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Results 21 - 30 of 35 for Abnormal eyelid movement
  1. ... to ocular hypertelorism, affected individuals may have droopy eyelids (ptosis), thick lips, and low-set ears. Affected individuals also usually have an abnormal appearance of the chest; they either have pectus ...
  2. ... the forehead muscles to try to lift the eyelids, or they may lift up their ... used for movement (myopathy), particularly those in the neck, arms, or ...
  3. ... of the mouth (high-arched palate), severely drooping eyelids (ptosis), and ... comes from characteristic abnormal cap-like structures that can be seen in ...
  4. ... have eye problems such as rapid, involuntary eye movements (nystagmus) or eyes that do not look in the same direction (strabismus).Other characteristic features of Kabuki syndrome include short stature and skeletal abnormalities such as abnormal side-to-side curvature of the spine (scoliosis), ...
  5. ... gaps that occur in the eyelids. While these eyelid gaps are also called colobomas, they arise from ... Coloboma arises from abnormal development of the eye. During the second month ...
  6. ... and other molecules (cell-matrix adhesion), and the movement (migration) of ... have an abnormal structure and cannot grow or divide normally. They ...
  7. ... a narrowing of the eye opening (blepharophimosis), droopy eyelids (ptosis), ... can have abnormal fusion of certain bones in the skull (craniosynostosis) ...
  8. ... nose and upper lip (philtrum), and droopy upper eyelids (ptosis). Individuals with frontonasal dysplasia type 2 can ... that regulate cell growth and division (proliferation) and movement (migration), ensuring that cells grow and stop growing ...
  9. ... the sun, including the face, the lips, the eyelids, the surface of the eyes, the scalp, and ... some people, the eyelashes fall out and the eyelids may be thin and turn abnormally inward or ...
  10. ... known as Horner syndrome, which leads to drooping eyelids, small pupils, decreased sweating, and red skin. Tumor ... develop opsoclonus myoclonus syndrome, which causes rapid eye movements and jerky muscle motions. This condition occurs when ...
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