Common findings on brain imaging include enlarged ventricles, widened cortical sulci, and cerebral, cerebellar, or brain stem atrophy. |
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Trax, in Sheppard Street, is holding a walkathon to raise money for four-year-old Brandon Humphries, who has cerebral palsy. |
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He was left with quadriplegic cerebral palsy and needs special equipment to stand and sit upright. |
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Delivered by Houllier, it is a sign he can balance the cerebral and physical elements of his job. |
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It is cute, astute, cerebral football, a mirror image of their studious manager though with an added dash of style and panache. |
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The drug's effect of preventing cellular adherence might be an important mechanism for curing the patients with cerebral thrombosis. |
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The common site of its occurrence is the deep white matter in the frontal lobes of the cerebral hemisphere. |
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There was also a single, small cerebral metastasis in the white matter of the posterior occipital lobe. |
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Nearly all cases of PML involve the cerebral white matter, but it may also involve white matter of cerebellum, brainstem and spinal cord. |
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Rupture of a cerebral aneurysm usually results in bleeding in the brain, causing a haemorrhagic stroke. |
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The medulla controls this involuntary swallowing reflex, although voluntary swallowing may be initiated by the cerebral cortex. |
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Superimposed on this reflex arc, are suprasegmental modifying influences from the brain stem, cerebellum, basal ganglia, and cerebral cortex. |
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It says that cerebral palsy is almost never caused by fetal distress in labor. |
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The left middle cerebral artery was almost completely occluded by fungal emboli. |
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He has also conducted several reviews and studies of cerebral laterality, primarily through investigations of handedness patterns. |
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The brain weighed 1620 g, and macroscopic examination revealed congested leptomeninges covering the cerebral hemispheres. |
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These are important striate branches of the middle cerebral artery, destined for the corpus striatum, internal capsule and associated structures. |
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Since the advent of antibiotics, however, most infections associated with cerebral abscesses are localized to the lungs and endocardium. |
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In old times it used to be given as an injection for such conditions as cerebral concussion and asphyxia from drowning. |
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Until recently, it was widely believed that asphyxia during a difficult delivery was the cause of most cases of cerebral palsy. |
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Without treatment, severe jaundice can pose a risk of permanent brain damage resulting in athetoid cerebral palsy. |
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She has severe athetoid cerebral palsy arising from the circumstances of her birth. |
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He gives the example of a girl with athetoid cerebral palsy with very little control over her limbs and who speaks through a specialist computer. |
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She had helped slow learners, schizophrenic adults, people who were visually and aurally impaired, and children with autism and cerebral palsy. |
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Children with conditions like cerebral palsy, autism and learning difficulties benefit. |
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The MRI appearance of spinal cavernous malformations is generally the same as its cerebral counterparts. |
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Babies with brain malformations, numerous genetic diseases and other physical birth defects are at increased risk of cerebral palsy. |
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When cerebrovascular malformation, aneurysm, cerebral venous thrombosis, or arteritis is suspected, MRI or MRA is preferred. |
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The middle cerebral artery supplies much of the frontal, temporal, and parietal lobes of the brain. |
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One emerges having had a good time even if it is the private pain one remembers more than the cerebral badinage. |
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He is great at almost every sport, right from table tennis and badminton to even cerebral games like chess. |
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Peripheral injury results in anatomic and physiologic changes within the dorsal horn, sensory thalamus and cerebral cortex. |
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Through the removal of atherosclerotic plaques, carotid endarterectomy restores cerebral blood flow and reduces the risk of cerebral ischemia. |
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Deep vein thrombosis also may affect the caval, innominate, cerebral, hepatic, portal, splenic, mesenteric, and renal venous circulations. |
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Deep vein thrombosis typically occurs in the leg, but veins in the arms, retina, mesentery, and cerebral sinus may also be affected. |
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I type this having regained the feeling in my fingers, toes, trapezius, gluteus maximus and cerebral cortex. |
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She has a number of complex conditions including congenital microcephaly and cerebral palsy. |
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Because many transient ischemic attacks are associated with permanent cerebral damage, a better label would be ministroke. |
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Some cases of cerebral palsy are caused by brain damage during the last trimester of pregnancy or around the time of birth. |
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Doctors say Hindley, 57, is suffering from a cerebral aneurysm caused by an artery swelling up at the base of the brain. |
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The posterior communicating artery is sometimes joined with the middle cerebral artery instead of the trunk of the internal carotid. |
