It is owing to these oil workers that the paralysis of the oil industry is not complete. |
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A wasted muscle will be weak, and if separation from the motor nerve is complete, so will be the paralysis. |
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This is the same bacterial nerve toxin that causes botulism, an illness which causes muscle weakness or paralysis. |
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Such, at any rate, was the answer that rang back at my moment of frustration and paralysis and panic. |
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He sees the crops withered through drought and devoured by pests on a shrivelled land struggling to escape the paralysis of famine. |
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The effects of aldicarb and levamisole were scored in acute paralysis assays as follows. |
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When I was telling my mother about my sleep paralysis, I told her there was a website that said I was experiencing alien abduction. |
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Symptoms of quinine toxicity include diarrhea, vomiting, confusion, blindness, tinnitus, and paralysis. |
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Marta's path to becoming a healer began when, as a child, she believed she was cured of a paralysis through prayer. |
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So, admitting that paralysis would occur, it's still okay if you're wearing a life jacket because you would float face up? |
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However, as Sejvar noted, West Nile paralysis affects a patient's body asymmetrically and doesn't impair the sense of touch. |
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Other episodic neurological disorders include periodic paralysis, hemiplegic migraine, and episodic ataxia. |
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The cells gradually degenerate over a period of time and cause paralysis as muscles atrophy throughout the body. |
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Polio, a disease that attacks the nervous system, usually infects young children resulting in paralysis and muscular atrophy. |
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During 2002, fully conscious patients with a polio-like flaccid paralysis were also recognised. |
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Such protection should be adequate to unequivocally deter tamperers without imparting permanent paralysis or injury to the tamperer. |
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The shock of the fall had traumatized my spine, causing temporary paralysis, and tearing my back muscles. |
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This manifests symptomatically with episodes of severe muscular weakness or paralysis, tetany and postural hypotension. |
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Most paralysis ticks lodge onto passing indigenous species that are immune to their toxins. |
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We report the clinical findings in a patient with essential thrombocythaemia who presented with partial third nerve paralysis. |
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Such unwitting similarity to Boyd's conception of strategic paralysis suggests that Owens's variant possesses the same weaknesses. |
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Pyrethroids attack the nervous system of insects, provoking excitation, paralysis and death. |
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Exposure to amniotic fluid may damage the neural tissue in cases of spina bifida and cause subsequent paralysis and hydrocephalus. |
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It is used as a stimulant in languid states of the system, and as a sialagogue in paralysis of the tongue and mouth. |
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The loss of these motor neurons causes the muscles under their control to weaken and waste away, leading to paralysis. |
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Less frequently, weakness or paralysis of a limb or limbs, or unconsciousness, may occur. |
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Instead of letting his partial paralysis become his recognizable characteristic, he lets his playing persona speak on the murderball court. |
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In rare instances, infection results in myelitis and presents with symptoms such as muscle weakness, paralysis, or changes in body sensation. |
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Total lung capacity is virtually unchanged in patients with unilateral paralysis. |
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Specialist equipment such as splints, callipers and braces can help with paralysis and contractures. |
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The study was terminated with the administration of atropine and neostigmine to reverse muscle paralysis. |
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Many parents have experienced the world of nightmares, night terrors and sleep paralysis with at least one of their children. |
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This features progressive paralysis of the tongue, throat and voice box so that swallowing and speaking become difficult or impossible. |
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Life in the picturesque Yorkshire village of Knapely is pleasant, but placid to the point of paralysis. |
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Sometimes it was more like numbness or paralysis, or even problems with co-ordination. |
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If we don't use it to fuel our political potential, that potential will be stilled by fear or paralysis. |
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The sting is usually painful, and there can be serious symptoms, such as stomach pain, difficulty breathing, muscle paralysis and fits. |
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The combination of daytime sleepiness, cataplexy, sleep paralysis, and hypnagogic hallucinations suggested narcolepsy. |
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I have Narcolepsy and as a result I experience cataplexy, automatic behavior, sleep paralysis, microsleeps, and hypnagogic hallucinations. |
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It is the media-programmed subconscious mind that poisons people into apathetic paralysis. |
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Patients with unilateral or bilateral paralysis have subnormal exercise capacity, and oxygen consumption at peak exercise is increased. |
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But although it revises the spiritual meaning of paralysis, East Coker is not a palinode of Eliot's earlier work. |
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The paralysis or palsy may affect mainly the legs, or all four limbs, or just one side of the body. |
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Traditional stroke symptoms were defined as loss of balance and paralysis of at least one part of the body. |
