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  1. Mother. Agnes of France. Joan of Burgundy ( French: Jeanne; c. 1293 – 12 December 1349), also known as Joan the Lame ( French: Jeanne la Boiteuse ), was Queen of France as the first wife of King Philip VI. Joan ruled as regent while her husband fought on military campaigns during the Hundred Years' War during the years 1340, 1345–1346 and 1347.

  2. Jan 4, 2017 · The main signs and symptoms of Sprengel deformity are limited or restricted movement of the arm and shoulder blade on the affected side as well as the cervical spine. Some affected individuals have neck deformities as well, ranging from mild tilting (torticollis) to severe spine deformity.

  3. However, her nature and power earned both herself and her husband a bad reputation, which was accentuated by her deformity (which was considered by some to be a mark of evil), and she became known as la male royne boiteuse ("the lame male Queen"), supposedly the driving force behind her weaker husband.

  4. Sprengel Shoulder / Undescended Scapula. Sprengel deformity is a high shoulder blade (scapula), due to failure in early foetal development where the shoulder fails to descent properly from the neck to its final position. Normally this disorder is asymmetric with the left scapula most commonly affected, so it will sit higher on the back than the ...

  5. Oct 27, 2014 · Sprengel deformity, also known as congenital high scapula, undescended scapula, or scapula elevata, is a rare congenital deformity of one or both scapulae that appears at birth, [ 1] although Pellegrin et al ., have published a single case in which the patient presented with Sprengel shoulder reported as appearing after trauma. [ 2] .

    • Antonia Bindoudi, Eleni P Kariki, Konstantinos Vasiliadis, Ioannis Tsitouridis
    • 10.4103/2156-7514.143407
    • 2014
    • J Clin Imaging Sci. 2014; 4: 55.
  6. Muscular forms. Sprengel's deformity (also known as high scapula, scapular hypoplasia, or congenital high scapula) is a rare congenital skeletal abnormality where a person has one shoulder blade that sits higher on the back than the other. The deformity is due to a failure in early fetal development where the shoulder fails to descend properly ...

  7. May 25, 2012 · By Charles Goldfarb • May 25, 2012. Sprengel deformity is an uncommon condition in which the scapula (shoulder blade) on one side is higher in the neck than the other side. Normally, during prenatal development, both scapula begin high in the neck and slowly descend toward their normal resting position in the upper back.

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