His blindness ensures that she does not, once again, become the object of the male gaze. |
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Ten millilitres of pure methanol can cause blindness and 30 millilitres death, so it is just small amounts. |
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The question suggests a blindness to the fact that sportswomen around the world are accomplishing remarkable feats. |
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Initially manifested as night blindness in young dogs, as PRA progresses, its victims become totally blind. |
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Impaired fat soluble vitamin absorption may also occur leading to osteopenia, increased clotting times, and night blindness. |
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Approximately halfway to the summit, however, Dr Weathers realized he had night blindness. |
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Lack of vitamin A causes night blindness, with hundreds of thousands of children, particularly in Southeast Asia, affected. |
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Pressure from excess fluid or improper drainage damages the optic nerve and can lead to tunnel vision, loss of peripheral vision, or blindness. |
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She runs the place for her father, whose blindness forced him into retirement. |
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From time-to-time, horse owners and veterinarians see equine recurrent uveitis, also known as periodic ophthalmia or moon blindness, in horses. |
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There is indeed a disease colloquially known as moon blindness, but it only occurs in horses. |
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As an owner of a horse that has been diagnosed with moon blindness, I have always been looking for alternative treatments for his condition. |
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Equine recurrent uveitis, also known as moon blindness, is the most common cause of blindness in this species. |
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If you read about her moon blindness and her loss of eyesight you wonder how she functions day to day around here. |
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Vitamin A is important for photoreceptor mechanisms in the retina and the integrity of epithelia, so deficiency can lead to night blindness. |
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Progressive retinal atrophy is a disease in which the retina slowly deteriorates, producing night blindness in young dogs. |
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For night flying, engineers added special flame-suppressing exhaust stacks to it to prevent night blindness in crew members. |
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He suffers from night blindness, but this hasn't stopped him winning three Paralympic titles and a host of other medals. |
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During walks in the woods, Rusty, whose blindness is caused by underdeveloped retinas, would follow Dugan, staying right at his ear. |
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If the liver blood is insufficient, there will be a dryness of the eyes, blurred vision, or night blindness. |
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Patients might also have bone pain, muscle cramps, night blindness, and easy bruising as a result of malabsorption of fat-soluble vitamins. |
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He had been left with a severe form of cerebral palsy, epilepsy, and cortical blindness. |
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Lutein is a carotenoid thought to protect against age-related eye problems and blindness. |
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Once I believed that blindness, deafness, tuberculosis and other causes of suffering were necessary, unpreventable. |
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Affected individuals are sensitive to blue light and develop night blindness at an early age. |
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During World War II, medics accompanying German mountain troops were experts at treating frostbite, snow blindness, and other problems. |
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These include exhaustion, weight loss, night blindness, dehydration, diarrhoea and hunger-related deaths. |
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He is utterly happy, and so is she, and despite his blindness and being a cripple, she accepts his hand in marriage. |
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This deficiency is the single-most important cause of blindness in about half a million children annually. |
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It is, however, susceptible to entropion, an eye disease which can cause blindness as the lashes penetrate the cornea. |
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There is a slight possibility that the scar tissue could grow over the pupil, causing blindness. |
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Some 8 percent of men and 0.5 percent of women have some form of color blindness. |
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Its resolute blindness to empirical matters of power and politics in organizational structuring is obvious. |
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If a malefic planet is in this place they will be struck by sudden blindness. |
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This sets apart the hero and villain, and also shows the blindness of society at that time. |
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When that is coupled with temporary blindness by the sun, a hidden trap lies waiting to ensnare the unwary driver. |
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Thoroughly frustrated with the blindness of his countrymen, he resolved to establish a community in America. |
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Youthful stupidity and not a small amount of cultural blindness are things common to most people. |
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Willing blindness seems to prevail among farmers who refuse to understand the idiocy of pricing milk at wildly differing price levels. |
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This is epitome of blindness, that mere externalities blind one to reality, even when it is right before one's face. |
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Once the agreement is made, willful blindness will not save the co-conspirators from being responsible for other conspirators' acts. |
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In the confusion, he berates his lamenting fellow-citizens for their blindness, an image emphasizing the human dilemma of uncertain truth. |
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Color blindness is caused by problems in the pigments of the cones in the retina. |
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Conjunctivitis, keratitis, or chorioretinitis can result in vision loss and blindness. |
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Timoleon resigned his office, allegedly because of blindness, died in the mid-to late 330s, and was buried in the Syracusan agora. |
