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Identification of Turner's Syndrome in an Elderly WomanCase Report and Review
Peter P. Tóth, MD, PhD;
Gerald J. Jogerst, MD
Arch Fam Med. 1996;5(1):48-51.
Abstract
Turner's syndrome is one of the most frequently occurring chromosomal defects and is associated with a well-characterized set of anatomic malformations. We studied clinical findings in an elderly woman who was diagnosed as having cytogenetically proved Tuener's syndrome late in life. Because most patients with Turner's syndrome have normal intelligence and mild phenotypic abnormalities, the condition was never properly diagnosed in many affected women born earlier in this century. Given the range of clinical abnormalities and physiologic deficits to which these women are predisposed, it remains important to diagnose and treat them accurately irrespective of age.
Author Affiliations
From the Department of Family Practice, University of Iowa, Iowa City.
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