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The proceeds for the Shrove Tuesday event at the store, in Turner Rise, Colchester, will go to helping people with cerebral palsy. |
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Lukas has a condition called Hemiplegia, a form of cerebral palsy that only affects the right side of his body. |
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Sport will develop children's motoric abilities, balance, etc. which interacts with cerebral activities and enhances the growth of neurons. |
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Eriksson, charming, smooth and cerebral, has the uncanny ability to deflect most criticism. |
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That is to say nothing of the cerebral challenges in finding the most unlikely-looking stone to successfully skim. |
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The charity Scope is piloting a game for people with cerebral palsy called bocce, which is similar to the French game of boules. |
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Gabriel, who suffers from cerebral palsy, will represent his country in the discipline known as boccia. |
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Dispaltro initially hesitated in transitioning from the physically demanding sport of wheelchair rugby to the more cerebral boccia. |
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In this time he has taught paraplegics, quadriplegics, persons with cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, spina bifida, and others. |
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One theory suggests that examination of his mummy revealed a wound near his left ear, which would have caused a cerebral haemorrhage. |
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The pool caters for people suffering from a range of disabilities, including cerebral palsy, brain damage, muscular dystrophy and arthritis. |
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There was diffuse mycotic arteritis in the left middle and posterior cerebral arteries. |
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The more cerebral cinemagoer, however, is left in a conundrum as he or she tries to unpick the film's slapdash symbolism and script. |
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Predominant neuropathological features of cerebral toxoplasmosis is multifocal necrotizing encephalitis. |
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Thirty-two hours later she was clinically brain-dead, the result of a cerebral haemorrhage. |
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When there was heavy brainwork to be done, he understood the best cerebral lubricant was the humble bottle in his desk. |
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Some neuroscientists think that complex memories may be stored in widely distributed networks of neurons, probably in the cerebral cortex. |
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In summing up her career, this icon of cerebral West Coast songcraft has produced a substantial body of work without one iota of sentimentality. |
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The subarachnoid space is continuous with the cavities of the cerebral ventricles. |
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Crashing chords pound out from the piano line while the clarinet speaks in a tonal, coolly cerebral mode. |
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Alexandra has cerebral palsy, is confined to a wheelchair and suffers from frequent epileptic fits. |
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Her sister, Lucy, suffers from cerebral palsy and epilepsy and is often treated in York Hospital for fits and chest infections. |
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The midbrain is attached to the base of the cerebral hemispheres by the cerebral peduncles, two massive, flattened bundles of nerve fibres. |
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Congenital deformities and neuromuscular disorders, such as cerebral palsy, can also be linked to bunions. |
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Alternatively cerebral and visceral, it's not easy listening, but is posesssed of a restless, elemental energy. |
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The great cerebral vein can be seen curving below the splenium of the corpus callosum to empty into the straight sinus. |
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Kathryn, 28, who has cerebral palsy and learning difficulties, has been ranked number two in the country in her dressage class. |
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Patients often have nystagmus, ataxia, and in severe poisonings, cerebral edema. |
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I feel panic rising in the back of my throat, urgency illuminating my cerebral cortex, and a dark cloud of bewilderment obscuring my vision. |
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In a study involving 93 people, they found a strong statistical connection between handedness and cerebral dopamine asymmetries. |
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The posterior cerebral may course below, rather than over, the oculomotor nerve. |
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The oculomotor nerve passes between the posterior cerebral and superior cerebellar arteries. |
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Other features of severe preeclampsia include oliguria, cerebral or visual disturbances, and pulmonary edema or cyanosis. |
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There will be cerebral excitement, particularly if youngsters like Rafael van der Vaart and Wesley Sneijder are given their head. |
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Fabian, who was born with cerebral palsy, will have his place cut by the cash-strapped pre-school if money is not found quickly. |
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Yet it is hard to avoid some sense, in many of his operas, that the music is at times cerebral in its conception. |
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The organisation specialises in limbs for cerebral palsy-affected children and also for paraplegic and hemiplegic patients. |
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The brain had multiple hemorrhagic lesions within both cerebral hemispheres and the cerebellum. |
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The brain includes the cerebral hemispheres, the cerebellum, and the brain stem. |
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The voluntary muscles are regulated by the parts of the brain known as the cerebral motor cortex and the cerebellum. |
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Hypertension associated with cerebral infarction or intracerebral hemorrhage only rarely requires treatment. |
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Initial scan results may also reveal a hyperdense middle cerebral artery thought to be caused by a fresh clot or embolus. |
