AASE (syndrome D) Translate this page aase (syndrome d). Maladie rare, familiale et congénitale associant des poucescomportant trois phalanges avec une anémie de type Blackfan-Diamond. http://www.vulgaris-medical.com/textp/pouces.htm
Liste A syndrome) A frigore Aarskog (syndrome d')aase (syndrome d') Abadie (signe d') Abandon (névrose d') Abarticulaire Abasie http://www.vulgaris-medical.com/lista.html
Jon Morton Aase (www.whonamedit.com) Albuquerque, New Mexico. Associated with aaseSmith syndrome. Albuquerque, New Mexico.Associated eponyms aase-Smith syndrome A familial deformity syndrome. http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/334.html
Extractions: After graduating in medicine from Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, he interned at the University of Minnesota and completed his residency at the University of Washington. He then spent two years studying the indigenous population of Alaska, before he returned to Seattle to work with the paediatrician and dysmorphologist David W. Smith (1926-1981). After five more years in Alaska he came to the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, where he became chief of the dysmorphology division. Aase is the author or co-author of over forty-five articles in the area of dysmorphology. He developed the FAS Clinical Checklist and Screening Protocol for the Centers for Disease Control, and in early 2000 was conducting a Study of the Epidemiology of FAS in New Mexico for the Centers for Disease Control. He is on the advisory board of National Organization on Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. Besides his tenure at the University of New Mexico Aase (1996) is a consulting dysmorphologist in private practice. He also provides clinical and educational services for various state and national agencies.
FAS - State Of Alaska DHSS Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Website Streissguth, AP; aase, JM; Claren, SK; Randels, SP; LaDue, RA; and Smith, DF Fetalalcohol syndrome in adolescents and adults. JAMA 265(15)19611965, 1991. http://www.acbr.com/fas/diagnose.htm
Extractions: Diagnosing FAS Fetal alcohol syndrome is a medical diagnosis usually made by a physician specifically trained in the assessment of birth defects. Other professionals often assist in identifying children with known maternal drinking histories or suspected problems. For example, nurses may be trained to recognize the facial features of children with fetal alcohol syndrome. It is important that the physician making the diagnosis is sensitive to the physical characteristics of the racial group with whom he or she is working because the physical characteristics of FAS may look slightly different among different racial groups. Accurate diagnosis of alcohol-related effects require that the physician be qualified. Accurate identification can improve the child's opportunity to receive appropriate interventions, facilitate communication among clinicians, caregivers, and educators, and provides better self-awareness and understanding by family members. The following information has been extracted from Ninth Special Report to the U.S. Congress on Alcohol and Health, June 1997(RP0973)
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome- Alcohol Alert No. 13-1991 the American Medical Association 261(2)205209, 1989.(14) MAY, PA; Hymbaugh, KJ;aase, JM; Samet, JM Epidemiology of fetal alcohol syndrome among American http://www.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/aa13.htm
Extractions: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In 1973, Jones and Smith (1) coined the term "fetal alcohol syndrome" (FAS) to describe a pattern of abnormalities observed in children born to alcoholic mothers. It was originally postulated that malnutrition might be responsible for these defects. However, the pattern of malformation associated with FAS is not seen in children born to malnourished women, and alcohol has been found to be acutely toxic to the fetus independently of the effects of malnutrition (2,3). Criteria for defining FAS were standardized by the Fetal Alcohol Study Group of the Research Society on Alcoholism in 1980 (4), and modifications were proposed in 1989 by Sokol and Clarren (5). The proposed criteria are 1) prenatal and/or postnatal growth retardation (weight and/or length below the 10th percentile); 2) central nervous system involvement, including neurological abnormalities, developmental delays, behavioral dysfunction, intellectual impairment, and skull or brain malformations; and 3) a characteristic face with short palpebral fissures (eye openings), a thin upper lip, and an elongated, flattened midface and philtrum (the groove in the middle of the upper lip).
FAS And Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Web Page The Clinical Diagnosis of Fetal Alcohol syndrome by Jon M. aase, MD Complete andnever before published information on the diagnosis of Fetal Alcohol syndrome http://www.floraco.com/fas/index.html
Extractions: Decreased Liability Exposure Because the diagnostic protocols and measurement techniques described on the video are so easy to utilize, the opportunity for missed and mis-diagnoses will be reduced. This video is a completely new production which uses diagnostic images of more than a dozen FAS patients. Enhanced Patient and Client Service The methods and procedures explained on the video allow the health care professional to discriminate between FAS and other causes of growth retardation and mental deficit. The result of over 1000 clinical examinations of children afflicted with FAS, these techniques are on the cutting edge of this critical field.
