enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pallister–Killian syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pallister–Killian_syndrome

    Individuals with PKS present prenatally or at birth with multiple birth defects.These defects include: brain atrophy, agenesis of the corpus callosum, polymicrogyria of the brain, and/or spot calcifications in the brain's lateral sulcus; deafness and/or blindness; autonomic nervous system dysfunctions such as anhidrosis, hypohidrosis, and/or episodic spells of hyperventilation interspersed ...

  3. WI-38 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WI-38

    The WI-38 cell line stemmed from earlier work by Hayflick growing human cell cultures. [2]In the early 1960s, Hayflick and his colleague Paul Moorhead at the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania discovered that when normal human cells were stored in a freezer, the cells remembered the doubling level at which they were stored and, when reconstituted, began to divide from that level to ...

  4. CD55 deficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD55_deficiency

    CD55 deficiency, also called DAF deficiency or CHAPLE syndrome, is a rare genetic disorder of the immune system. CHAPLE stands for "CD55 deficiency with hyper-activation of complement, angiopathic thrombosis, and severe protein-losing enteropathy (PLE)." [1] The disorder usually manifests in childhood and can be life-threatening. This condition ...

  5. List of syndromes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_syndromes

    Serpentine fibula-polycystic kidney syndrome; Sertoli cell-only syndrome; Serum sickness–like reaction; Setleis syndrome; Severe acute respiratory syndrome; Shaken baby syndrome; Shapiro syndrome; Sheehan's syndrome; Shell nail syndrome; Shone's syndrome; Short anagen syndrome; Short bowel syndrome; Short man syndrome; Short QT syndrome ...

  6. Microchimerism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microchimerism

    In humans (and perhaps in all placental mammals), the most common form is fetomaternal microchimerism (also known as fetal cell microchimerism or fetal chimerism) whereby cells from a fetus pass through the placenta and establish cell lineages within the mother. Fetal cells have been documented to persist and multiply in the mother for several ...

  7. Why do people rarely see images like these? - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/heres-pregnancy-actually...

    Photos of what pregnancy tissue from early abortions at 5 to 9 weeks actually looks like have gone viral.. The images, which were originally shared by MYA Network — a network of physicians who ...

  8. CHILD syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CHILD_syndrome

    Congenital hemidysplasia with ichthyosiform erythroderma and limb defects (also known as "CHILD syndrome") is a genetic disorder with onset at birth seen almost exclusively in females. [ 1 ] : 485 The disorder is related to CPDX2, and also has skin and skeletal abnormalities, distinguished by a sharp midline demarcation of the ichthyosis with ...

  9. Sanjad–Sakati syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanjad–Sakati_syndrome

    Sanjad–Sakati syndrome (Middle East syndrome) is a rare autosomal recessive genetic condition seen in offspring of Middle Eastern origin. It was first described in Saudi Arabia, [ 1 ] but has been seen in Qatari, Kuwaiti, Omani and other children from the Middle East as well as elsewhere. [ 2 ]