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  2. Clubfoot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clubfoot

    Clubfoot was diagnosed between 12 and 23 weeks of gestation in 86% of children and between 24 and 32 weeks of gestation in the remaining 14%. [ 17 ] Without treatment the foot remains deformed and people walk on the sides or tops of their feet, which can cause calluses, foot infections, trouble fitting into shoes, pain, difficulty walking, and ...

  3. Dopamine-responsive dystonia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dopamine-responsive_dystonia

    Characteristic symptoms are increased muscle tone (dystonia, such as clubfoot) and Parkinsonian features, typically absent in the morning or after rest but worsening during the day and with exertion. Children with dopamine-responsive dystonia are often misdiagnosed as having cerebral palsy. The disorder responds well to treatment with levodopa.

  4. Potter sequence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potter_sequence

    The first child to survive bilateral renal agenesis (BRA), Abigail Rose Herrera Beutler, was born in July 2013 to US Congresswoman Jaime Herrera Beutler. [8] A few weeks before she was born, Dr. Jessica Bienstock, a professor of maternal–fetal medicine at Johns Hopkins Hospital, [ 9 ] administered a series of saline solution injections into ...

  5. Pes cavus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pes_cavus

    Pes cavus can occur from four primary causes: neurological conditions, trauma, undertreated clubfoot, or idiopathic with other underlining conditions. [9]Bilateral presentation (i.e., in both feet) often occurs due to a hereditary or congenital source, whereas a unilateral presentation (i.e., in one foot) is often the result of trauma.

  6. Adducted thumb syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adducted_thumb_syndrome

    Signs and symptoms [ edit ] This syndrome is characterised by typical facial appearance, slight build, thin and translucent skin, severely adducted thumbs, arachnodactyly , club feet , joint instability, facial clefting and bleeding disorders, as well as heart, kidney or intestinal defects.

  7. Larsen syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larsen_syndrome

    Ultrasound can capture prenatal images of multiple joint dislocations, abnormal positioning of legs and knees, depressed nasal bridge, prominent forehead, and club feet. These symptoms are all associated with Larsen syndrome, so they can be used to confirm that a fetus has the disorder.

  8. Atelosteogenesis, type II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atelosteogenesis,_type_II

    The signs and symptoms of atelosteogenesis, type 2, are similar to those of another skeletal disorder called diastrophic dysplasia. Atelosteogenesis, type 2 tends to be more severe, however. Atelosteogenesis, type 2 tends to be more severe, however.

  9. Pascual-Castroviejo syndrome type 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascual-Castroviejo...

    1 Signs and symptoms. 2 Genetics. ... Talipes (clubfoot) Central nervous system ... All cases to date have been reported in children. Long term prognosis is not known.