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Results 1 - 10 of 15 for muscles
  1. ... affect several parts of the body, including the muscles used for movement (skeletal muscles), the heart, the brain, or the liver.The ... large amounts of energy, such as the brain, muscles, and heart. Cell death in these and other ...
  2. ... which connect the brain and spinal cord to muscles and to sensory cells that detect sensations such ... or loss of sensation and wasting (atrophy) of muscles in the feet, legs, and hands.The protein ...
  3. ... chromosome. This condition impairs the coordinated waves of muscle contractions that move food through the digestive tract ( ... affects the shape of cells in the smooth muscles of the gastrointestinal tract during development before birth, ...
  4. ... of chromosome 4. This condition is characterized by muscle weakness and wasting (atrophy) that worsens slowly over ... influences the activity of other genes, particularly in muscle cells. It is unknown how abnormal activity of ...
  5. ... tract abnormalities, moderate to severe intellectual disability, abnormal muscle tone, and a distinctive facial appearance. The chromosomal ... disability, a thin or absent corpus callosum, weak muscle tone (hypotonia), abnormal curvature of the spine (scoliosis), ...
  6. ... cancer is generally divided into two types, non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) and muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC), based on where in ...
  7. ... intellectual disability, slow growth, characteristic facial features, weak muscle tone (hypotonia), and abnormalities of the fingers and ...
  8. ... severely delayed development of speech and walking, weak muscle tone (hypotonia), breathing problems, seizures, and distinctive facial ...
  9. ... intellectual disability, slow growth, distinctive facial features, weak muscle tone (hypotonia), skeletal abnormalities, and heart defects.Several ...
  10. ... chromosome. People with this condition may have weak muscle tone (hypotonia), a small head (microcephaly), frequent respiratory ...
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