There's no evidence of such.
With strong evidence, genetic as it is hereditary.
No, but consuming alcohol during pregnancy can lead to impaired mental development in a condition called Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.
There is no evidence to suggest that Albert Einstein had fetal alcohol syndrome. Fetal alcohol syndrome is a condition that occurs in children born to mothers who drank alcohol during pregnancy, leading to developmental and physical abnormalities.
There is no evidence that Post Polis Syndrome can cause dementia, but PPS sufferers' can develop dementia which is non-related to PPS, such as Alzheimers' Disease.
evidence links aneurysms to certain rare diseases of the connective tissue. These diseases include Marfan syndrome, pseudoxanthoma elasticum, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, and fibromuscular dysplasia.
Talk to the guardian ad litem, but it is often evidence of parental alienation syndrome.
Grade I: Child is quiet, sleepy, vomiting, and there is some blood evidence of a drop in liver functioning.
GBS is termed a syndrome rather than a disease because there is no conclusive evidence to support the possibility that a specific disease-causing agent such as a bacteria or a virus is the direct cause of the malady.
There is limited evidence to suggest that Alice in Wonderland syndrome may have genetic components, but more research is needed to confirm this. The syndrome is often associated with migraines and can occur at any age. It is more commonly linked to factors such as neurological conditions, infections, and drug use.
No, your period isn't the same as pre-menstrual syndrome. The term pre-menstrual syndrome is a term given to around 150 different symptoms that may or may not occur prior to your period - there is no evidence that PMS actually exists, it's considered a sociological condition.
I don't think there is any. Aurther Shawcross maybe, but not Gacy at least that I know of.