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May have associated ocular symptoms including partial visual loss and field cuts, diplopia, ptosis, and blindness. |
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Glaucoma is a group of diseases that can lead to damage to the eye's optic nerve and result in blindness. |
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Although unaffected in everyday life, he is the victim of a selective word blindness. |
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As the disease progresses, the field of vision gradually narrows and blindness can result. |
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Pink eye in horses is more serious than in humans and can easily lead to blindness. |
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Yet he has a very short fuse, perhaps the inevitable result of coping with his blindness in such a pressurised job. |
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He was distracted from his blindness, he says, by the deluge of mental and physical challenges coming his way. |
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Most authors on the subject state that people with colour blindness will adapt without any serious inconvenience or problems. |
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But even under those conditions, and the blindness that came on, he continued his scientific work. |
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The most common form of color blindness is an inherited condition that affects boys much more often than girls. |
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The water in the well is believed to have curative powers and was recommended as a remedy for warts and blindness. |
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Symptoms of quinine toxicity include diarrhea, vomiting, confusion, blindness, tinnitus, and paralysis. |
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Leber congenital amaurosis is an inherited disease that is believed to cause up to 20 percent of all cases of childhood blindness. |
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Accidents or strokes that damage the retina or affect particular areas of the brain can cause colour blindness. |
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This leading cause of blindness in the elderly occurs when excess blood vessels start leaking into the eye. |
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In addition, damage to retinal layer blood vessels of the eye can result in blindness. |
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Many people with total blindness experience life-long sleeping problems because their retinas are unable to detect light. |
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Several degenerative conditions, including the progressive retinal atrophy which caused his blindness, are passed along through breeding lines. |
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Having to saddle up a mud-encrusted bike and ride hell-bent in inky blindness is a dicey proposition. |
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An eye examination is called for once a year to ensure that diabetes has not resulted in retinopathy, which could lead to blindness. |
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The most common and most serious eye complication of diabetes is diabetic retinopathy, which may result in poor vision or even blindness. |
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How could she possibly descry the ship's position from a standpoint of utter blindness. |
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Untreated inflammation can result in cataracts, calcium deposition in the cornea, glaucoma and, ultimately, blindness. |
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At first glance, it might be tempting to dismiss this fear of blindness as hypochondria and leave it at that. |
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According to the Levitical purity system, blindness implied, first of all, an exclusion from the political religious system. |
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In some cases, a gas dose, which normally caused blindness and imploding lungs, temporarily destroyed the cancer. |
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Males are more susceptible to genetic diseases such as Hemophilia, color blindness, male pattern baldness, and even being left handed. |
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Raphael helped him to catch a fish, the heart, liver and gall of which were used by Tobias to drive away a demon and cure his father's blindness. |
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She took a short course in ophthalmology and collaborated with research into river blindness in Central Africa. |
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While these issues were being debated by the company and the world public health community, the ravages of river blindness continued. |
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The best example of such generosity is their gift of Mectizan, a drug that prevents river blindness, to over 25 million people in Africa. |
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Onchocerciasis, or river blindness affects more than 17 million people in Africa, Latin America, and Yemen. |
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She literally crowed with pleasure, declaring that now she understood my political blindness. |
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We are planting corn, rice or wheat, and we're also dealing with Guinea worm, and river blindness, and chistocymsis and tropical diseases. |
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Prevalent tropical diseases are malaria, schistosomiasis, and river blindness, especially in the south. |
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The essential problem with compulsive gamblers, however, is their blindness to this pathological desire to lose. |
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But the decadence and blindness on display in that nation simply mean that the inevitable day of reckoning will be that much more convulsive. |
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By today's standards, the theoretical blindness of the male 19 th-century craniologists seems outrageous. |
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Other tests in development include one for progressive blindness which afflicts a number of breeds, including poodles. |
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Insufficient vitamin A leads to blindness, poor growth and increased susceptibility to infection. |
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For example, malnutrition and lack of access to clean water can lead to blindness. |
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It was scapegoated just before Prohibition took hold of the United States, its detractors claimed it caused insanity, blindness and even death. |
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Instead they are labelled as bad at maths or stupid when, in fact, what they have is really no more than number blindness. |
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The illness that he suffered from became progressively worse and led to blindness. |
