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  1. The highest frequency of occurrence of epicanthic folds is found in specific populations or ethnicities: East Asians, Southeast Asians, Central Asians, North Asians, Polynesians, Micronesians, Indigenous peoples of the Americas, and some African people (especially among Khoisan and Nilotic people).

  2. Monolid eyes, or epicanthal folds, are an eyelid shape commonly seen in people of Asian descent. It’s also seen in people with genetic conditions. With monolid eyes, the skin of your upper eyelids covers the inner parts of your eyes.

  3. 2 lut 2021 · Asian eyes tend to have a smaller vertical distance between the upper and lower eyelid — this opening is called the palpebral fissure. Epicanthal folds — the folds of skin that run from the upper eyelid to the inner corner of the eye — are present in about half the Asian population.

  4. 1 sie 2024 · “Monolids” is a common term for epicanthal folds, a type of eyelid seen in people who don't have a double eyelid or crease. Monolids typically occur in some people of Asian ethnicity, with eyelids shaped by a skin fold at the inner eye (the canthus) that can create a more narrowed appearance.

  5. One distinguishing structure that characterizes many Asian eyes is the epicanthal fold. Present in almost all newborns, the epicanthal fold presents with an incidence of 2% in non-Asian adults, and at an incidence as high as 90% in Asian adults.

  6. For people of Asian descent, the epicanthal fold is a signature inherited through chromosomes. About half of this population displays a monolid, where the fold seamlessly extends across the eyelid without a crease.

  7. epicanthic fold, fold of skin across the inner corner of the eye (canthus). The epicanthic fold produces the eye shape characteristic of persons from central and eastern Asia; it is also seen in some Native American peoples and occasionally in Europeans (e.g., Scandinavians and Poles).

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