Genetics Home Reference [LIBRARY OF GENETIC Dwarfism ► NEW TOPIC PAGE]
Dwarfism Update
MedlinePlus sent this bulletin at 04/14/2016 01:10 PM EDTNew on the MedlinePlus Dwarfism page:
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
04/13/2016 02:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
03/15/2016 04:39 PM EDT
Source: National Library of Medicine -
MEDICAL ENCYCLOPEDIA
National Institutes of Health
A dwarf is a person of short stature - under 4' 10" as an adult. More than 200 different conditions can cause dwarfism. A single type, called achondroplasia, causes about 70 percent of all dwarfism. Achondroplasia is a genetic condition that affects about 1 in 15,000 to 1 in 40,000 people. It makes your arms and legs short in comparison to your head and trunk. Other genetic conditions, kidney disease and problems with metabolism or hormones can also cause short stature.
Dwarfism itself is not a disease. However, there is a greater risk of some health problems. With proper medical care, most people with dwarfism have active lives and live as long as other people.
- Genetic Testing (For Parents) (Nemours Foundation)Available in Spanish
- Ellis-Van Creveld Dysplasia (Nemours Foundation)
- Hypochondroplasia (Nemours Foundation)
- Primordial Dwarfism (Nemours Foundation)
- Genetics Home Reference: 3-M syndrome (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: achondrogenesis (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: achondroplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: asphyxiating thoracic dystrophy (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: atelosteogenesis type 2 (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: campomelic dysplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: cartilage-hair hypoplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: diastrophic dysplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: Ellis-van Creveld syndrome (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: fibrochondrogenesis (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: hypochondrogenesis (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: hypochondroplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: isolated growth hormone deficiency (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: Kniest dysplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: Laron syndrome (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: Meier-Gorlin syndrome (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: metatropic dysplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: microcephalic osteodysplastic primordial dwarfism type II (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: osteoglophonic dysplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: platyspondylic lethal skeletal dysplasia, Torrance type (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: pseudoachondroplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: Robinow syndrome (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: SADDAN (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: Schimke immuno-osseous dysplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: spondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia, Strudwick type (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia congenita (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: spondylothoracic dysostosis (National Library of Medicine)
- Genetics Home Reference: thanatophoric dysplasia (National Library of Medicine)
- Insights Into Severe Form of Dwarfism Could Lead to New Treatment Strategies (National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases)
- ClinicalTrials.gov: Dwarfism (National Institutes of Health)
- Article: Autosomal-Recessive Intellectual Disability with Cerebellar Atrophy Syndrome Caused by Mutation...
- Article: Endoplasmic reticulum stress-mediated apoptosis contributes to a skeletal dysplasia resembling...
- Article: Bilateral humeral lengthening in achondroplasia with unilateral external fixators: is...
- Dwarfism -- see more articles
- Dwarfism (For Parents) (Nemours Foundation)
- Dwarfism (Nemours Foundation)
- Achondroplasia Available in Spanish
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