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If the cancer has spread to the brain, it can cause seizures, paralysis, personality changes and speech difficulty. |
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Finally he yanked himself out of the paralysis that gripped him and pulled the blinds tightly shut. |
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I can only suggest that the paralysis that has gripped this country in recent years is causing us huge angst. |
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Downing Street, if not quite yet gripped by paralysis, is at least on edge waiting for malevolent treachery to strike again. |
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Those who recover consciousness often have some paralysis, which can be severe. |
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Italy is facing political paralysis as near-complete election results raise the possibility of no clear winner and a hung parliament. |
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The most likely explanation for alien abductions is sleep paralysis and hypnopompic hallucinations. |
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The initial colonization of the walls of the ureter is in areas of turbulent flow which leads to paralysis of peristalsis. |
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As the disease progresses, total paralysis and the inability to speak or swallow result. |
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His initial response to his wife's death was paralysis and guilt that his self-absorption in art had left him inattentive to her needs. |
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The school would have sat empty for the first four months of 1925 as an infantile paralysis epidemic swept across the country. |
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As a child growing up in Bradford he was struck down with both infantile paralysis and rickets. |
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Until 1894 when Vermont reported 132 cases, poliomyelitis, also known as infantile paralysis, remained rare. |
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Pearl can also pluck vivid pictures out of the past of the polio epidemic, or infantile paralysis epidemic, as it was called in her day. |
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The paralysis that had gripped him from the first instant of the flash slowly ebbed, and he crawled out from under the truck. |
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She had heard about a process called continuant movement that a teacher had done with people who had spinal cord injuries and paralysis. |
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With bilateral paralysis, bilateral plication improves the efficiency of the rib cage muscles in generating tidal volume. |
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Overexposure can lead to symptoms of dizziness, respiratory problems, involuntary muscle twitching and even paralysis. |
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The viral disease known as poliomyelitis is highly infectious and can cause total paralysis and even death. |
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I fear lung disease, heart disease, cancer, losing control of my bladder and bowels, paralysis and crabs in my underpants. |
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The current paralysis in government demands the kind of leadership that brings lawmakers out of their foxholes. |
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His hope is that a dose of poisonous curare followed quickly by the antidote will reverse the ongoing paralysis of his limbs. |
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Most intriguingly, among the described symptoms of fugu poisoning is progressive limb paralysis while maintaining consciousness. |
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Sensing a dark presence in the room is a common symptom of sleep paralysis. |
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Muscular dystrophies are genetic disorders, usually progressive, which can lead to profound paralysis. |
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Sometimes, during the process of delivery, the nerves passing through the babies shoulder get damaged, resulting in paralysis of the arm. |
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Livestock may also develop paralysis if they ingest grass pea for a long time. |
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The common name for Dieffenbachia is dumb cane, so-named because the the sap will burn the mouth and can cause paralysis of the vocal chords. |
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She has suffered bouts of total paralysis, is constantly fatigued and is racked by regular spasms of excruciating pain. |
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Clearly, the Contaminated Land Register has caused a market paralysis so there has to be a fiscal douceur to compensate. |
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The differential diagnosis of tracheomalacia includes laryngomalacia, subglottic stenosis, congenital cysts, vocal cord paralysis, and hypocalcemic tetany. |
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The imminent threat of Malcolm's death or long-term permanent paralysis and vegetative state from serious brain damage had immobilized and terrified them. |
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Involvement of the cranial nerves may cause bulbar paralysis. |
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Had a case been only Vincent's angina one would not have expected pharyngeal paralysis to develop, but in most cases, whether they received N.A.B. or not, it did. |
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If nothing else, this comprehensive and comprehensible idea could move our leaders past the present paralysis. |
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Symptoms may range from palpitations and severe sweating to paralysis, convulsions, and death. |
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The two sections of society most damaged by the growing paralysis in social mobility are the lower middle class and the underclass at the bottom of the heap. |
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Causes of this type of breathing may include vocal cord paralysis or weakness, floppiness in the airways or voice box, or a blood vessel pressing on the outside of the airway. |
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While consultation documents on wheelchair strategy have winged back and forth, the creeping paralysis of the National Health Service has gone unabated. |
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The shooting left Brady with slurred speech, and with partial paralysis, which required him to use a wheelchair. |
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It was a country that had succumbed to paralysis and defeatism and nostalgia. |
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In severe cases there may be weakness of the muscles, paralysis, speech disturbances, double vision or partial loss of the field of vision, and epileptic fits. |
