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Results 1 - 10 of 18 for Finger Injuries
  1. ... unintentionally, typically by biting the tongue, lips, or fingers. These injuries may lead to loss of the affected areas, ...
  2. ... CIPA, typically by biting the tongue, lips, or fingers, which may lead to spontaneous amputation of the affected area. In addition, people with CIPA heal slowly from skin and bone injuries. Repeated trauma can lead to chronic bone infections ( ...
  3. ... of sensation in the hands and feet. Repeated injuries that go unnoticed and untreated because of this lack of sensation can lead to reabsorption of affected fingers or toes by the body, resulting in the ...
  4. ... aggression, anxiety, impulsiveness, and difficulty paying attention. Self-injury, ... licking their fingers and flipping pages of books and magazines (a ...
  5. ... vessels called arterioles. The disorder mainly affects the fingers but can also involve the ears, nose, nipples, ... Raynaud phenomenon, sores on the pads of the fingers or tissue death (necrosis) can occur. Primary Raynaud ...
  6. ... immune system, which plays a role in healing injuries, targets these areas, ... is especially noticeable.People with osteoarthritis typically experience ...
  7. ... in which the joints of one or more fingers cannot be fully straightened (extended); their mobility is ... cords develop. These cords gradually draw the affected fingers downward so that they curl toward the palm. ...
  8. ... nutrient-deprivation autophagy factor-1 WFS2 ZCD2 zinc finger, CDGSH-type domain 2 Tests of CISD2 PubMed ... R. A homozygous mutation in a novel zinc-finger protein, ERIS, is responsible for Wolfram syndrome 2. ...
  9. ... that leads to abnormalities of the voicebox (laryngo-), finger- and toenails (onycho-), and skin (cutaneous). Many of ... tissue grows even when there is no major injury.One of the first symptoms in infants with ...
  10. ... skin (lesions), particularly on the face, ears, nose, fingers, and toes. These lesions begin as rashes and ... separates the two nostrils (nasal septum perforation), or fingers or toes that require amputation. Individuals with SAVI ...
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