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Cyclopia
Cyclopia
from Wikipedia
Cyclopia
Other namesCyclocephaly, synophthalmia, monophthalmia
Fetuses with cyclopia
SpecialtyMedical genetics
Usual onsetDuring embryonic development
DurationLifelong
PrognosisInvariably fatal
Frequency1 in 100,000 births

Cyclopia (named after the Greek mythology characters cyclopes), also known as alobar holoprosencephaly, is the most extreme form of holoprosencephaly and is a congenital disorder (birth defect) characterized by the failure of the embryonic prosencephalon to properly divide the orbits of the eye into two cavities. Its incidence is 1 in 16,000 in born animals and 1 in 200 in miscarried fetuses.[1][2]

Signs and symptoms

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Typically, the nose is either missing or not functional. This deformity (called proboscis) forms above the center eye and is characteristic of a form of cyclopia called rhinencephaly or rhinocephaly.[3] Most such embryos are either naturally miscarried or are stillborn upon delivery.

Although cyclopia is rare, several cyclopic human babies are preserved in medical museums (e.g. The Vrolik Museum, Amsterdam, Trivandrum Medical College).[4]

Some extreme cases of cyclopia have been documented in farm animals (horses, sheep, pigs, goats, and sometimes chickens). In such cases, the nose and mouth fail to form, or the nose grows from the roof of the mouth, obstructing airflow and resulting in suffocation shortly after birth.[5]

Causes

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Genetic defects or toxins can misdirect the embryonic forebrain-dividing process.[6] One highly teratogenic alkaloid toxin that can cause cyclopia is cyclopamine or 2-deoxyjervine, found in the plant Veratrum californicum (also known as corn lily or false hellebore). Grazing animals are most likely to ingest this plant and induce cyclopia in offspring. People sometimes accidentally ingest false hellebore while pregnant thinking it is hellebore, which has been suggested as a "natural" treatment for vomiting, cramps, and poor circulation – three conditions which may be present in the early stages of pregnancy.[7] Cyclopia occurs when certain proteins are inappropriately expressed,[8] causing the brain to stay whole, rather than developing two distinct hemispheres. This leads to the fetus having one optic lobe and one olfactory lobe, resulting in the eye and nose malformations of cyclopia.[9]

The Sonic hedgehog protein (SHH) is the gene regulator involved in the separation of the single eye field into two bilateral fields.[10] Although not proven, it is thought that SHH emitted from the prechordal plate suppresses Pax6, which causes the eye field to divide into two. If the SHH gene is mutated, the result is cyclopia, a single eye in the center of the face (Gilbert, 2000).

Notable cases

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  • A British description from 1665 of a colt that appeared to have cyclopia reads:

    First, That it had no sign of any Nose in the usual place, nor had it any, in any other place of the Head, unless the double Bagg CC that grew out of the midst of the forehead, were some rudiment of it. Next, That the two Eyes were united into one Double Eye which was placed just in the middle of the Brow.[11]

