Want this question answered?
people with marfan syndrome are typically very tall with loose jointed. people with marfan disease usually have long narrow faces.
Marfan syndrome (also called Marfan's syndrome) is a genetic disorder of the connective tissue. People with Marfan's tend to be unusually tall, with long limbs and long, thin fingers.
People with Marfan syndome have problems with their eyes, heart, skeleton, and people with it are usually very tall and skinny
No. Down is caused by an extra chromosome while Marfan is due to a mutation in one or more genes.
Marfan syndrome
The "autosomal dominant" method of inheritance. if your question as Marfan syndrome is the result of inheriting a single allele. Individuals with Marfan syndrome are tall and long-limbed, and have both cardiovascular and eye defects. The inheritance of Marfan syndrome is an example of ______. then the answer is pleiotropy
There is no set height for people with Marfan syndrome. There was even a man who had both dwarfism and Marfan syndrome! People with Marfan are USUALLY taller than unaffected family members, but not always. More important than a person's height are their ratios (arm span to height, upper torso to lower torso), flexibility, condition of their aorta, and condition of their eyes.
The Marfan syndrome is a connective tissue disorder. The Marfan syndrome is inherited and affects many parts of the body. There's no single test for diagnosing it, but people who have it often have many similar traits. Besides perhaps having heart problems, people with the Marfan syndrome are often tall and thin. They also may have slender, tapering fingers, long arms and legs, curvature of the spine and eye problems. Sometimes the Marfan syndrome is so mild that few symptoms exist. In the most severe cases, which are rare, life-threatening problems may occur at any age.
Some of the effects on a person with Marfan's syndrome might be that they would have bad eyesight, they would be abnormally tall (7ft), they might also have a long face and loose joints.
Yes. Marfan syndrome is a congenital disorder affecting the formation of fibrillin. In Marfan syndrome, the abnormal fibrillin is responsible for many of the findings of the disease. Hyperextensibility/hyperelasticity of joints is one of the hallmark signs. Pectus excavatum is another. People with Marfan syndrome are typically very tall and thin, with very long fingers and toes (arachnodactyly). The fibrillin defect also affects the blood vessels, especially the large arteries, such as the aorta. Disordered fibrillin production causes these arteries to be weaker than normal, predisposing patients with Marfan syndrome to aortic dissections and rupture. This the major cause of death for patients with Marfan syndrome.
Marfan's syndrome is a genetic condition that effects the connective tissues. These people tend to be very tall with extra long limbs. Some famous people who have the syndrome include Vincent Schiavelli, Bradford Cox, and John Taverner. Abraham Lincoln is suspected to have had the condition.
It depends. If you have the genes or your family is Tall, you might grow taller like them. I know that women's stop growing at the age of 18 and men at the age of 21:)