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macroglossia sentence in Hindi

"macroglossia" meaning in Hindi  macroglossia in a sentence  

Examples

  1. Another definition presented by Elliot et al . includes the presence of either three major features ( anterior abdominal wall defect, macroglossia, or prepostnatal overgrowth ) or two major plus three minor findings ( ear pits, nevus flammeus, neonatal hypoglycemia, nephromegaly, or hemihyperplasia ).
  2. "' Macroglossia "', a large tongue, is a very common ( > 90 % ) and prominent feature of BWS . Infants with BWS and macroglossia typically cannot fully close their mouth in front of their large tongue, causing it to protrude out.
  3. "' Macroglossia "', a large tongue, is a very common ( > 90 % ) and prominent feature of BWS . Infants with BWS and macroglossia typically cannot fully close their mouth in front of their large tongue, causing it to protrude out.
  4. It is not a disease as such, but usually results from habits where the tongue is pressed against the lingual surfaces ( the side facing the tongue ) of the dental arches, or from any cause of macroglossia ( enlarged tongue ), which in itself has many causes such as Down syndrome.
  5. And after Drs Beckwith and Wiedemann described a syndrome of low blood sugar, omphalocele abdominal malformation and macroglossia ( enlarged tongue ), Drs Winter and Curry and colleagues discovered how the syndrome, which had been named Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome, could be diagnosed prenatally ( before the baby was born ).
  6. Originally, Dr . Hans-Rudolf Wiedemann ( born 16 February 1915, Bremen, Germany, died 4 August 2006, Kiel ) coined the term exomphalos-macroglossia-gigantism ( EMG ) syndrome to describe the combination of congenital exomphalos ), large tongues ( macroglossia ), and large bodies and / or long limbs ( gigantism ).
  7. Originally, Dr . Hans-Rudolf Wiedemann ( born 16 February 1915, Bremen, Germany, died 4 August 2006, Kiel ) coined the term exomphalos-macroglossia-gigantism ( EMG ) syndrome to describe the combination of congenital exomphalos ), large tongues ( macroglossia ), and large bodies and / or long limbs ( gigantism ).
  8. In an attempt to standardize the classification of BWS, DeBaun et al . have defined a child as having BWS if the child has been diagnosed by a physician as having BWS and if the child has at least two of the five common features associated with BWS ( macroglossia, macrosomia, midline abdominal wall defects, ear creases / ear pits, neonatal hypoglycemia ).
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Related Words

  1. macrofauna
  2. macrofossil
  3. macrogamete
  4. macroglobulin
  5. macroglobulinaemia
  6. macrograph
  7. macroinstruction
  8. macrology
  9. macromastia
  10. macromere
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