  • In October 1766, an infant in France was born with cyclopia, living for only a few hours. Reports of the case were made in the Mercure de France and an illustration of the infant was made by Marie Bihéron. The case was also mentioned in Volume IV of Buffon's L'Histoire Naturelle.
A Swedish description from 1793 of a newborn with cyclopia
  • On 1 March 1793, a 46-year-old woman in Boalts Torp, Glimåkra, Sweden gave birth to a child with cyclopia that died after two hours. The child was 35 cm long, its face without nose and nostrils, and its lidless eye with no eyebrow sat raised on the middle of its forehead like a large blueberry. The wrists were somewhat crooked as well as the right foot which was completely crooked and bent inwards. It was not clear whether it was a boy or a girl, but it was believed to be the former.[12]
  • In November 1889, reports emerged from Umatilla County, Oregon, of a Nez Perce child with one eye in the center of the forehead. The child was reportedly healthy and "able to see with ease, and ran about with as much freedom as any of his companions."[13][14][15] Several individuals tried to locate the child to be put on display, but the tribe had left to hunt in the mountains by the time they arrived.[16] It is unknown what became of the child.
  • On December 28, 2005, a kitten with cyclopia, "Cy", was born in Redmond, Oregon, United States and died about one day after birth.[17]
  • In 2006, a baby girl in India with cyclopia was born. Her only eye was in the center of her forehead. She did not have a nose and her brain did not separate into two separate hemispheres (holoprosencephaly).[18] The child died one day after her birth.[19]
  • In 2011, an albino cyclops shark fetus was discovered in the body of a caught shark in Mexico, with no discernible nose and one giant eye. The unborn fetus was turned over for medical studies.[20]
  • On October 10, 2012, a small kitten was born. Its eye was in the center of the forehead and there was no developed nose to be found. The small cat died shortly after it was born. It was nicknamed Cleyed the Cyclops.[21]
  • On May 10, 2017, in Assam, India, a black goat was born with one eye and other cyclopia-related facial abnormalities. It was reported to still be alive over a week later, which is unusual for this condition.[22]
  • On September 13, 2018, in Mandailing Natal, North Sumatra, Indonesia, a baby with cyclopia was born without a nose and one eye with the weight of 2.4kg (5.3lb) and heart rate under 100 bpm. The child died seven hours after birth.[23]
  • On March 16, 2022, a boy was born in Al Bayda, Yemen, with cyclopia. He died 7 hours after birth. He was seen in photos taken by Yemeni journalist Karim Zarai.[24]
  • In March 2024, a pig was born in Ilocos Sur, Philippines, with cyclopia.[25]
  • In December 2024, the Korean Society of Perinatology documented a female infant with cyclopia who survived for 8 months on palliative care, which is the longest known to date. The baby girl was born as part of a twin birth, with the other twin being reportedly normal. [26]

Cultural significance

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The Islamic State used photos of babies born with cyclopia in its recruitment campaign. ISIS claimed the photos depicted Masih ad-Dajjal, who according to the Hadith, would have only one eye. Mainstream Islamic scholars consider the prophecy as referring to a one-eyed man, not a cyclops.[27] One infant whose image was circulated in 2014 was claimed to be Israeli, but was actually Bolivian and from 2008. The baby girl from India born in 2006 (see notable cases above) also had her image used.[28]

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Humans

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Animals

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Cyclopia is a rare and lethal congenital malformation representing the extreme form of alobar , in which the prosencephalon fails to divide into bilateral cerebral hemispheres during the third to fourth weeks of , yielding a single midline with a fused or solitary eye, rudimentary nasal structures often manifesting as a superior , and severe midfacial dysmorphism. This developmental arrest stems from defective ventral midline signaling, most notably sonic hedgehog (SHH) pathway disruptions, which orchestrate and facial primordia separation.
Etiologically multifactorial, cyclopia arises from chromosomal anomalies like 13 in approximately 31% of cases, monogenic mutations in genes such as SHH or ZIC2, and environmental teratogens including maternal or alkaloids like , as evidenced in ovine models where ingestion of Veratrum californicum induces analogous defects via SHH inhibition. Prenatal diagnosis via ultrasonography reveals characteristic findings such as absent midline , fused thalami, and the eponymous ocular fusion, though incidence remains exceedingly low at roughly 1 in 100,000 live births amid high rates of spontaneous abortion. Prognosis is uniformly dismal, with affected fetuses typically succumbing in utero or perinatally due to respiratory insufficiency, profound , and hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction precluding extrauterine viability; rare postnatal survivals extend mere hours absent aggressive interventions, underscoring cyclopia's incompatibility with sustained life. Documented across species from humans to , these anomalies illuminate conserved mechanisms of embryonic patterning while highlighting the precision of craniofacial .

