http://www.nature.com/ejhg/journal/v24/n11/full/ejhg201673a.html This is more common than I realized. 2/3 are familial autosomal dominant with the remainder being sporadic. If this is relevant, then there are more kids to choose from. Also, the medical screening angle (clinics, doctors) is uber-valid.
The cerebral implications are quite astounding from an aesthetic anatomical perspective, the brain is completely dualistic therefore without the grounding nut, non dualistic region.
From a genetic perspective, does this show a separate ancestry?
From a whatever the hell science perspective how on earth would this affect the circadian rhythms of the body or indeed where is the melatonin being produced. Given the geographical location one would think it should have to be in abundance.
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badastrid ago
http://www.nature.com/ejhg/journal/v24/n11/full/ejhg201673a.html This is more common than I realized. 2/3 are familial autosomal dominant with the remainder being sporadic. If this is relevant, then there are more kids to choose from. Also, the medical screening angle (clinics, doctors) is uber-valid.
PhysicsEconomy ago
In one tunic group of northern Africans experiencing Aniridia completely lacked a pineal gland. http://iovs.arvojournals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2366489&resultClick=1
The cerebral implications are quite astounding from an aesthetic anatomical perspective, the brain is completely dualistic therefore without the grounding nut, non dualistic region.
From a genetic perspective, does this show a separate ancestry?
From a whatever the hell science perspective how on earth would this affect the circadian rhythms of the body or indeed where is the melatonin being produced. Given the geographical location one would think it should have to be in abundance.