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Overweening distrust of authority can lead to blindness as much as to liberation. |
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The moral blindness and institutional prejudice of those who worked the apparatus of apartheid shocks me still. |
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I am not going to apologise for what may appear to be more heteronormative homo-social blindness to one's own horizon of intelligibility. |
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It was probably some combination of liberal blindness, centrist caution, and simple lack of imagination. |
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Injuries to the eye are one of the most common preventable causes of blindness. |
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The new study by Mutter and Munch shows the range of light intensity within which blindness can be treated using optogenetic methods. |
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We are at the beginning of the end of blindness with this type of technology. |
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If the warning is not heeded sudden excruciating pain and eye-watering blindness may follow. |
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Onchocerciasis is the world's second leading infectious cause of blindness. |
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Without carotenoids in the diet, animals, including ourselves, would suffer serious vision defects and potentially blindness. |
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There's the dashing hero, a former pilot stricken with impending blindness who stoically refuses to be pitied. |
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Vakhass was suspected of developing a squint, which if left untreated could have led to permanent blindness in one eye. |
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Indeed, his serial attacks on certain subjects, be they flowering trees or allegories of encroaching blindness, suggest a bullheaded tenacity. |
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Immediate therapy can be dramatic in effect and prevent further vasculitic complications, permanent blindness, or death. |
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Glaucoma, which often leads to partial or total blindness, is caused by an increase of fluid pressure within the eyeball. |
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In rare cases toxocariasis can lead to partial blindness and swelling of the organs and central nervous system. |
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Alethea, a poet with a past, watches and notes, despite encroaching blindness. |
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And dog mess is not just unpleasant, it is sometimes a source of toxocariasis, which can lead to blindness in children. |
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Even before the ozone hole, sunburn and snow blindness were problems during the polar summer because ice reflects both visible light and ultraviolet energy. |
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They had overcome everything from religious persecution to blindness to crushing family responsibilities. |
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Ultimately, is some form of blindness necessary to hold all societies together? |
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Bacterial pathogens include gonorrhea which can cause blindness in a matter of hours, and chlamydia. |
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Agamemnon maintains that his blindness was an act of the gods. |
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The dashing hero is a former pilot stricken with impending blindness. |
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They burned all the books in the blindness of their religious fervor. |
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When they mentioned the word blindness I didn't know what to feel or do. |
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The 32-year-old rugby star from Stirling suffered years of misery at school because of dyslexia, or word blindness, which some experts believe affects up to one in six people. |
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More than 10 million Americans are thought to have macular degeneration and retinitis pigmentosa, diseases of the retina that often result in blindness. |
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And finally, oxygen therapy given to sustain the lives of premature infants can cause retinopathy of prematurity, causing permanent vision loss or blindness. |
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It is known that excessive oxygen can damage the retina of a premature baby leading to a condition called retrolental fibroplasia which results in blindness. |
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Diseases like leprosy, Guinea worm and river blindness are endemic. |
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David was diagnosed in May 2003 with a grapefruit-sized malignant brain tumour called a rhabdomyosarcoma, which was causing blindness and headaches. |
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This perception of blindness in terms of social exclusion appears in some passages of the Israelite literature that presuppose the Levitical health care system. |
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Officials from the World Health Organization last week celebrated the elimination of onchocerciasis, or river blindness, as a public health threat in west Africa. |
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Yet, while onchocerciasis eradication is a success and children born in the 1990s have no risk of river blindness, malaria is still a problem in developing countries. |
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Outbreaks of river blindness have been reported in over 80 percent of Burkina's land area, causing people to leave their villages to seek healthy, uninfected areas. |
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Seems to me like the blindness is a McGuffin, just brought up to generate suspense for that one sequence, then dropped as if the audience is just going to forget about it. |
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It takes a World War, diphtheria and blindness to sort it all out. |
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This semantic field reveals an emic understanding of blindness, which involves the importance of everything visual in ancient Mediterranean culture. |
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Untreated, the disease leads to serious microvascular consequences that include blindness, renal failure, coronary artery disease, and limb amputations. |
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It is a highly poisonous substance and as little as 30 millilitres is enough to kill a person, with 10 millilitres being enough to cause blindness. |
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The hospital will offer new treatments not currently available on the NHS to treat conditions that lead to blindness in the elderly, and treatments for short sight. |
