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  2. Sacral dimple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacral_dimple

    Sacral dimples are often spotted in post-natal checks by pediatricians, [3] [5] who can check: whether the floor of the dimple is covered with skin; whether there is a tuft of hair in the dimple; whether there are potentially related problems such as weak lower limbs; the distance from the buttocks to the dimple (closer is better).

  3. Tufted folliculitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tufted_folliculitis

    Tufted folliculitis presents with doll's hair-like bundling of follicular units, and is seen in a wide range of scarring conditions including chronic staphylococcal infection, chronic lupus erythematosus, lichen planopilaris, Graham-Little syndrome, folliculitis decalvans, acne keloidalis nuchae, immunobullous disorders, and dissecting cellulitis.

  4. Tethered cord syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tethered_cord_syndrome

    Studies have found that marked metabolic and electrophysiological susceptibility to hypoxic stress to the lumbar and sacral portion of the spinal cord under traction with various weights. [13] Similar effects were found in redox behavior of tethered spinal cord during the surgical procedures to repair it.

  5. Spina bifida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spina_bifida

    The skin at the site of the lesion may be normal, or it may have some hair growing from it; there may be a dimple in the skin, or a birthmark. [21] Unlike most other types of neural tube defects, spina bifida occulta is not associated with increased AFP , a common screening tool used to detect neural tube defects in utero.

  6. Congenital dermal sinus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congenital_dermal_sinus

    Congenital dermal sinus is an uncommon form of cranial or spinal dysraphism. [2] [3] It occurs in 1 in 2500 live births. [3]It occurs as a dermal indentation, found along the midline of the neuraxis and often presents alongside infection and neurological deficit. [2]

  7. Newborn baby goes viral after shocking his family with his ...

    www.aol.com/news/baby-rare-condition-shocks...

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  8. Sacrococcygeal teratoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacrococcygeal_teratoma

    SCT is seen in 1 in every 35,000 live births, and is the most common tumor presenting in newborn humans. Most SCTs are found in babies and children, but SCTs have been reported in adults [12] and the increasingly routine use of prenatal ultrasound exams has dramatically increased the number of diagnosed SCTs presenting in fetuses. Like other ...

  9. Congenital melanocytic nevus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congenital_melanocytic_nevus

    Some individuals advocate the use of hair removal laser for the treatment of congenital nevi. While this is likely safe and effective for small congenital nevus, laser removal for larger lesions might pose a liability for the laser surgeon if malignancy developed from a deep (dermal) component of the nevus that is not reached by the laser.