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Results 1 - 10 of 654 for Long fingers
  1. Long, slender fingers can be normal and not associated with any medical problems. In some cases, however, "spider fingers" ... your health care provider if your child has long, slender fingers and you are concerned that an underlying condition ...
  2. ... partial dislocation (subluxation) of certain joints, and unusually long fingers and toes. They may have bowed limbs; underdeveloped, ...
  3. ... that includes a long face, slim body, and long fingers.Less commonly, DLG4-related synaptopathy can affect a ...
  4. ... of the genitourinary system. Many affected individuals have long fingers and toes with an unusually large range of ...
  5. ... creatures. They have nearly see-through bodies with long, finger-like structures called tentacles. Stinging cells inside the ...
  6. ... called Marfan syndrome. For example, they may have long, slender fingers (arachnodactyly), unusually long limbs, a sunken chest (pectus excavatum) or protruding ...
  7. ... soft and stretchable skin. Some affected individuals have long, slender fingers and toes (arachnodactyly); curvature of the spine (scoliosis); or a chest that is either sunken (pectus excavatum) or protruding (pectus ... including a long, narrow face with droopy cheeks; eye openings that ...
  8. ... symptoms (such as being tall and thin with long, slender fingers), while others also experience life-threatening complications involving ...
  9. ... typically are tall with long limbs (dolichostenomelia) and long, slender fingers and toes (arachnodactyly). They often have permanently bent ...
  10. ... include joint deformities (contractures) that limit movement; unusually long, slender fingers (arachnodactyly); bowing of the thigh bones; and radiohumeral ...
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