Recent scientific discoveries in genetics (DNA, genes etc.) have brought about unprecedented changes in the way genetic diseases are named. While the focus was previously placed on the patient\u2019s symptoms and physical appearance, after the advent of modern science it turned to the gene mutations responsible for the disease itself. An interesting case in point is represented by those named after the physician who first discovered them, i.e. eponyms like Down syndrome, Lejeune syndrome. These are often accompanied by popular and / or disparaging terms (e.g.: mongolism, dwarfism), especially in the case of genetic diseases with a high phenotypical impact, as well as by cause-descriptive labels (e.g.: trisomy 18, trichomoniasis). To prevent...
This paper focuses on the structural development of institution-based interest in genetics in Anglo-...
The word "syndrome" was originally a medical term. Compound words ending with "syndrome" became more...
The "Nosology of genetic skeletal disorders" has undergone its 11th revision and now contains 771 en...
In recent years, the rapid evolution of scientific research on DNA has unlocked the codes to genetic...
The terminology of medicine within the systematic approach is studied as a well-ordered base with a ...
Clinicians and laboratory scientists use a number of different systems for naming genetic mutations ...
The "Nosology of genetic skeletal disorders" has undergone its 11th revision and now contains 771 en...
Item does not contain fulltextThe system of assigning locus symbols to specify chromosomal regions t...
This article is a revision of the previous edition article by Victor A McKusick, volume 1, pp 3–32, ...
Genetics can do more than predict, explain or help treat medical conditions - it can create new ones...
What are known as specialized or specialist dictionaries are much more than lists of words and their...
Genetics, in The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Health, Illness, Behavior, and Society (W.C. Cocke...
Hereditary conditions are traditionally classified based either on physical/physiological attributes...
The purpose of this dissertation is to examine the use, role and function of medical pedigrees as pa...
Introduction: Throughout history, eponyms have been used in medical sciences to designate anatomical...
This paper focuses on the structural development of institution-based interest in genetics in Anglo-...
The word "syndrome" was originally a medical term. Compound words ending with "syndrome" became more...
The "Nosology of genetic skeletal disorders" has undergone its 11th revision and now contains 771 en...
In recent years, the rapid evolution of scientific research on DNA has unlocked the codes to genetic...
The terminology of medicine within the systematic approach is studied as a well-ordered base with a ...
Clinicians and laboratory scientists use a number of different systems for naming genetic mutations ...
The "Nosology of genetic skeletal disorders" has undergone its 11th revision and now contains 771 en...
Item does not contain fulltextThe system of assigning locus symbols to specify chromosomal regions t...
This article is a revision of the previous edition article by Victor A McKusick, volume 1, pp 3–32, ...
Genetics can do more than predict, explain or help treat medical conditions - it can create new ones...
What are known as specialized or specialist dictionaries are much more than lists of words and their...
Genetics, in The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Health, Illness, Behavior, and Society (W.C. Cocke...
Hereditary conditions are traditionally classified based either on physical/physiological attributes...
The purpose of this dissertation is to examine the use, role and function of medical pedigrees as pa...
Introduction: Throughout history, eponyms have been used in medical sciences to designate anatomical...
This paper focuses on the structural development of institution-based interest in genetics in Anglo-...
The word "syndrome" was originally a medical term. Compound words ending with "syndrome" became more...
The "Nosology of genetic skeletal disorders" has undergone its 11th revision and now contains 771 en...