Pathophysiology

Embryonic Developmental Failure

Cyclopia results from the failure of the prosencephalon to cleave into bilateral cerebral hemispheres during early embryogenesis, a that normally commences around the third week of gestation and completes by the fourth to fifth week. This cleavage establishes distinct telencephalic and diencephalic structures, including the separation of the initially midline optic primordia into paired eye fields. Empirical observations in human embryos with spectrum disorders, of which cyclopia represents the most severe manifestation, confirm that uncorrected fusion of these fields leads to a single central ocular structure and proboscis formation superiorly, as the ventral midline remains undifferentiated. Central to this developmental arrest is disruption in the sonic hedgehog (SHH) signaling pathway, which governs ventral midline patterning through gradients emanating from the and prechordal . SHH induces ventral identity and represses dorsal markers, facilitating the bifurcation of the eye field via coordinated and migration along the midline axis. In Shh-deficient murine models, ablation of this pathway causes with cyclopia, as ventral signaling deficits prevent the spatial segregation of optic vesicles, evidenced by persistent expression of midline markers and absence of lateral orbital fissures by embryonic day 9.5, analogous to human stages at 4-5 weeks . The causal sequence proceeds from impaired axial SHH diffusion to defective ventral prosencephalic specification, yielding incomplete orbital septation without compensatory mechanisms in severe cases. Human genetic studies corroborate this, showing that pathway perturbations correlate with reduced ventral progenitor domains in forebrain organoids derived from holoprosencephaly-affected induced pluripotent stem cells, underscoring the pathway's non-redundant role in midline integrity over alternative signaling cascades like BMP or Wnt during this critical window.

Association with Holoprosencephaly

Cyclopia constitutes the most severe expression of alobar (HPE), wherein the prosencephalon fails entirely to cleave into separate cerebral hemispheres during early embryogenesis, resulting in a single, undifferentiated holosphere rather than distinct telencephalic structures. This malformation precludes any hemispheric division, manifesting as a monoventricle, fused thalami, and complete absence of midline cerebral commissures, including the . Postmortem autopsies and (MRI) analyses of affected specimens consistently document these features, with the exhibiting no interhemispheric fissure or , distinguishing it from partial separations observed in less severe HPE variants. In contrast to semilobar HPE, which shows rudimentary posterior hemispheric separation, or lobar HPE with near-complete division except for rostral deficits, alobar HPE in cyclopia demonstrates absolute telencephalic non-cleavage, often accompanied by absent olfactory bulbs and tracts as verified in histological examinations of autopsy cases. These neurological anomalies arise from the undivided prosencephalon's inability to form bilateral structures, leading to a fused ventricular system and hypothalamic dysgenesis without compensatory midline development. Empirical data from necropsy series confirm the uniformity of these brain-specific defects across cyclopic specimens. Within the HPE spectrum, cyclopia's prevalence stands at approximately 1 in 100,000 births, far rarer than the overall HPE incidence of 1 in 16,000 live births, positioning it as an infrequent extreme among alobar cases, which themselves represent the severest HPE subtype but do not invariably include cyclopia. This rarity is evidenced by large-scale epidemiologic datasets tracking congenital anomalies, highlighting cyclopia's confinement to the most profound fusion endpoints.

Clinical Presentation

Ocular and Craniofacial Features

Cyclopia manifests with a single midline containing fused ocular structures, termed synophthalmia, where two eyes fail to separate during embryogenesis, resulting in an apparent single eye often exhibiting a shared and fused anterior segments. This ocular anomaly typically includes a solitary and is frequently non-functional due to incomplete differentiation of retinal and optic components, as observed in neonatal examinations and histopathological studies. Nasal development is profoundly disrupted, featuring complete absence of external nares and (arhinia), with a —a cylindrical, midline of rudimentary nasal tissue—positioned superior to the in most cases. Histological analysis of proboscis tissue reveals cartilaginous elements but confirms olfactory , lacking functional and olfactory bulbs externally. Craniofacial dysmorphism includes microcephaly, characterized by a reduced occipitofrontal circumference, and midface hypoplasia, with underdevelopment of the maxilla and flattened profile anterior to the orbit. Micrognathia, or small mandible, further contributes to the distorted facial contour, as documented in postmortem evaluations of affected neonates.

