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Results 1 - 10 of 17 for oligodontia
  1. When a person's teeth grow in, they may be delayed or not occur at all. ... The age at which a tooth comes in varies. Most infants get ...
  2. ... Feng H. EDA gene mutations underlie non-syndromic oligodontia. J Dent Res. 2009 Feb;88(2):126- ...
  3. ... absence of some teeth (known as hypodontia or oligodontia). Some affected infants are born with a few ... tremor-ataxia with central hypomyelination (TACH); leukodystrophy with oligodontia (LO); or hypomyelination with cerebellar atrophy and hypoplasia ...
  4. ... least six MSX1 gene variants are responsible for oligodontia, a condition in which multiple teeth fail to ... with MSX1 gene variants have a combination of oligodontia and cleft lip and/or cleft palate. Variants ...
  5. ... account for (1/4) of population-based isolated oligodontia and show phenotypic correlations. Am J Med Genet ... N. Mutations in WNT10A are frequently involved in oligodontia associated with minor signs of ectodermal dysplasia. Am ...
  6. ... the teeth never emerge from the jaw (clinical anodontia). In addition, the gums are often overgrown (hypertrophic ...
  7. ... is deleted in Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome patients with oligodontia. J Dent Res. 2003 Dec;82(12):1013- ...
  8. ... lip; and small teeth that are either decreased (oligodontia) or increased (supernumerary) in number. Almost all affected ...
  9. ... Affected individuals may have fewer teeth than normal (oligodontia) and their teeth are often smaller than usual ...
  10. ... small teeth (microdontia) or fewer than normal teeth (oligodontia). Some people with Axenfeld-Rieger syndrome have extra ...
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