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Epilepsy refers to recurrent seizures that reflect aberrant electrical activity of cerebral cortical neurons. |
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Seizures are usually due to hypoxic encephalopathy, hemorrhage or cerebral infarction. |
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The adjacent cerebral parenchyma and overlying ependyma revealed no discrete inflammation or vasculitis. |
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The worst of all possibilities is if the patient has slipped into an irreversible coma due to a cerebral hemorrhage or some other catastrophe. |
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Pulmonary artery, nasopharyngeal, and esophageal temperatures tracked cerebral temperature better than bladder or rectal temperatures. |
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After giving off pontine and other branches, the basilar artery divides into two posterior cerebral arteries at the upper border of the pons. |
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It may be the leading risk factor for cerebral aneurysms and subarchnoid hemorrhage. |
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The third section focuses on thrombosis affecting neurological systems, in particular, thrombotic stroke and cerebral venous thrombosis. |
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Nitroglycerin reduces BP by reducing preload and cardiac output, undesirable effects in patients with compromised cerebral and renal perfusion. |
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Increases in intrathoracic pressure cause obstruction in cerebral venous outflow, leading to vascular congestion. |
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This is very much in line with the contemporary need to have everything explained in cerebral, rather than emotional terms. |
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It's intricate, emotional, cerebral, funny, satirical, worldly, and will have you sifting through your reference books with glee. |
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Perhaps in an attempt to portray the character as cerebral rather than outwardly expressive, he ends up conveying very little emotion. |
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It could be that he just instinctively knows what to do, instinctively knows what's right, relying on gut feeling rather than cerebral exertion. |
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To her learning is a process that draws on emotional, cerebral and physical faculties. |
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Novelists are thought to be doing something very cerebral, like intellectual engineering. |
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Wikner lumps the cerebral and dental consonants together, since the sounds are difficult for the Westerner to distinguish. |
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Owing to printer's difficulties the cerebral consonants, the visarga, the sonant r and the anusvara have remained unmarked. |
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The fourth ventricle communicates with the third ventricle via a narrow tube, the cerebral aqueduct, which runs up through the midbrain. |
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Transependymal flow is also seen and consistent with obstruction of the cerebral aqueduct from compression of the midbrain by uncal herniation. |
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This ventricle is continued cranially into the cerebral aqueduct of the midbrain. |
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However, some patients may present with cerebral edema before treatment is started. |
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Administration of fluids to severely hyponatremic patients may result in fatal cerebral edema. |
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I'm pretty sure the poor trekkers thought we must be suffering from cerebral edema. |
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This manual is a delightful and comprehensive presentation on children affected with cerebral palsy. |
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This man has very significant cerebral palsy, and he lives in a retirement home. |
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Neurological disorders, such as poliomyelitis and cerebral palsy, can also cause acquired club foot. |
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More than one half of the children with aspiration syndrome had cerebral palsy. |
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In the result he suffered severe post natal asphyxia which resulted in very severe disability due to cerebral palsy. |
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Those disabilities include cerebral palsy, neural deafness and mental retardation. |
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The little girl's cerebral palsy and other medical conditions meant she was entirely dependent on others. |
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Some people with cerebral palsy have only mild impairment of their motor abilities. |
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It certainly seems promising, although it's clearly not a cure for cerebral palsy. |
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In fact epilepsy is more than three times as common as multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease and cerebral palsy. |
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Around 1 in 10 cases of cerebral palsy are caused by problems during labour and birth. |
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Not all women who were exposed to these viruses get a baby with cerebral palsy, but it was more common in the affected babies. |
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His music will hopefully aid children with cerebral palsy and other neurological conditions. |
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Another study from Sweden suggests that higher risks of cerebral palsy are not just due to the increase in multiple births. |
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There are specific times of extra stress in the lives of families who must cope with cerebral palsy. |
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If you think your child has symptoms of cerebral palsy, take him to the doctor as soon as you notice them. |
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The workshop will take up the issues faced by the parents of the children with various disabilities due to cerebral palsy. |
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It is not uncommon for the most prematurely born infants who survive to have cerebral palsy. |
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The analogy between cerebral protection with deep hypothermia, and cold water submersion, now becomes obvious. |
