Gigantism
Gigantism | |
Anna Haining Bates with her parents | |
ICD-10 | E22.0, E34.4 |
ICD-9 | 253.0 |
DiseasesDB | 30730 |
MedlinePlus | 001174 |
MeSH | D005877 |
Gigantism Microchapters |
Diagnosis |
---|
Treatment |
Case Studies |
Gigantism On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Gigantism |
Types
As a medical term, gigantism can refer to:
- "Pituitary gigantism",these are people who their hormones over produce which is due to prepubertal growth hormone excess. This is sometimes equated with acromegaly, but more precisely, an excess of growth hormone leads to "pituitary gigantism" (vertical growth) if the epiphyseal plates have not yet closed,[1] but it leads to "acromegaly" (lateral growth) if they have closed.
- "Cerebral gigantism", also known as Sotos syndrome,[2] which is due to a mutation in NSD1.
Terminology
The term is typically applied to those whose height is not just in the upper 1% of the population but several standard deviations above mean for persons of the same sex, age, and ethnic ancestry. The term is seldom applied to those who are simply "tall" or "above average" whose heights appear to be the healthy result of normal genetics and nutrition.
Other names somewhat obsolete for this pathology are hypersomia (Greek: hyper over the normal level; soma body) and somatomegaly (Greek; soma body, object pronoun somatos of the body; megas, megalos great).
Many of those who have been identified with gigantism have suffered from multiple health problems involving their circulatory or skeletal system.
See also
References
External links
de:Riesenwuchs et:Gigantism el:Γιγαντισμός eu:Erraldoitasun id:Gigantisme it:Gigantismo he:ענקיות sr:Gigantizam fi:Jättikasvu sv:Gigantism Template:WH Template:WS