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This attitude would seem to lead to a kind of epistemic paralysis. |
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The State Department indicated that botulinum, a biological poison that causes muscle paralysis and death, should be considered strong evidence of a banned weapons program. |
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Resist the easy comforts of complacency, the specious glitter of materialism, the narcotic paralysis of self-satisfaction. |
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A female patient complains of dramatic mood swings, paralysis on one side of her body, hallucinations, convulsive seizures, and religious delusions. |
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A feeling of helplessness and its resulting paralysis are the enemy of the Good. |
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If the tragedy of the poem consists in Prufrock's fear of and failure to risk vulnerability, these lines configure that fear with a precise correlative for paralysis. |
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It must be remembered that over distension makes contraction impossible, i. e., tympanites is paralysis just exactly according to its degree of distension. |
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General paresis, formerly known as general paralysis of the insane, may appear within a few years or take as many as several decades to manifest itself. |
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Very small amounts of botulinum toxin can lead to botulism, a descending paralysis with prominent bulbar symptoms and often affecting the autonomic nervous system. |
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If taken with wax from Cyprus, with fresh olive oil, or with any other calefacient, this stone greatly helps those suffering from rheumatism and paralysis. |
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He said had it not been for prayers from the archdiocese, friends and family, coupled with therapy, he would not have recovered fully from the paralysis. |
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She alleges that the surgeon who operated on her was negligent in that what was supposed to be a simple surgical procedure resulted in partial paralysis of her left side. |
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Sources tell me that this autocratic style led to managerial paralysis in the party and that the current leadership are doing their best to sort it all out. |
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It is the perplexity of this situation that has caused most of the paralysis in Congress. |
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At times I was suffering mild paralysis in my legs, and I think I was beginning to hallucinate, but one of the other drivers in a Ferrari 550 ended up in intensive care! |
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He also reported sleep paralysis and hypnagogic hallucinations. |
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Sleep paralysis occurs in the hypnagogic state or the hypnopompic state. |
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Our paralysis amidst this paradox is not helped by the way it has taken hold inside the ivory tower itself. |
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This feature alone will be helpful to the many individuals with social phobia who use alcohol or drugs to self-medicate or who experience the paralysis of depression. |
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Over-exposure to thallium may cause nerve damage, emotional changes, cramps, convulsions and eventually coma which can lead to death caused by respiratory paralysis. |
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At the end of the operation, different drugs are injected by the anaesthetist to reverse the paralysis and the patient then starts to breathe spontaneously. |
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On the political front, the situation has been marked by total paralysis. |
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Administrative paralysis, reckless student behavior, and social promotion are inexcusable and limit the opportunities for our nation's most at-risk children. |
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By longstanding historical demonstration, the U.S. Congress specializes in paralysis, indecision, and dysfunction. |
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Some patients report ear pain or fullness before the paralysis. |
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Have you seen the bleeding and bruising, the skin ulceration and infection, the nerve paralysis? |
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Bites are painless, though envenomed people rapidly experience paraesthesia, tightness in the chest, difficulty breathing, weakness and paralysis. |
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Locked-in syndrome sees paralysis of all muscles except for those that control eye movement. |
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General anaesthetics suppress the central nervous system, to bring about unconsciousness and paralysis. |
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It is a disorder characterized by uncontrollable brief episodes of sleep, hypnagogic hallucinations, cataplexy, and sleep paralysis. |
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Jugular foramen syndrome is characterized by unilateral paralysis of the glossopharyngeal, vagus, and accessory nerves. |
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Yet not everyone is caught up this vortex of paralysis and resentment. |
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Topics range from phonatory anatomy and perception of voice to disorders, lesions, vocal fold paralysis, and surgery. |
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Acute complications include haematemesis, bowel obstruction, haemorrhage, fistula formation, vocal cord paralysis, and bowel perforation. |
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Ramachandran have recently proposed neurological theories for why people hallucinate ghosts during sleep paralysis. |
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Car accidents lead to many cervical spine injuries and various levels of paralysis. |
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Unlike poliomyelitis, paralysis in China syndrome is symmetrical. In addition, cases are seasonal. |
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The paralysis of the Northern conscience, the dumbing of the Northern voice, were coming to an end. |
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From 1839, she suffered from headaches and bouts of paralysis in parts of her body, which sometimes prevented her from reading and writing. |
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In 1822 he was struck with paralysis, but recovered a fair degree of health, sufficient to enable him to resume his studies. |
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In some cases, people land on their neck or head, which can cause paralysis or even death. |
