Madison has developed hip dysplasia in her back legs and will require surgeries.
From the delawareonline.com
If the cells are only slightly abnormal, the condition is called mild dysplasia.
From the sacbee.com
Not even 2 years old, he had hip and knee dysplasia and a horrible bone disease.
From the kentucky.com
Rocky's rare disease, craniodiaphyseal dysplasia, ended his life at 16, in 1978.
From the time.com
One female family member with the duplication had hip dysplasia but not clubfoot.
From the sciencedaily.com
Longitudinal measures of lung function in infants with bronchopulmonary dysplasia.
From the sciencedaily.com
It will help you find a network of doctors trained to deal with hip dysplasia.
From the omaha.com
Dysplasia offers a stage at which cancer can be prevented by removing these cells.
From the sciencedaily.com
The likelihood of developing carcinoma is related to the degree of dysplasia.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
Abnormal development (of organs or cells) or an abnormal structure resulting from such growth
(dysplastic) relating to or evidencing dysplasia
Dysplasia (from Ancient Greek u03B4u03C5u03C3- dys-, "bad" or "difficult" and u03C0u03BBu03ACu03C3u03B9u03C2 plasis, "formation") is an ambiguous term used in pathology to refer to an abnormality of development or an epithelial anomaly of growth and differentiation (epithelial dysplasia).
(Dysplastic) An alteration in size, shape, and organization of cells. A dysplastic nevus, also called an atypical mole, is characterized by the ABCDs of melanoma detection.
(Dysplastic) Congenital abnormality.
Developmental abnormality; alteration in size, shape or function.
Cells that look abnormal under a microscope but are not cancer.
A condition where cells grow more than normal. The growth can become malignant.
Disorganized cell structure or arrangement within a tissue or organ.