23. [abstract]
  3. Krawczynski MR, Witt M; PCD and RP: X-linked inheritance of both disorders? Pediatr Pulmonol. 2004 Jul;38(1):88-9. [abstract]
  4. Bent J III; Kartagener Syndrome. eMedicine, 2007.
  5. Sharma B, Sharma M, Bondi E, et al; Kartagener's syndrome associated with allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis. MedGenMed. 2005 May 31;7(2):25.
  6. Santamaria F, De Stefano S, Montella S, et al; Nasal nitric oxide assessment in primary ciliary dyskinesia using aspiration, exhalation, and humming. Med Sci Monit. 2008 Feb;14(2):CR80-85. [abstract]
  7. Geremek M, Schoenmaker F, Zietkiewicz E, et al; Sequence analysis of 21 genes located in the Kartagener syndrome linkage region on chromosome 15q. Eur J Hum Genet. 2008 Feb 13;. [abstract]
  8. Rosen MJ; Chronic cough due to bronchiectasis: ACCP evidence-based clinical practice guidelines. Chest. 2006 Jan;129(1 Suppl):122S-131S. [abstract]
  9. Otgun I, Karnak I, Tanyel FC, et al; Surgical treatment of bronchiectasis in children. J Pediatr Surg. 2004 Oct;39(10):1532-6. [abstract]
  10. Alvarez A, Algar FJ, Santos F, et al; Pediatric lung transplantation. Transplant Proc. 2005 Apr;37(3):1519-22. [abstract]
  11. Miralles A, Muneretto C, Gandjbakhch I, et al; Heart-lung transplantation in situs inversus. A case report in a patient with Kartagener's syndrome. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 1992 Feb;103(2):307-13. [abstract]
  12. Kartagener Syndrome; Madisons Foundation, 2008; No authors listed

Internet and further reading Acknowledgements EMIS is grateful to Dr Laurence Knott for writing this article. The final copy has passed scrutiny by the independent Mentor GP reviewing team. ©EMIS 2008.
DocID: 2353
Document Version: 20
DocRef: bgp1398
Last Updated: 1 Mar 2008
Review Date: 1 Mar 2010












Disclaimer: Patient UK has no control of the content of the above links. Inclusion does not imply endorsement by Patient UK.

Advertise on this site


Health Matters

Disclaimer: Patient UK has no control of the content of the above links. Inclusion does not imply endorsement by Patient UK.

Advertise on this site


PS - Health and Poverty

Perhaps the biggest cause of ill health in the world is poverty. Help to Make Poverty History. For example, why not lend some of your money to disadvantaged communities to enable them to trade their way out of poverty through schemes such as Shared Interest.

See also MAKEPOVERTYHISTORY North East for details and links to campaigns against poverty.

^ Top of Page