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Your cautious movement down the banister suggests a desire to move from an intellectual plane to a less cerebral level. |
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A second computed tomographic scan showed effacement of the temporal sulci and gyri, which was believed to be secondary to cerebral edema. |
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Its restrained palette, the sinuous, loopy drawing, and the interplay of seemingly simple forms and planes present a highly cerebral visual game. |
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He had been left with a severe form of cerebral palsy, epilepsy, and cortical blindness. |
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A major type of neuron in the cerebral cortex may receive up to 10,000 synaptic connections from other neurons. |
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A York couple who overcame the hurdle of cancer are now tackling another challenge in aid of a cerebral palsy charity. |
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Interruption of oxygen supply to the fetus was classically considered to be the main causal factor explaining later cerebral palsy. |
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Shouldn't she wear something classy that doesn't detract from her more cerebral achievements? |
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All had cerebral atrophy, but none had intracranial vascular pathology on magnetic resonance imaging examination. |
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The hypothesis of the study was that acupuncture would reduce muscle hypertonicity in children with cerebral palsy. |
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If monitoring of the middle cerebral artery indicates anaemia, fetal blood sampling and intrauterine transfusion are indicated. |
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Injury to the brain in infancy or early childhood can also cause cerebral palsy. |
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A face like hers couldn't be duplicated just from memory, even if her face was engrained into his mind like a cerebral tattoo. |
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My 5-year-old son Luco is just about to have his left cerebral lobe jostled by this institutionalized barbarity. |
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Children affected with cerebral palsy generally have basic intellectual ability. |
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Katy has cerebral palsy, kidney problems and learning difficulties but Mr Hulme is not swayed by her plight. |
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They married in 1918, after MacDiarmid was invalided out of the army with cerebral malaria. |
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What could have been a simple plein-air painting of the sky morphs into a cerebral yet poetically lively hybrid. |
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His coolly cerebral performance of the clarinet sonata was perfection itself. |
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Parts of the thalamus, and the frontal lobes of the cerebral cortex that are important in controlling mood, also connect to the hypothalamus. |
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The most striking feature of this preparation is the convergence of great masses of corticofugal fibers from extensive areas of cerebral cortex. |
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It was not about the clinical post-mortem measurement of her cerebral functionality. |
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A preemie's risk of cerebral palsy is much higher than that of a full-term baby. |
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He saw the elegant pyramidal cells of the cerebral cortex, the chunky interneurons of the spinal cord. |
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The little girl has dystonic quadriplegic cerebral palsy, which means she is confined to a wheelchair and needs 24-hour care. |
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Softer, less cerebral electronic music has been getting a short straw lately. |
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The show has always grooved in the cerebral and quixotic, which often translates to slow. |
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One of the 18 study patients had a cerebral spinal fluid leak, which was repaired endoscopically. |
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Infraoptic course of anterior cerebral arteries associated with abnormal gyral segmentation. |
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The cerebellum has on its surface a series of tight folds, called folia, similar to, but narrower than, the gyri of the cerebral cortex. |
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The brain weighed 1380 g and showed diffusely swollen cerebral hemispheres with marked flattening of the gyri throughout the convexities. |
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He suffers from epileptic fits, lower limb motor neurone problems, illnesses relating to cerebral palsy and other neurological problems. |
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In these analyses children with pre-existing conditions, such as Down's syndrome or cerebral palsy, were excluded. |
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In contrast, cerebral edema was present in 4 of 10 fatal cases in the Paris series, and in 1 there was herniation. |
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Specific regions of each cerebral hemisphere, with their unique folds and grooves, are responsible for the movements of a particular body part. |
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An echoencephalogram can also be used to examine the cerebral structures, although it is more commonly used for eye disorders. |
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The autopsy found that death was due to cerebral and pulmonary oedema. |
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In people, nonhuman primates, and other mammals with relatively large brains, the cerebral cortex's convolutions permit its large surface area to cram inside the skull. |
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Its pleasures are undoubtedly visual, but also more cerebral than many of the other performing arts. |
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Computed tomography scans showed that her cerebral hemispheres had atrophied, and electroencephalograms showed that she was without any cortical activity. |
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This technique rapidly became a standard way of testing the integrity of the nerve pathway from the motor area of the cerebral cortex to the motoneurons in the spinal cord. |
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Cats have frontal, temporal, occipital, and parietal lobes of their cerebral cortex, as we do, and these brain regions are composed of gray and white matter. |
