Orthopedics

Last modified by Ulla Mugler on 2009/07/10 09:33

Ophthalmology

 In the more mildly affected children curving of the fifth finger (clinodactyly), small hands, a short thumb placed closer than usual to the wrist and some limitation of elbow motions are often present, with webbing of one or more fingers (syndactyly) less common. Abnormalities of the hip occur in five to ten percent of the children with CdLS and may interfere with the ability to walk. Surgery may be used to correct this condition.
Of greater relevance to communication because of the interference in the use of sign language or other augmentative strategies for communication are the more severe upper-limb malformations. In some cases fingers, metacarpals and the long bones of the arm are absent.

Tags:
Created by Gerritjan Koekkoek on 2009/06/25 21:25

About you..

Only when registerd...

CdLS impressions

Loading...

World associations

CdLS is worldwide present, all information is available in English
but if you want to change the language click on a flag of one of the supportgroups in CdLS World
Number of associations: 19
Australia
Australia
Australia
Canada
Deutschland
España
France
Italia
vereniging CdLS
vereniging CdLS
Polska
Portugal
CdLS Foundation UK & Ireland
CdLS Foundation UK & Ireland
CdLS Foundation USA
Danmark
日本
Schweiz, Suisse
CdLS World
Chile
South Korea
Central America
Central America
Central America
Central America
Central America
Argentina

Disclaimer - All of the information contained within these questions and answers is for education purposes only. The place to get specific medical advice, diagnoses, and treatment is your doctor. Use of this site is strictly at your own risk. If you find something that you think needs correction or clarification, please let us know at: umugler@aol.com
This wiki is licensed under a Creative Commons 2.0 license
XWiki Enterprise 2.7.1.34853 - Documentation