Kallmann's revisited, part II
I went to GALILEO today (it's the database for the UGA libraries) to see if there was anything on Kallmann's in later life--50 and above. I haven't found it, and of course most of the articles were far too technical for my eyes. My knowledge of genetics is not even rudimentary. So maybe I'm throwing this out: Does anything know anything about the lives of Kallmann's patients in the second half of life?
I do not define myself by Kallmann's.
I do not define myself by Kallmann's.
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