A common anatomical variation is being born with more than ten fingers or more than ten toes.
The term polydactyly is derived from the Greek poly (meaning many) and dactyly (referring to fingers or toes or digits). To understand it, we need to start with how an embryo develops in the womb.
Developing hands and feet start as limb buds, which look like little flat paddles. But with polydactyly, an extra finger or toe grows from the limb bud.
Based on the research literature about one in 700–1,000 people born have polydactyly. Having an extra finger on the side of your little finger or having an extra toe on the side of your little toe is the most common form.
If the extra digit doesn’t have bone, or has poor muscle connections to the hand or foot, it won’t work. So it is usually cut off or tied off with a suture (specialized medical string) straight after you are born.
Less commonly, people are born with double thumb tips or an extra thumb. Seeing as we use our thumbs so often, an orthopaedic surgeon may need to remove the extra bones to improve use of the thumb.
The rarest type of polydactyly affects the fourth finger (ring finger) or the second toe (next to your big toe).
Ten known syndromes (groups of associated symptoms) are linked to polydactyly: Bardet-Biedl, McKusick-Kaufman, Carpenter, Arrow-chotzen, Poland, Greig cephalosyndactyly, short-rib, Pallister-Hall, Triphalangeal thumb, and Smith-Lemli-Opitz. Many of these are rare syndromes people are born with, usually affect the head and upper limbs, and will have been diagnosed by a paediatrician early in life.
If you have polydactyly and you don’t have one of those syndromes, it means you inherited a dominant mutated gene from your ancestors. In other words, one of your parents would have passed this on to you when you were conceived.
Tennant does not appear to have any of these syndromes. So we can probably presume he inherited a mutated copy of a gene related to his polydactyly from one of his parents.
Another common anatomical variation is when people have fused or “webbed” fingers or toes, known as syndactyly. This term comes from syn (meaning together with) and dactyly (referring to fingers or toes).
Syndactyly also arises in the womb. When individual fingers and toes develop from the paddle-like limb buds, cells in between the growing fingers and toes have to die and disappear. But if the cells don’t die and disappear, they can cause webbing or fusing.
Based on the medical literature, about one in 2,000–3,000 people born have syndactyly. So it’s about three times less common than polydactyly.
There are nine different types of syndactyly, and 11 syndromes associated with it. Eight of the syndromes are also associated with polydactyly. The other three are Open and Pfeiffer syndromes, and acrocephalosyndactyly.
Exercising with Allergic Asthma: A Guide to Safe and Effective Workouts 1. Exercise in Short…
The Miracle Bear Scores 8.5 out of 10 Olympia-winning coach Hany Rambod reviewed the physique…
The Minimalists Talk about the Difference between Minimalism and Renunciation In a recent episode, The…
Ten Million People Diagnosed with Dementia Worldwide Each Year - Early Signs of Alzheimer's Disease…
Why the Fear of Space is So Prevalent There are many home-grown problems on Earth,…
Loaded Burger Bowls: A Game-Changer for Dinner This Post May Contain Affiliate Links. Please Read…