Extractions: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Reports Increase at Sixfold Rate, CDC Says ALCOHOL September 1995 According to recent data released by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), the rate of reported fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) has increased sixfold between 1979 and 1993 ("Update: Trends in Fetal Alcohol Syndrome United States, 1979-1993," Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report , April 7, 1995, p. 1; "FAS Births Six Times Higher in 1993 Than in 1979: CDCP," Drugs and Drug Abuse Education , March 1995, p. 26). Data collected by the CDC in the Birth Defects Monitoring Program (BDMP) show that in 1993, the rate of newborn FAS was 6.7 per 10,000 infants, while in 1979 that rate was 1.0 per 10,000 births. Hospital data management services voluntarily submit data on births to the CDC for the BDMP. To be diagnosed with FAS, children must exhibit abnormalities in three areas: growth (height, weight, or head circumference), central nervous system (behavioral or mental problems, for instance), and appearance (a specific pattern of recognizable deformities). Editors of MMWR cautioned that the increasing rate may be a result of greater awareness of FAS, not necessarily greater incidence. Tom Donaldson of the National Organization on Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (NOFAS) told
Conditions And Diseases A Treasure Coast Health Q / R / S / T / U / V / W / X / Y / Z. Aarskog syndrome@ (6); Aasesyndrome@ (3); Abdominal Migraine@ (3); Abetalipoproteinemia@ (5); http://treasurecoasthealth.com/treasurecoasthealth.php/Health/Conditions_and_Dis
MetaEUREKA Metasearch Organizations, Personal Pages. Support Groups, Aarskog syndrome. Aasesyndrome, AblepharonMacrostomia syndrome. Acoustic Neuroma, Adie syndrome. http://www.metaeureka.com/cgi-bin/odp2.pl?dir=Health/Conditions_and_Diseases/Gen
Wholesale Products And Drop Shipping Information! Health Top Health Conditions_and_Diseases Rare_Disorders Aarskog syndrome@ (6); Aasesyndrome@ (3); Abetalipoproteinemia@ (5); AblepharonMacrostomia syndrome@ (4); http://www.wholesale-dropshipping.com/catalog.php/Health/Conditions_and_Diseases
A Listing Of Disorders Brain and Tissue Bank University of Maryland, Baltimore, A. Aarskog syndrome. Aasesyndrome. Ablepharon Macrostomia syndrome. Acanthocheilonemiasis. Acanthocytosis. http://medschool.umaryland.edu/BTBank/Family/Disorders_A.htm
Katalog - Wirtualna Polska Serwis Katalog w Wirtualna Polska S.A. pierwszy portal w Polsce. http://katalog.wp.pl/DMOZ/Health/Conditions_and_Diseases/Genetic_Disorders/Aase_
Internet Course Guide In this practice, let's pretend we are doing research on the disease Aasesyndrome. Save your Word document to your hard drive or diskette. http://www.gordonrichard.com/internet/lessons/les8bnot.htm
Extractions: Home Site map Syllabus Question Bank ... Miscellaneous Lessons 1.Intro to Browser 3.Selecting Home Page 4.Deleting Favorites 5.Creating, organizing Favorites ... Lesson 8A In Lesson 8A, we learned how to make notes from a browser window into a wordprocessor's window. You may sometimes wish to copy an entire Web page or a section of a Web page into a Word document. Then, at a later time, you can make notes from your copied material and incorporate those notes into a report. You must be careful though not to copy and paste from a source into your report, and then present your copied/pasted work as your own. If you copy and paste text from a source into your own report and then try to fool the teacher into thinking your copied words are you own, you are guilty of plagiarism. Plagiarism can lead to a failing grade, a tarnished reputation and even expulsion. But there are legitimate times when you want to copy parts of a Web page into a Word document just as there are legitimate times when you want to photocopy an entire article or sections of an article. Here's how: Open up your Word processor. Type at the top of document window the topic of your research. In this practice, let's pretend we are doing research on the disease Aase syndrome. Save your Word document to your hard drive or diskette.