{"Name":"Crossed polydactyly, type I","DiseaseID__c":"GARD:0001616","id":1616,"encodedName":"crossed-polydactyly-type-i","IsDeleted":false,"Disease_Name_Full__c":"Crossed polydactyly, type I","Xref_IDs__c":"C1868112; MEDGEN:357421; MONDO:0800291","USA_Estimate__c":null,"No_of_Specialist_Tagsa__c":0,"No_of_ClinGen_records__c":0,"No_of_GeneReviews__c":0,"No_of_HHS_records__c":0,"World_Estimate__c":null,"No_of_HRSA_records__c":0,"Evidence_Based_Score__c":0,"No_of_Disease_Descriptions__c":0,"Disease_Characteristics_Score__c":0,"No_of_Age_at_Onset__c":0,"Description_Source__c":"MEDGEN:C0265553","Disease_Description__c":"A rare anatomical malformation characterized by polydactyly (extra fingers or toes) and syndactyly (webbed fingers or toes).","GARD_Name__c":"Crossed polydactyly, type I","GARD_Synonym__c":"cp1","Curated_Disease_Description_Source__c":"MEDGEN:C0265553","Curated_Disease_Description__c":"This rare birth difference of the hands or feet is marked by both extra digits and webbing of the digits. Polydactyly means having extra fingers or toes, and syndactyly means that the fingers or toes are joined together by skin, creating webbed digits. People with this disease have both of these features at the same time.","Curated_USA_Estimate_Source__c":null,"Curated_USA_Estimate__c":null,"Age_at_Onset_Snippet_Text__c":null,"SourceID__c":null,"Deprecated__c":"No","Disease_Concept_Type__c":"Rare Disease Entity","MONDO_ID__c":"MONDO:0800291","ORPHANET_ID__c":null,"Replaced_By_ID__c":null,"Display_Spanish_Disease_Name__c":null,"Spanish_Description_Source__c":null,"Spanish_Description__c":null,"Spanish_Disease_Name__c":null,"Spanish_GARD_Synonym__c":null,"Category_Linearization__c":null,"icd10_id__c":null,"mesh_id__c":null,"omim_id__c":null,"snomed_id__c":null,"umls_id__c":null,"GARD_Disease__c":[{"Curated_Disease_Description__c":"This rare birth difference of the hands or feet is marked by both extra digits and webbing of the digits. Polydactyly means having extra fingers or toes, and syndactyly means that the fingers or toes are joined together by skin, creating webbed digits. People with this disease have both of these features at the same time.","Curated_Disease_Description_Source__c":"MEDGEN:C0265553","GARD_Synonym__c":"cp1","Name":"Crossed polydactyly, type I","estimateUsa":""}],"Diagnosis__c":[{"Type__c":"GTR","Curie__c":"MEDGEN:C1868111"}],"External_Identifier_Disease__c":[{"URL__c":"https://uts.nlm.nih.gov/uts/umls/concept/C1868112","Source__c":"C1868112","Xref__c":"C1868112"},{"URL__c":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/medgen/?term=357421","Source__c":"C1868112","Xref__c":"MEDGEN:357421"},{"URL__c":"http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/MONDO_0800291","Source__c":"GARD:0001616","Xref__c":"MONDO:0800291"}],"tags":{},"synonyms":["cp1"]}