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There are particular parts of the cerebral cortex related to sensation and perception, and areas that enter into the planning, beginning, and control of movement. |
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At the stage of lethargy and drowsiness, cerebral function is affected and the person may not be able to think well enough to make an escape effort. |
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Those connecting neighboring cerebral gyri are clearly seen. |
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Toni is a high achiever but has the mildest form of ataxic cerebral palsy and needs a scribe to help with note taking as she has a tremor in her hand. |
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That capacity for regeneration means that the cerebral wiring for our own store of knowledge and memories, which grows as we do, is as unique as a thumbprint. |
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A positive CT scan included findings of a subdural, epidural or parenchymal hematoma, subarachnoid hemorrhage, cerebral contusion or depressed skull fracture. |
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Other causes of apparent clumsiness include visual impairment, orthopedic disorders, mild cerebral palsy, hereditary ataxia, and congenital chorea. |
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Among its winding streets and alleys, you will find parks where men with luxuriant moustaches and flat caps still play that rather silent, cerebral game of boule. |
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Serious reactions to large doses of epinephrine may result in a rapid rise in blood pressure, ventricular arrhythmias, cerebral hemorrhage, and angina. |
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And although she has never had children of her own, she works unstintingly for PACES, an innovative Sheffield school for pupils with cerebral palsy. |
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Many children with cerebral palsy have problems that are in the middle range of severity and may need ongoing therapy and devices such as braces or wheelchairs. |
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Hollywood's take on the Middle East wars has ranged from cerebral to resigned, but its latest is a classic triumphal war movie. |
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A constriction of the blood vessels in the brain, cerebral vasospasm usually occurs three to 10 days following a massive brain bleed known as hemorrhagic stroke. |
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So maybe in Freeport, the Long Island fishing village the Reeds moved to, young Lou was a cerebral quarterback. |
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In severe cases, the mistaken treatment of an overhydrated patient with intravenous fluids can be life threatening, resulting in cerebral edema and death. |
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Ryan is Frannie, the cool and cerebral literary academic who, as a murder inquiry witness, is strangely drawn to the homicide detective played by the excellent Mark Ruffalo. |
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Less commonly, cerebral palsy takes the form of a hypotonic tetraplegia, with no spasticity, when the child has a mobility problem but with floppy muscles. |
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The message for the non-specialist reader is that cerebral palsy may be common in surviving infants with low weight births, but that most survivors do not have it. |
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Discrete damage to the brain, especially to parts of the interior surface of the temporal lobes of the cerebral hemispheres, can also cause profound anterograde amnesia. |
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Ross has cerebral palsy, and the Pathways to Careers initiative of SourceAmerica helped him get his position. |
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They unplugged their cellphones from overloaded outlets so a girl with cerebral palsy could recharge her wheelchair. |
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His first marriage was crumbling and a daughter was born with cerebral palsy. |
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Suggestions for regions of the brain that could be the site of action have included the brain stem reticular formation, the cerebral cortex, and the thalamus. |
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The two internal cerebral veins join beneath the splenium of the corpus callosum to form the great cerebral vein, but the site of union is not visible in this preparation. |
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The author develops a rationale for cerebral asymmetry and specialization that goes well beyond that necessitated by early observations of lateralized language skills. |
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Among children, the 1990s saw the emergence of new theories of intellectual development, and patterns of cerebral lateralization in the maturing child. |
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The anterior cerebral artery can be seen running on the medial surface of the hemisphere, first beneath and then around the genu of the corpus callosum. |
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That said, her involvement with nature is cerebral rather than emotional. |
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The end organ effects of hypertension, particularly in the heart, brain and kidneys, can be devastating, leading to premature coronary, cerebral or renal arteriosclerosis. |
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Not necessarily physical action, but cerebral and emotional action. |
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Toni Preckwinkle, a cerebral and progressive president of the Cook County Board, is a growing presence. |
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For the past forty years critic James Wolcott has been a cerebral antidote to the dullness contaminating our cultural pages. |
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Because the incidence of cerebral infarction is high in children with hemiplegic cerebral palsy, diagnostic testing for coagulation disorders should be considered. |
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Unlike the Hollywood version of genius, which is preternaturally cerebral, Hitchens was preternaturally visceral. |
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She experienced progressive oliguria and died 2 weeks after the cerebral infarction and 1 year 8 months after the diagnoses of HHT and bile duct cancer. |
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I shall mark these cerebral consonants with a dot under them. |
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From previous anatomical data, we hypothesize that the level of such actions is suprametameric, with strong implication of the diencephalon and cerebral cortex. |