Associated Systemic Abnormalities

In cyclopia, systemic malformations frequently accompany the primary neural and ocular defects, as documented in autopsy series and cohort studies of (HPE), of which cyclopia represents the extreme form. Congenital heart defects, particularly septal defects including and , are prevalent, occurring in approximately 43% of prenatally diagnosed HPE cases. These cardiac anomalies arise from disruptions in midline signaling pathways like sonic hedgehog (SHH), which also govern division, leading to incomplete septation observed in fetal and postmortem examinations. Renal abnormalities, such as , , or cystic changes, are reported in about 11% of HPE-affected fetuses, often unilateral or bilateral and incompatible with sustained postnatal life. Gastrointestinal defects like , involving herniation of abdominal contents, occur less commonly but are linked to chromosomal aberrations such as trisomy 13, which underlies up to 40% of cyclopic cases; incidence in such subsets reaches 10-30%. Limb anomalies, notably postaxial , manifest in roughly 8% of HPE instances, reflecting shared developmental field defects in SHH-mediated patterning without direct causality to the cyclopic phenotype. Endocrine disruptions stem from pituitary hypoplasia or aplasia, inherent to the malformation, resulting in deficiencies of , , and antidiuretic hormone; hormonal assays in the few extended survivors confirm central , exacerbating metabolic instability. These systemic issues, derived from large-scale reviews of over 100 HPE cases, underscore the multisystemic nature of cyclopia, with frequencies varying by genetic but consistently elevating beyond the cerebral insult alone.

Etiology

Genetic and Chromosomal Factors

Cyclopia arises as a severe manifestation of (HPE), a disorder of ventral forebrain patterning, where genetic mutations disrupt sonic hedgehog signaling and related pathways essential for midline facial and cerebral development. Pathogenic variants in the SHH gene, encoding the , account for approximately 12.7% of HPE cases overall, with mutations identified in up to 37% of families exhibiting autosomal dominant transmission of the HPE spectrum. Similarly, mutations in ZIC2 and SIX3 genes, which regulate transcription factors in neural progenitor cells, are detected in cohorts of HPE patients, with ZIC2 variants often de novo in sporadic cases at rates exceeding 70% when parental samples are tested. Chromosomal anomalies contribute to 32-42% of HPE instances, with (Patau syndrome) representing a primary etiology, particularly in cases featuring cyclopia alongside ; karyotypic analyses of affected fetuses confirm extra material in such presentations. In , the supernumerary disrupts dosage-sensitive genes influencing midline development, leading to cyclopic fusion of ocular structures in severe expressions. Familial recurrence risks for HPE, including cyclopia, are estimated at 1-6% in pedigrees without identified parental mosaicism, derived from empiric studies rejecting purely environmental models and highlighting incomplete penetrance in carrier parents. Low-level parental mosaicism can elevate this risk, as detected in recurrent cases via targeted sequencing, underscoring the need for parental genetic evaluation to refine counseling.

Environmental and Teratogenic Causes

Pre-gestational maternal diabetes mellitus substantially elevates the risk of (HPE) in offspring, with cyclopia as its most extreme form; cohort studies indicate a increase of up to 200-fold compared to non-diabetic pregnancies, alongside an absolute HPE incidence of approximately 1% in such cases.31107-8/fulltext) This association stems from hyperglycemia-induced and disrupted Sonic hedgehog (SHH) signaling, which impairs ventral patterning and eye field division during early embryogenesis. A prototypical teratogen exemplifying causal environmental induction is , a steroidal from (corn lily). When pregnant sheep ingest the plant around day 14 of gestation—a critical window for ocular development—offspring exhibit synophthalmia or full cyclopia due to direct inhibition of the SHH pathway, preventing prosencephalic cleavage and midline eye fusion. This mechanism mirrors human HPE pathogenesis, as SHH antagonism experimentally replicates cyclopic phenotypes across vertebrates, underscoring preventable exogenous risks in susceptible species. While animal models demonstrate ethanol's capacity to suppress SHH activity and produce cyclopia-like defects via modification interference, human epidemiological data reveal no verified causal link between routine prenatal alcohol exposure and isolated cyclopia, with observed craniofacial anomalies in fetal alcohol spectrum disorders typically broader and multifactorial rather than midline-specific.01721-4/fulltext) Prioritizing causal evidence over mere correlation, confirmed teratogens like highlight targeted interventions, such as avoiding known toxic in , whereas speculative human environmental triggers lack robust verification beyond .

