|
Post by kAHANyAH on Apr 2, 2004 22:03:54 GMT -5
daemons are your flawed defective genes or dementia or autism or your dangerous germs and viruses. Degrees of religion and spookism can always be raised [razed] into the light of science. Especially when dealing with daemon as it is applied in real time temporal reality.
|
|
|
Post by SatiyaH on Apr 3, 2004 14:29:40 GMT -5
Polydactylism, or having one or more extra fingers or toes, is probably the most common abnormality of development found at birth. Polydactylism is reported in about 2 per 1000 children. However, many of the simpler cases are taken care of in the nursery by the obstetrician or pediatrician and don't show up in these statistics. An extra finger or toe may be nothing more than a nubbin of soft tissue with no bone involvement, it may be a full digit that forks off one of the five normal long bones of the hand or foot, or it may be a complete extra digit with its own extra long bone in the hand or foot -- or almost any variation between these possibilities. The most common form of polydactyly is a small, soft, extra finger that contains no bone. Many of these can be easily treated at birth by the attending physician who ties a suture tightly around the base. The extra digit falls off, and the normal-appearing hand or foot heals quickly. If there might be bone in the extra digits, X rays should be obtained to give a clear picture of what is going on. In some instances, it is still difficult to decide which digit should be removed, and close observation of the function of the hands and feet as they develop can give the answer. Complex polydactyly is usually not repaired until a child is one year old. Generally, the digit that is best aligned with the long bones is saved. When the other digit is removed, sometimes transferring tendons from the amputated digit will make the one that remains more normal. Sometimes a joint needs to be reconstructed, or a bony prominence shaved. If the case is complex, an orthopedic or plastic surgeon with expertise in hands and feet is preferred. Usually the results are excellent. There are over 30 rare congenital syndromes in which polydactyly is present. Most children with extra fingers or toes, however, are "normal" in the sense of their chromosomes.
|
|
|
Post by SatiyaH on Apr 3, 2004 14:34:25 GMT -5
cyclops are real: Rhinencephaly is characterized by a proboscis-like nose above a single median eye. Cyclopia is also known as synophthalmia, which is the fusion of the eyes
|
|
|
Post by kAHANyAH on Apr 3, 2004 14:39:26 GMT -5
oh damn! how you be finding these photos ?
|
|
|
Post by SatiyaH on Apr 3, 2004 14:46:14 GMT -5
More birth defects that relate to myths, stories passed down in religions, etc.: webbed feet or hands: You figure out the rest!: treacher syndrome-- hydrocephaly
|
|
|
Post by 1dell on Apr 3, 2004 15:29:58 GMT -5
Wow, where can I see moor pics like that Satiyah? I never seen york using pics like those in his books. Can these conditions be seen from a psonogram?
|
|
|
Post by kAHANyAH on Apr 3, 2004 15:32:55 GMT -5
"psonogram" ? Doest I persuadeth thou oh noble sir 1dell to psonix'th thine words ? Wow, where can I see moor pics like that Satiyah? I never seen york using pics like those in his books. Can these conditions be seen from a psonogram?
|
|
|
Post by 1dell on Apr 3, 2004 15:33:56 GMT -5
Nah bro, Zamir is on the way and I don't want no surprises. I am probably spelling sonogram wrong. You know when they look into the belly of a woman electronically and show you what the baby looks like "psonogram" ? Doest I persuadeth thou oh noble sir 1dell to psonix'th thine words ?
|
|
Master-9
Apprentice
You can't stop NUWAUBU!!!!
Posts: 172
|
Post by Master-9 on Apr 3, 2004 16:30:43 GMT -5
daemons are your flawed defective genes or dementia or autism or your dangerous germs and viruses. Degrees of religion and spookism can always be raised [razed] into the light of science. Especially when dealing with daemon as it is applied in real time temporal reality. No! All the men(sometimes women) in his family has those traits i mean at least 6 generations
|
|
|
Post by SatiyaH on Apr 3, 2004 16:46:44 GMT -5
Wow, where can I see moor pics like that Satiyah? I never seen york using pics like those in his books. Can these conditions be seen from a psonogram? Birth defects in Iraq due to depleted uranium!
|
|
|
Post by SatiyaH on Apr 3, 2004 16:49:15 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by kAHANyAH on Apr 3, 2004 16:52:23 GMT -5
M9, why are you saying No ? I dont think I had disagreed wit you on some point. No! All the men(sometimes women) in his family has those traits i mean at least 6 generations
|
|
|
Post by SatiyaH on Apr 3, 2004 16:53:22 GMT -5
The number of birth defects in Russian children are increasing. About 10% of Russian children are born with deformities. This figure increases by an estimated 2% annually. Of the 9 million babies born in 1993, only 9% were completely healthy. Birth defects are a result of nuclear fallout, industrial pollution, and various other factors. Below is a picture of a group of Russian children that are missing the lower portion of their right arms.
|
|
|
Post by SatiyaH on Apr 3, 2004 16:59:17 GMT -5
A CHILD IS BORN. It is past midnight inside the dank labour room at the Sultania Janada Hospital, Bhopal. Three attendants wash the tiny infant and routinely hold him up to give his mother her first glimpse. "Tumhara ladka paida hua hai (you have a son)," says one nurse as she pats the child to make him cry. There is no response. In the dim light, the skin of the child looks macerated and bluish. Within minutes, a senior doctor is called in. He looks down at the curled figure, asks for the mother's medical record and scrawls in the column for details of the birth: "Stillborn boy weighing four pounds, born to the mother". Then he rushes out to the maternity ward to attend to another patient about to deliver. Outside there is silence as the father looks expectantly at the white-clothed figures washing hands in the waiting room. Then comes the sound of weeping from beyond the green curtains of the labour room. "Yeh bhi gas kand ka baccha paida hua hai, (Here is another child of the gas tragedy)" says the nurse as she shows the father the shrivelled face of his newborn. (Source: Sunday, 28 July-3 August 1985) Fetus of a victim of the December 3, 1984 gas leak, preserved in formaldehyde at Hamidia Hospital, "...a Carbide child whose fate was sealed inside its mother's womb". In 2000, children were still being born with defects due to that gas lead!
|
|
|
Post by 1dell on Apr 3, 2004 17:03:40 GMT -5
Satiyah post some pics of Bart Simpson Babies. You aint talkin to me Sati? can these be seen before hand in sonograms?
|
|