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She then played a former singer suffering from paralysis in the road drama My Own Love Song. |
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People who experience sleep paralysis often report seeing ghosts during their experiences. |
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They usually experience persistent headache and early abducent nerve paralysis caused by apical involvement and extension into Dorello's canal. |
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Aconite, popular in Hong Kong, has caused respiratory system paralysis and death due to herbal poisoning. |
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Michael's Housing Authority and then turned over to a family with a teenage boy who is living with quadriplegic paralysis. |
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Not so with The Nightmare, a jarringly silly doc that attempts to suggest the phenomenon of sleep paralysis is evidence of the paranormal. |
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Gait initiation with electromyographically triggered electrical stimulation in people with partial paralysis. |
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Posterior interosseus nerve paralysis caused by ganglion at the elbow.Compression of the ulnar nerve at the elbow by an intraneural ganglion. |
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Long-term follow-up of fat injection laryngoplasty for unilateral vocal cord paralysis. |
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He finally found her, who had also suffered infantile paralysis, on the 'Marriage of the people who have will and challenge' Facebook page. |
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An Australian team led by Alan Mackay-Sim of Griffith University is also testing use of these cells to treat paralysis in several patients. |
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Locked-in syndrome is characterised by complete paralysis of voluntary muscles in all parts of the body except for those that control the eyes. |
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He was riding Sayonara and he fractured his skull and he had optical paralysis. |
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Am now scared of funnel-web spiders, box jellyfish, blue ringed octopus, paralysis ticks and stone fish. |
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So, hypokalemic periodic paralysis was considered in differential diagnosis, which was confirmed by genetic testing. |
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Silicotic mediastinal lymphadenopathy can cause left vocal cord paralysis and dysphagia. |
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Serums were provided and anti-measles and infantile paralysis campaigns organised. |
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In addition to influenza, infectious diseases such as scarlet fever and diphtheria, infantile paralysis and tuberculosis were also rife. |
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Nivene is a physiotherapist afflicted with infantile paralysis, but this does not prevent her from working. |
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Their mode of action involves blocking neurotransmission in insects, leading to paralysis. |
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In the literature, there was no association of hypokalemic periodic paralysis with supraventricular arrhythmias. |
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Of course, all this means that most flexecutives are suffering from analysis paralysis which can lead to a severe case of presenteeism. |
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Anthracosis is not a previously known cause of left vocal fold paralysis. |
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Hind limb paresis or paralysis is a typical presenting complaint in birds with ovarian tumors, because such tumors can press on the ischiatic nerve or result in lumbar pain. |
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He also had a son named Dave who thought milking a pretty tough job, and who imagined he was getting weak-handed and on the way to milker's paralysis. |
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Some minor infarctions at the midbrain which resulted in localized paralysis like weakness of a single extra ocular muscle have been demonstrated previously. |
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A 1998 article in the New England Journal of Medicine attributed his death to typhoid fever complicated by bowel perforation and ascending paralysis. |
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What does surprise, however, is the spinelessness of the UPA II ministers who tamely allowed their bureaucrats to manipulate them into a paralysis. |
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Chickling vetch, a dietary staple in some areas of southern Asia and Africa, contains a neurotoxic protein that, with chronic consumption, causes limb paralysis. |
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First identified in 2007 from a child with febrile illness, SAFV are found in the stool of children with nonpolio acute flaccid paralysis and healthy children in Pakistan. |
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As he pressed on he was affected by giddiness and fits of paralysis. |
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The neuroses of motion, or kinesioneuroses of the larynx, may be subdivided into spasm of the larynx, or hyperkinesis, and paralysis of the larynx or akinesis. |
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The stems of Alocasia macrorrhizos were used to treat paralysis. |
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The neuropathy is characterised by a progressive paralysis accompanied by amyotrophy, as a result of damage to motor neurones in the spinal cord and brain. |
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Systemic involvement of the central nervous system may be indicated by headache, visual changes, cranial nerve paralysis or, very rarely, meningomyelitis with paraplegia. |
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And by the early 90s he showed it was possible to reverse paralysis in rats through a transplant of those special cells, called olfactory ensheathing cells. |
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Locked-in syndrome is a rare neurological disorder characterised by paralysis of voluntary muscles in all parts of the body except for those that control eye movement. |
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Around 12 days after MOG sensitization, all groups started to develop clinical signs, such as tail and hind limb paralysis, and the symptoms worsened and peaked by 3 weeks. |
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It has been known to cause neurolathyrism which is characterized by the paralysis of the legs and has many qualities that are similar to Parkinsons disease. |
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The moggy is now facing paralysis after the pellet hit him in the neck. |
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