Diagnosis

Prenatal Diagnostic Methods

Prenatal diagnosis of cyclopia, a severe manifestation of alobar , primarily relies on fetal as the initial screening tool, often identifying characteristic brain and facial anomalies as early as the first trimester. Transabdominal or transvaginal at 10-12 weeks' can reveal fused thalami, a single midline monoventricle, and absence of the interhemispheric , with additional craniofacial signs such as a fused orbital structure or becoming more apparent by the second trimester. In targeted neurosonography for high-risk pregnancies, detection sensitivity for exceeds 90%, though overall first-trimester sensitivity for malformations ranges from 68% to 92%, depending on operator expertise and equipment. Invasive genetic testing via , typically performed after 15 weeks following suspicious findings, employs chromosomal analysis (CMA) to detect copy number variants associated with cyclopia, including 13 and deletions or duplications involving the SHH gene on 7q36. CMA identifies genomic imbalances in up to 20-30% of cases undetected by standard karyotyping, though it may miss de novo point mutations or small insertions/deletions not altering copy number. offers an earlier alternative around 10-13 weeks but carries a slightly higher risk compared to . Fetal (MRI), usually conducted in the second trimester after detection, provides superior soft-tissue resolution to confirm alobar features such as dorsal sac expansion or incomplete prosencephalic cleavage, and to evaluate associated midline facial defects like cyclopia or ethmocephaly. MRI enhances diagnostic accuracy for complex cases, reducing false positives from artifacts, though it is not routinely first-line due to cost and availability. Empirical studies report MRI confirmation rates approaching 95% for severe subtypes when correlated with prenatal .

Postnatal Evaluation

Postnatal evaluation commences with a comprehensive of the neonate, revealing diagnostic craniofacial anomalies such as a solitary central encompassing fused ocular globes within a single , a arising from the midline , and complete absence of nasal structures. , micrognathia, and potential midline clefts may accompany these features, confirming the clinical suspicion of cyclopia as the most extreme manifestation of alobar . Ophthalmologic assessment elucidates the ocular fusion, typically disclosing a unified anterior segment, shared lens or corneal elements, and a common stalk, underscoring the embryonic failure of optic vesicle separation. Cranial (MRI) serves as the definitive tool, visualizing the undivided prosencephalon with a single ventricular cavity, fused thalami, and rudimentary cerebral hemispheres lacking an interhemispheric fissure. (CT) may supplement if MRI is unavailable, though MRI provides superior resolution for subtype classification. Electroencephalography (EEG), when feasible in briefly surviving neonates, discloses profoundly abnormal tracings, often featuring burst-suppression patterns or electrical silence reflective of absent cortical differentiation. follows, encompassing karyotyping to detect aneuploidies like 13, chromosomal microarray for copy number variants, and sequencing of holoprosencephaly-linked genes including SHH, ZIC2, and SIX3 to pinpoint molecular causes. These analyses, performed on neonatal blood or tissue, aid in etiological confirmation distinct from prenatal inferences.

