The fingers and toes may be long and slender, with loose joints that can be bent beyond their normal limits.
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.
Marfan syndrome is sometimes called arachnodactyly, which means "spider-like fingers" in Greek, since one of the characteristic signs of the disease is disproportionately long fingers and toes.
Marfan syndrome is found in 1 in every 5,000 - 10,000 births. If one of your parents has Marfan syndrome, you have a 50% chance of having Marfan syndrome.
Marfan Syndrome is a medical problem with the Conective Tissue.
Yes, Marfan syndrome is autosomal dominant.
Marfan's syndrome is not contagious. A person can only get it by inheriting it from a parent.
Marfan syndrome is an inherited disorder characterized by a tall, thin body with long limbs and fingers (arachnodactyly). Other features of Marfan syndrome include heart, eye, and skeletal abnormalities due to a genetic mutation affecting connective tissue. It can vary in severity and may require medical management to address associated complications.
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.
No. Down is caused by an extra chromosome while Marfan is due to a mutation in one or more genes.
Marfan Syndrome is also known as Marfan's disease and hereditary connective tissue disorder. In some contexts, it may be referred to as Marfan syndrome type I or simply as a connective tissue disorder. However, the most common and widely recognized name remains Marfan Syndrome.
flat feet an sinked chest are some symptomes of marfan syndrome
They cant exercise as vigorously as someone without Marfan syndrome