Defecation -- Social aspects -- India : The Sabar Shouchagar Project (toilets for everyone) : making Nadia District the first open-defecation-free district in India / Devi Vijay, (Department of Organizational Behavior, Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, Kolkata, India), and Debabrata Ghosh, (Department of Operations Management, Malaysia Institute for Supply Chain Innovation MIT Scale Network, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)
Defects of color vision are mainly hereditary traits but can be secondary to acquired or developmental abnormalities in the CONES (RETINA). Severity of hereditary defects of color vision depends on the degree of mutation of the ROD OPSINS genes (on X CHROMOSOME and CHROMOSOME 3) that code the photopigments for red, green and blue
Defects of color vision are mainly hereditary traits but can be secondary to acquired or developmental abnormalities in the CONES (RETINA). Severity of hereditary defects of color vision depends on the degree of mutation of the ROD OPSINS genes (on X CHROMOSOME and CHROMOSOME 3) that code the photopigments for red, green and blue
Congenital malformations of the central nervous system and adjacent structures related to defective neural tube closure during the first trimester of pregnancy generally occurring between days 18-29 of gestation. Ectodermal and mesodermal malformations (mainly involving the skull and vertebrae) may occur as a result of defects of neural tube closure. (From Joynt, Clinical Neurology, 1992, Ch55, pp31-41)
Diseases that are caused by genetic mutations present during embryo or fetal development, although they may be observed later in life. The mutations may be inherited from a parent's genome or they may be acquired in utero
Here are entered works on disorders of the physiological mechanisms required for the articulation, patterning, or production of speech. Works on disorders of the central neurological function affecting the reception, processing, or expression of language are entered under Language disorders
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defective speech. : Signs, Signals and Symbols : a Presentation of a British Approach to Speech Pathology and Therapy