Prognosis and Management

Survival Expectations

Infants with cyclopia, the most severe manifestation of alobar holoprosencephaly, exhibit profoundly limited survival prospects due to incompatible craniofacial and central nervous system malformations that preclude effective respiration, feeding, and thermoregulation. Empirical data from clinical case series indicate that the condition frequently culminates in intrauterine demise, with approximately 50% of detected cases resulting in stillbirth and a substantial proportion ending in earlier miscarriage. Among live births, median postnatal survival does not exceed 24 hours, as documented across multiple autopsy-verified reports, with death invariably attributable to respiratory insufficiency or associated systemic failures rather than isolated ocular defects. Rare instances of prolonged survival beyond initial hours stem from partial functionality in non-cranial organs, yet these remain exceptional and do not alter the uniformly lethal trajectory. For example, a 2024 from the Korean Journal of Perinatology described an infant with cyclopia and arrhinia who achieved 8 months' survival under without or surgical intervention, representing the longest documented duration to date; however, such outcomes are outliers amid a backdrop of near-universal early mortality. No verified instances of survival into childhood or beyond have been reported in peer-reviewed literature, underscoring cyclopia's biological incompatibility with sustained independent viability.

Supportive Interventions

Supportive interventions for cyclopia, the most severe manifestation of alobar holoprosencephaly, are confined to palliative strategies aimed at symptom relief, as the extensive forebrain malformation and associated craniofacial defects render corrective procedures infeasible. Surgical attempts to separate fused ocular structures or reconstruct midline defects have historically failed due to underlying prosencephalic non-segmentation, which disrupts neural integration essential for functional outcomes; case reviews of alobar holoprosencephaly confirm no viable reconstructive options exist for cyclopic variants, distinguishing them from milder holoprosencephaly forms amenable to limited craniofacial repairs. In neonatal settings, initial management may involve admission for and intravenous hydration to address respiratory insufficiency and dehydration stemming from absent nasal passages and proboscis obstruction, though empirical data underscore the futility of prolonged aggressive interventions given inevitable multi-organ failure. Withholding escalatory measures in favor of comfort-focused care—such as opioid administration for distress and family-centered planning—is standard in bioethical frameworks for lethal congenital anomalies, prioritizing empirical over resource-intensive prolongation of suffering; documented cases emphasize parental in electing comfort-only protocols, which align with observed rapid deterioration patterns. Post-diagnosis genetic counseling for affected families emphasizes nondirective assessment of recurrence risks, typically low (under 6% for sporadic cases tied to de novo mutations or environmental teratogens) but elevated in familial or syndromic contexts via targeted sequencing of holoprosencephaly-associated genes like SHH or ZIC2. Counseling avoids unsubstantiated reassurances, instead conveying verifiable etiological heterogeneity—predominantly sporadic with maternal factors like contributing—while facilitating informed reproductive planning through options, grounded in pedigree analysis and molecular data without presuming causality from biased institutional narratives.

Epidemiology

Incidence in Human Populations

Cyclopia, the most severe form of facial dysmorphism in alobar , has a of approximately 1 per 100,000 births, encompassing both live births and stillbirths, based on analysis of large-scale epidemiologic data from multiple birth defect surveillance programs. This estimate derives from 257 identified cases across diverse populations, with a 95% of 0.89 to 1.14 per 100,000, demonstrating low variability. The condition's uniformity in across geographic sites, uncorrelated with local socioeconomic or demographic factors, underscores a predominantly genetic and teratogenic basis over social determinants. In pregnancies affected by maternal mellitus, the risk of cyclopia elevates notably, as evidenced by case series documenting multiple occurrences among offspring of diabetic mothers, distinct from baseline rates. Maternal similarly amplifies odds of —a spectrum including cyclopia—by up to ninefold in controlled studies, linking hyperglycemia-induced disruptions in embryonic signaling pathways to and ocular malformations. Approximately 31% of cyclopia cases involve chromosomal anomalies, such as trisomy 13, further elevating incidence in at-risk cohorts, though karyotyping availability limits precise sub-stratification. The true embryonic incidence exceeds live birth figures, approaching rates seen in early conceptuses for (up to 1:250 including spontaneous losses), as many cyclopia-affected pregnancies terminate or via elective intervention post-diagnosis. Enhanced prenatal and genetic screening since the 2010s have facilitated earlier detection, correlating with reduced postnatal identifications in live births, particularly in regions with routine anomaly scans. This trend persists into the , prioritizing family counseling and selective continuation over delivery of non-viable cases.