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Night blindness develops, usually in childhood, followed by loss of peripheral visual field, progressing over many years to tunnel vision and finally blindness. |
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If unmanaged, it can lead to blindness, kidney failure and heart disease. |
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Part of the explanation for this dismal record of non-rescue is our capacity for willed blindness. |
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Most, but not all, focus on the relationship between Brahmanism, religious blindness and women's oppression, but a couple deal simply with oppression within the home. |
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Regular carrot intake can also help protect against macular degeneration and cataracts, help minimise night blindness and reduce harmful cholesterol. |
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They are usually registered partially sighted by their thirties, suffering night blindness and losing their peripheral vision to become severely visually disabled. |
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Definitions of blindness are not the same around the world and the vast majority depend on measured visual acuity with no allowance for any functional deficits. |
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Optic neuropathy and optic neuritis, sometimes progressing to total blindness, have been described in a small number of patients treated with amiodarone. |
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Human trials of gene-based therapies aimed at both macular degeneration and hereditary blindness are set to begin in the U.K. perhaps as early as next year. |
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The yellow pigments zeaxanthin and lutein in sweetcorn, which are not destroyed by the canning process, have been linked to reducing the risk of age-related blindness. |
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Examples of the consequences of parasitism include anemia, allergic reactions, obstruction of blood vessels, induction of cancer, blindness, and diarrhea. |
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How is this for sheer stupidity, moral blindness and ingratitude? |
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But mothers are faced with a tragic conflict of interest that no amount of wishful thinking or social engineering or wilful blindness can resolve. |
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Extreme effects of excessive quinine use include blindness and deafness. |
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After more than 50 years of searching, scientists have discovered a key gene that enables certain bacteria to cause blindness and debilitating genital tract infections. |
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The boy waited for spring to follow his sister to the lake to find a red-throated loon to help heal him of his blindness. |
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Severe neurologic sequelae include cerabral palsy, mental retardation, blindness, deafness, hydrocephaly and convulsion. |
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The Scottish winger suffers from dyslexia, or word blindness, and has always struggled to read and write. |
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The issue of word blindness is particularly close to her heart as her son is severely dyslexic. |
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This is an inaccuracy, as she was actually unable to speak at the age of five because of her word blindness. |
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A PIONEERING treatment for people who have face blindness has been discovered by accident. |
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And then bigger things, like helping to curse his rival with blindness. |
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It is alleged that at least 600 have colour blindness and many others suffer from other problems. |
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Ian '''' Beefy'''' Botham suffers from that form of colour blindness, but it didn''''t seem to do his career much harm. |
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He managed this on foot despite his blindness, demonstrating his determination and resourcefulness. |
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Accordingly, it rapidly attacks the cornea and can induce permanent blindness if splashed onto eyes. |
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Lucentis, also called ranibizumab, is approved to treat age-related macular degeneration, the leading cause of blindness in the elderly. |
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In the most severe cases, the disease can lead to blindness. |
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O'Connor herself was never dismissive of any aspect of life, other than the intellectual's own dismissiveness or the bigot's blindness. |
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He was nominated as first viceroy of Portuguese India in 1504, but could not take up this post owing to temporary blindness. |
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In Japan, pathologic myopia and the associated myopic CNV is the second most common cause of blindness. |
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The patient subsequently developed panhypopituitarism, diabetes insipidus and total blindness. |
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This number included students who had deafblindness, blindness, or low vision. |
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If after this you still feel he has a problem go to your health visitor or GP and ask for him to have colour blindness tests. |
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Participants indicated they experienced public negativity, stereotypes, overprotectiveness, and misconceptions of blindness. |
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There may also be issues with joint and muscle pain, orchiditis, blindness and sensitivity to light. |
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Iritis, Keratitis, Keratoconjunctivitis, Miosis, Mydriasis, Night blindness, Ophthalmoplegia, Optic atrophy. |
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Certainly, her work with Dr Macphail saved many thousands of lives and even included a cure for night blindness, using milk and cod liver oil. |
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Colour blindness affects a significant number of people and especially isolated communities with a restricted gene pool. |
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Vitamin E supplements flunked a test to see if they could reduce the risk of macular degeneration, a common cause of blindness in older people. |
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The cavalry messenger dismounted after his moon blindness made it unsafe to ride on through the wilderness. |
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He now has tunnel vision during the day and night blindness, making it very difficult for him run in dim light. |
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Mark would have laughed at the concept of hearing dogs for the deaf on the air because he makes light of his own condition, blindness. |
