The population is as far as 1 in 50,000 people suffer from yellow nail disease but the same is increasing and has reached to the limit of 1 per 30,000.
Nail Patella Syndrome can be found in 1 of 50,000 people.
Nail Patella Syndrome is found on chromosome #9. If you search "what chromosome is nail patella syndrome on?" in Google, then it will give you a bunch of websites that have a bunch of info. about it. hope this helps. :-)
No, it is not recessive. Nail-patella syndrome is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner. This means that possession of only one copy of the defective gene is enough to cause disease. When a parent has nail-patella syndrome each of their children has a 50% chance to inherit the disease-causing mutation. A new mutation causing nail-patella syndrome can also occur, causing disease in a person with no family history. This is called a sporadic occurrence and accounts for approximately 20% of cases of nail-patella syndrome. The children of a person with sporadic nail-patella syndrome are also at a 50% risk of developing signs of the disorder.
Scientist fong 1897
Nail-patella syndrome (NPS), also known as hereditary osteo-onychodysplasia (HOOD), is a rare, genetically determined disease, which is inherited as a dominant trait. So yes, it is hereditary.
Nail-patella syndrome is associated with open-angle glaucoma, which, if untreated, may lead to blindness. Patients may also have cataracts, drooping eyelids (ptosis ), or corneal problems such as glaucoma.
The hallmark features of this syndrome are poorly developed fingernails, toenails, and patellae (kneecaps). Other common abnormalities include elbow deformities, abnormally shaped pelvis bone (hip bone), and kidney (renal) disease.
They live normal, long, healthy lives. The syndrome has been in my family for generations, and many live 85 years ore longer.
no
well i have nail patella syndrome and some characteristics that i have are missing fingernails, my fingers are crooked and look weird, i cannot straiten my arms past a 90 degree angle, i have kneecaps the size of a dime and i am 14 years old, i have a slight sign of scoliosis in my lower back near my Si joint, there is something definitely wrong with my hips but my doctor cannot find out why they have been causing me so much pain, I'm missing my 9th chromosome and my corpus callosum (part of the brain) and ya that's about it!
The patella is better known as the knee cap.
Femoral patella syndrome for me is extremely painful because I am a track runner so when ever I run I just kills. But it could be different for any one.
Kneecap is a common name of the patella.