This section contains 2,343 words (approx. 8 pages at 300 words per page) |
Birth defects, or congenital defects result from heredity, environmental influences, or maternal illness. Such defects range from the very minor, such as a dark spot or birthmark that may appear anywhere on the body, to more serious conditions that may result in marked disfigurement, impaired functioning, or decreased lifespan.
A number of factors individually or in combination may cause birth defects. Heredity plays a major role in passing birth defects from one generation to the next. Inherited conditions are passed on when a baby receives a flawed gene from one or both parents. Conditions such as sickle cell anemia, color blindness, deafness, and extra digits on the hands or feet are hereditary. The condition may not appear in every generation, but the defective gene usually is passed on to successive generations.
Low birth weight is the most common birth defect...
This section contains 2,343 words (approx. 8 pages at 300 words per page) |