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He stated that partial or total blindness is caused by the malformation or non-formation of the fovea which causes bad sight. |
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Ray Tojo was known for his sense of humor and optimistic outlook on life despite his blindness and deafness. |
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The prime objective of the POB trust is to promote and sustain a global campaign against all forms of avoidable blindness, he said. |
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In subsequent decades, WHO largely eradicated polio, river blindness, and leprosy. |
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Bruno was advised not to fight again to avoid running the risk of causing any more damage to it, which could result in permanent blindness. |
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But the vice of blindness which the creationists attributed to Ransom's mechanists, I would argue, was not theirs alone. |
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The infection causes severe pain, blurriness of vision and occasional blindness. |
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A series of tragedies and betrayals blindsides Selma, and blindness becomes the least of her problems. |
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In developing countries, vitamin deficiencies cause an appalling array of diseases, such as beriberi or blindness, from vitamin A deficiency. |
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One reader informs me that colour blindness was even mentioned in an old Oor Wullie strip. |
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Experts haven't yet figured out exactly what goes wrong in the brains of people with face blindness. |
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Omura have helped many potential patients who would have suffered from river blindness and lymphatic, mosquito-born diseases. |
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Two scientists have been awarded the Nobel Prize for their discovery of a drug being used to eradicate river blindness. |
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In-image advertising has the potential to overcome many of the pitfalls of digital advertising, from banner blindness to low viewability. |
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Another group includes those with an affliction called face blindness, or prosopagnosia. |
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Both our opportunistic and structured systems have failed these patients, many of whom face blindness. |
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The pair hookup and then Lindsay learns that he suffers from the same problem Brad Pitt has 6 face blindness. |
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A cataract is caused by opacification of the lens of the eye which focuses light required for vision, and if left untreated, can lead to blindness. |
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River blindness, or onchocerciasis, is caused by parasitic roundworms. |
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Mechanisms of harm were better understood, lead blindness was documented, and the element was phased out of public use in the United States and Europe. |
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Retinopathy of prematurity is the most important cause of blindness and ophtalmologic disease in the neonatal period both in developing and developed countries. |
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An inability to distinguish between red and green is the most common type of colour blindness, and this is a gender-linked disorder that's much rarer in women than in men. |
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According to researchers at Stanford University, 'prosopagnosia', or face blindness is an impairment in the recognition of faces that affects 1 in every 50 people. |
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Although he rents an apartment and starts forming personal ties and relationships, he has trouble fitting in because of his face blindness, a rare neurological condition. |
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De Valera remained a lifelong devotee of rugby, attending numerous international matches up to and towards the end of his life despite near blindness. |
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An American neurotoxicologist investigating the disease for the WHO thinks Nodding Syndrome could be connected to river blindness, a disease transmitted by the black fly. |
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It costs so little but, in a country where night blindness is a major problem, two eggs a week in a child's diet can make the difference to them being able to see properly. |
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The statement stressed that Agar's both eyes suffer from night blindness, pointing he was night-blind in one eye before he was arrested 105 days ago. |
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He has also acted as an advisor to the World Health Organisation on disease control programmes for sleeping sickness, river blindness, elephantiasis and guinea worm. |
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The Center organised different health campaigns in the past year to eradicate Dracunculiasis, also called Guinea worm disease, river blindness, and Tranchoma. |
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River blindness is an eye and skin disease that leads to blindness. |
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Edward III was able to assume control in 1330 but Henry's further influence was restricted by poor health and blindness for the last fifteen years of his life. |
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These creative executions can aide in bringing some non-viewable ads back in to view, and will certainly go a long way in combating banner blindness. |
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People have developed banner blindness to standard digital ads. |
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People began reporting symptoms of methyl alcohol poisoning, including blindness and severe abdominal pain, three days ago in Istanbul, it reported. |
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Thus the observation of human blindness and weakness is the result of all philosophy, and meets us at every turn, in spite of our endeavours to elude or avoid it. |
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The principal reproach that Hartmann makes against Schleiermacher's theory is religious alogism, the blindness and amorphousness of naked feeling. |
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The Peek-a-Boo Bear is a voice output, touch-activated stuffed animal designed for use by children with blindness, low vision, or cognitive disabilities. |
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In this study, we examined the association between women's empowerment and night or day blindness during pregnancy using nationally representative data from India. |
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Many men also suffered blindness due to working chipping at the coral. |
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