Also known as trisomy X, Triple-X female, XXX syndrome, Triple-X chromosome syndrome, Triplo X syndrome, 47,XXX syndrome
presence of 47XXX chromosomes rather than the typical 46XX
via Wikipedia infobox
Trisomy X, also known as triple X syndrome and characterized by the karyotype 47,XXX, is a chromosome disorder in which a female has an extra copy of the X chromosome. It is relatively common and occurs in 1 in 1,000 females, but is rarely diagnosed; fewer than 10% of those with the condition know they have it.
Those who have symptoms can have learning disabilities, mild dysmorphic features such as hypertelorism (wide-spaced eyes) and clinodactyly (incurved little fingers), early menopause, and increased height. As the symptoms of trisomy X are often not serious enough to prompt a karyotype test, many cases of trisomy X are diagnosed before birth via prenatal screening tests such as amniocentesis. Most females with trisomy X live normal lives, although their socioeconomic status is reduced compared to the general population.
via PubMed
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).