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,  Elahe  Ghods1  
   ,  Majid  Mojarrad2
,  Majid  Mojarrad2  
   ,  Robab  Aboutorabi3
,  Robab  Aboutorabi3  
   ,  Mojgan  Afkhamizadeh3
,  Mojgan  Afkhamizadeh3  
   ,  Shokoofeh  Bonakdaran3
,  Shokoofeh  Bonakdaran3  
   ,  Zohreh  Mosavi3
,  Zohreh  Mosavi3  
   ,  Seyed Morteza Taghavi3
,  Seyed Morteza Taghavi3  
   ,   Mohammad  Hassanzadeh Nazarabadi4
,   Mohammad  Hassanzadeh Nazarabadi4  
   
                    Idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (IHH) is a condition caused by low doses of hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) leading to absence or incomplete sexual maturation. One of the disorders leading to IHH is Kallmann syndrome which is characterized by GnRH deficiency with anosmia or hyposmia. This disorder generally occurs as a hereditary syndrome with X-linked recessive inheritance pattern. However, autosomal dominant or recessive and sporadic cases have also been reported. KAL1 is the most common mutated gene among these patients. The aim of this study was to determine the mutation spectrum of KAL1 gene in twenty patients. KAL1 exons were amplified by PCR technique and the products were assessed by high resolution melting (HRM) technique. In addition, for one of the patients, all coding exons of the KAL1 gene were sequenced. Deletion of exons 4, 5 and 6 were evident in 5%, 10%, and 10% of patients, respectively. Furthermore, HRM results showed hemizygous mutation of exon 12 with more than 95% probability in 25% of patients. Finding these mutations could be helpful in the early diagnosis and presymptomic treatment of Kallman syndrome.
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