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cervical vertebrae
- ... two or more spinal bones in the neck (cervical vertebrae). The vertebral fusion is present from birth. Three ... these proteins leads to incomplete separation of the cervical vertebrae in people with Klippel-Feil syndrome.When Klippel- ...
- ... two or more spinal bones in the neck (cervical vertebrae) and a variety of other features affecting many ... and incorrect vertebral positioning. As a result, the cervical vertebrae do not separate during development but instead are ...
- ... feet, hips, and upper part of the spine (cervical vertebrae). People with this condition can have hearing loss ... Some affected individuals may have fusion of the cervical vertebrae and characteristic facial features like those seen in ...
- ... helps stabilize the spinal bones in the neck (cervical vertebrae). Odontoid hypoplasia can lead to misalignment of the cervical vertebrae, which may compress and damage the spinal cord, ...
- ... two or more spinal bones in the neck (cervical vertebrae) and a variety of other features affecting many ... this protein leads to incomplete separation of the cervical vertebrae in people with Klippel-Feil syndrome. More About ...
- ... two or more spinal bones in the neck (cervical vertebrae) and a variety of other features affecting many ... this protein leads to incomplete separation of the cervical vertebrae in people with Klippel-Feil syndrome. More About ...
- ... skull (occiput), and the rest occur in the cervical (neck), thoracic (upper back), or lumbar (lower back) vertebrae of the spine. As the chordoma grows, it ...
- ... turning foot (clubfoot), progressive abnormal curvature of the spine, and unusually positioned thumbs (hitchhiker thumbs). About half ...