Sloping forehead
From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki
Sloping forehead | |
---|---|
Synonyms | Receding forehead Sloped forehead |
![]() | |
Sloping forehead in Saethre-Chotzen syndrome | |
Classification and external resources | |
Specialty | {{#statements:P1995}} |
Patient UK | Sloping forehead |
Sloping forehead is a condition in which the forehead is objectively vertically inclined more than two standard deviations,[clarification needed] or the forehead shows subjectively excessive posterior sloping when viewed in profile.[1][2][3]
Syndromes (conditions)[edit]
Sloping forehead is seen in the following conditions and syndromes:[1]
- Arthrogryposis, renal dysfunction, and cholestasis (VPS33B and VIPAS39)
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3e/Idiotie_-_Microc%C3%A9phalie.jpg/300px-Idiotie_-_Microc%C3%A9phalie.jpg)
- Autosomal dominant primary microcephaly
- Carnitine palmitoyl transferase II deficiency, neonatal form
- Cerebrooculofacioskeletal syndrome (ERCC6)
- Congenital microcephaly - severe encephalopathy - progressive cerebral atrophy syndrome
- Craniosynostosis and dental anomalies
- Developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (PARS2 and UGP2)
- Dextrocardia with unusual facies and microphthalmia
- Dubowitz syndrome
- Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, kyphoscoliotic and deafness type
- Holoprosencephaly (CNOT1 and ZIC2)
- Hypotonia, infantile, with psychomotor retardation and characteristic facies (TBCK)
- Intellectual disability, autosomal dominant (CAMK2B)
- Intellectual disability, X-linked (PAK3)
- Lathosterolosis
- Lissencephaly (KATNB1) with microcephaly
- Lowry-Wood syndrome
- Macular coloboma-cleft palate-hallux valgus syndrome
- Meckel syndrome, type 1
- Microcephaly, primary, autosomal recessive (CDK6, CENPE, ANKLE2, CIT, WDR62, KIF14, NCAPD2, NCAPH, RRP7A, CDK5RAP2, KNL1, ASPM, STIL, CEP135)
- NDE1-related microhydranencephaly
- Nephrotic syndrome, type 11
- Neu-Laxova syndrome (PHGDH and PSAT1)
- Neurodevelopmental disorder with dysmorphic facies and cerebellar hypoplasia
- Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (CTSD)
- Norman-Roberts syndrome
- Pontocerebellar hypoplasia, types 2B and 12
- Pseudo-TORCH syndrome (OCLN)
- Schinzel-Giedion syndrome
- Seckel syndrome (ATR and CEP152)
- Severe feeding difficulties-failure to thrive-microcephaly due to ASXL3 deficiency syndrome
- Severe intellectual disability-short stature-behavioral abnormalities-facial dysmorphism syndrome
- Short stature, microcephaly, and endocrine dysfunction
- Syndromic X-linked intellectual disability, Siderius type
- Warsaw breakage syndrome
- Zaki syndrome
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Sloping forehead (Concept Id: C1857679)". www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. Retrieved 2023-08-07.
- ↑ "Forehead, Sloping". elementsofmorphology.nih.gov. Retrieved 2023-08-07.
- ↑ Eixarch, Elisenda; Figueras, Francesc; Gómez, Olga; Puerto, Bienvenido (2018-01-01), Copel, Joshua A.; D'Alton, Mary E.; Feltovich, Helen; Gratacós, Eduard, eds., "69 - Facial Dysmorphism", Obstetric Imaging: Fetal Diagnosis and Care (Second Edition), Elsevier, pp. 327–331.e1, ISBN 978-0-323-44548-1, retrieved 2023-08-07
This article "Sloping forehead" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Sloping forehead. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.