Occurrence in Animals

Cyclopia occurs naturally in , particularly in sheep exposed to the teratogen from (false ) during early gestation. Pregnant ewes on this plant between days 13 and 14 of gestation produce lambs with cyclopia, with incidence rates reaching up to 25% in affected herds. Controlled feeding studies in sheep demonstrate a dose-response relationship, where higher doses of correlate with increased severity of craniofacial defects, including synophthalmia (partial cyclopia). Similar outbreaks have been documented in , though less frequently, often linked to environmental teratogens rather than specific patterns. Sporadic cases appear in goats and cats, typically attributed to genetic factors like or unidentified toxins. In goats, cyclopia is exceptionally rare, with prevalence below 0.1% in populations; a notable instance occurred in Assam, India, in 2017, where a kid survived briefly post-birth due to presumed genetic defects. Feline cases are extremely uncommon, with documented specimens preserved in museums, often resulting from embryonic developmental arrest without established epidemiological incidence due to high fetal lethality. Overall, animal cyclopia incidence remains lower than in human holoprosencephaly-associated cases, potentially influenced by shorter gestation periods limiting the teratogenic exposure window. Experimental models in provide causal insights into cyclopia mechanisms. Sonic hedgehog (Shh) mice exhibit complete cyclopia, characterized by a single fused optic vesicle and absent ventral neural structures, confirming Shh's essential role in midline patterning. These homozygous null mutants die perinatally, mirroring the lethality in natural cases and aiding research into human congenital defects via disrupted hedgehog signaling pathways.

Notable Cases

Human Examples

A male fetus exhibiting cyclopia was identified following a miscarriage in Syria in early 2024, with postmortem examination confirming alobar holoprosencephaly characterized by a single midline orbit, fused thalami, and absent olfactory bulbs. This case, the first documented in Syria, underscores the condition's association with severe prosencephalic cleavage failure during embryogenesis. In Ethiopia, a neonate with cyclopia syndrome was reported at the University of Gondar Comprehensive Specialized Hospital in 2024, presenting as a fatal congenital anomaly resulting from incomplete forebrain division. A subsequent 2025 case involved a neonatal presentation with cyclopia and neck positioning linked to alobar holoprosencephaly, highlighting persistent diagnostic challenges in resource-limited settings. Prior to 2000, multiple U.S. cases from the 1980s involved infants with cyclopia and trisomy 13, where chromosomal aberrations, particularly trisomy 13, contributed to approximately 31% of documented instances in large surveillance datasets. These cases consistently demonstrated rapid postnatal demise, typically within hours, due to profound neurological and respiratory compromise. No human cases of cyclopia have achieved long-term survival; affected individuals universally succumb shortly after birth, with the exceptional 2024 South Korean infant with alobar holoprosencephaly, cyclopia, and arrhinia surviving 8 months under palliative care representing the maximum reported lifespan. Claims in non-peer-reviewed media of extended viability or cures lack substantiation and contradict extensive medical literature affirming the condition's incompatibility with sustained life.

Animal Instances

Outbreaks of cyclopic lambs occurred among sheep herds in the starting in the 1950s, primarily in , due to pregnant ewes grazing on false hellebore (Veratrum californicum) around gestation day 14. The plant's alkaloid inhibits Sonic Hedgehog pathway signaling, disrupting prosencephalic cleavage and causing with cyclopia, often accompanied by a proboscis and fused hemispheres. These teratogenic events produced multiple malformed lambs per affected flock, with ranchers reporting substantial losses until the causal plant was identified through field studies by USDA researchers. A goat kid born on May 10, 2017, in , , displayed classic cyclopia features including a single central eye, absent nasal structures, and a single , surviving about eight days postnatally. This case, while isolated, exemplifies sporadic occurrences in caprines potentially linked to genetic or environmental disruptors of midline facial development, though the exact remained undetermined. Cyclopia reports in felines and canines are exceedingly rare, typically involving stillborn or short-lived neonates with verified via necropsy. Veterinary pathology links such instances to possible viral infections, toxic exposures, or chromosomal anomalies during embryogenesis, as seen in isolated canine cases documented since the . These underscore the condition's conservation across mammals but dependence on specific developmental perturbations, distinct from the reproducible teratogen-induced epidemics in ruminants.

Historical and Cultural Significance

Teratological and Scientific History

In the early 19th century, teratological studies began systematizing observations of congenital anomalies, including cyclopia as part of (HPE). , in his 1832-1837 treatise Traité de tératologie, classified cyclopia alongside ethmocephaly and cebocephaly within a of prosencephalic malformations, emphasizing developmental arrest in midline facial structures. This framework shifted descriptions from anecdotal reports to empirical categorization, drawing on anatomical dissections to link ocular fusion with cleavage failure, though causal mechanisms remained speculative. Genetic insights emerged in the 1990s, identifying mutations in the SHH (Sonic Hedgehog) gene as a primary cause of HPE, including cyclopia. In 1996, researchers reported SHH mutations in familial HPE cases, demonstrating dosage-dependent effects where heterozygous variants produce milder phenotypes and homozygous ones severe forms like cyclopia. Subsequent analyses confirmed SHH alterations account for up to 37% of autosomal dominant HPE instances, establishing a direct molecular link to disrupted ventral midline patterning essential for eye field separation. Animal models in the late 1990s and 2000s validated SHH's causality, with Shh knockout mice exhibiting cyclopia and axial defects mirroring human pathology. Studies in zebrafish and chick embryos further delineated SHH signaling's role in forebrain induction, showing pathway inhibition recapitulates HPE phenotypes. Recent case series from 2020 onward, incorporating genomic sequencing, have refined diagnostic criteria by correlating SHH variants with prenatal imaging findings, yet no advances in treatment have materialized, underscoring cyclopia's lethality.

Mythological and Symbolic Representations

The of , portrayed as massive, one-eyed beings skilled in metallurgy or pastoralism, feature prominently in Hesiod's as primordial craftsmen forging Zeus's thunderbolts and in Homer's as the savage shepherd , whose single eye is blinded by . A longstanding posits that these depictions arose from ancient encounters with fossilized skulls of Pleistocene dwarf elephants ( species) unearthed in Sicilian caves and Greek islands, where the prominent central could be misinterpreted as a solitary eye socket amid the smaller orbital fossae. This interpretation, advanced by classicist , draws on the abundance of such fossils in regions tied to Cyclopean lore, yet lacks archaeological or textual evidence of direct causation, remaining a speculative paleontological rather than a verified . Cross-culturally, one-eyed giants recur in , such as the Irish Fomorian leader , whose deadly gaze from a lone eye evokes destructive power, or isolated Polynesian tales of singular-eyed spirits guarding reefs, potentially echoing misattributions of rare craniofacial malformations or analogous fossils over purely symbolic archetypes. These motifs prioritize empirical encounters—teratological births or osteological discoveries—over abstract symbolism, as no primary sources link them causally to cyclopia beyond retrospective , underscoring a pattern of human pattern-seeking in anomalies rather than invented metaphysics. In contemporary media, reports of cyclopic infants, such as purported " babies" in regions with limited medical access, often amplify narratives akin to mythic resilience, yet empirical records confirm uniform lethality within hours or days due to profound neural and visceral defects, critiquing such portrayals as unsubstantiated detached from verifiable outcomes. This persists despite consistent documentation of cyclopia's incompatibility with sustained life, revealing folklore's enduring influence on non-data-driven interpretations over clinical fatality rates approaching 100%.

References

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