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In popular parlance, at least, the image of the internet user shares much with the image of the nerd, suggesting a cerebral, solitary enthusiast with a sophisticated palate. |
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In East Timor he has had to help treat a range of injuries including vehicle accident victims, sufferers of cerebral malaria and even a local gored by a bull. |
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Jackie, whose eight-year-old daughter Libby has cerebral palsy, said she was stung into action when she was asked if disabled children needed to play. |
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The higher you go, the higher the risk of developing altitude sickness, or much more dangerous, pulmonary or cerebral edema, excess water in the lung or brain. |
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The reduction in the activity of complex I is found in the substantia nigra, but not in other areas of the brain, such as globus pallidus or cerebral cortex. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging off the brain showed scattered foci of abnormal white matter signal in both cerebral hemispheres, which were considered entirely nonspecific. |
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The package fell on the man's head, causing a massive cerebral hemorrhage. |
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Most children cared for by hospices have life-shortening conditions like cystic fibrosis and severe cerebral palsy or life-threatening conditions such as cancer. |
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The result of the questionnaire is of course merely opinion, but here opinion corresponds rather closely with the evolution of the forebrain and cerebral cortex. |
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Either that or he is just a gasbag who has some neurotic need to articulate every half baked misfired synapse that passes through his cerebral cortex. |
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It is a film of light, cerebral kicks and genuine Wildean wit. |
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Her daughter suffers from bi-lateral spasticity, a form of cerebral palsy which Miller believes was induced by toxins accumulating in her breast milk. |
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That was similar in that we were taking her deeply ironic and intelligent and cerebral group of stories and fleshing them out into this big strange movie. |
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The outer layer of the cerebrum, called the cerebral cortex, is responsible for most higher brain functions such as thought, reasoning, memory, and voluntary muscle movement. |
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Tumor invaded the parenchyma in multiple cerebral and brain stem sections. |
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It may affect coronary, pulmonary, cerebral, and splanchnic circulations. |
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The growth of and decline in the numbers of synapses in various regions of the cerebral cortex are closely associated with critical periods in development. |
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There is a posterior region of the cerebral cortex in monkeys and humans in front of the visual cortex that is critical for sensory-motor integration. |
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Decreased cerebral perfusion may cause impaired consciousness and syncope. |
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There is a large litigation industry in cerebral palsy and the threat of litigation is one of the major reasons for obstetricians leaving obstetrics. |
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It appears as if all of the staining in the cerebral ganglia is due to processes emanating from cells in the ganglia at the base of the tentacles. |
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This type of scoliosis occurs as a result of a condition which affects the nerves or muscles of the back, such as cerebral palsy or muscular dystrophy. |
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The daily anti-malarial pill ensured that if one did get malaria, at least it was controllable and did not usually develop into either cerebral malaria or blackwater fever. |
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They also may have highlighted the cerebral rather than the sexual aspects of their visits because of how they wanted to represent themselves to me. |
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Visual impairment due to a dyskinetic eye movement disorder in children with dyskinetic cerebral palsy. |
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Preparation of separate astroglial and oligodendroglial cell cultures from rat cerebral tissue. |
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Decorticate, decerebrate and opisthotonic posturing and seizures in Kenyan children with cerebral malaria. |
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Typical patients who benefit from an orthosis include those with spina bifida or cerebral palsy, or with a spinal cord injury or stroke. |
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Reduced cerebral blood flow with orthostasis precedes hypocapnic hyperpnea, sympathetic activation, and postural tachycardia syndrome. |
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Pulmonary and cerebral embolism can result from inadvertent intravascular injection or intravasation of Lipiodol. |
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He underwent surgical clipping and developed cerebral ischemia due to vasospasm. |
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With this grant, PhysioSonics will optimize its proprietary cerebral blood-flow monitor to detect vasospasm. |
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When assessment of the cerebral vasculature is necessary, an MR angiogram or MR venogram may be performed. |
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Care must be taken to avoid cerebral edema and congestive heart failure due to overhydration, particularly in patients with renal impairment. |
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Born in Belgium, de Man wound up at Yale where he emerged as the most celebrated and cerebral of literary deconstructionists. |
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Changes in optic nerve head blood flow in children with cerebral malaria and acute papilloedema. |
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Sernas, then a customs official and now a Calvinist priest, had perforating wounds from Soviet bullets in both cerebral hemispheres of the brain. |
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Regional cerebral blood flow was monitored by laser Doppler flowmetry with the use of a flexible probe over the skull as described earlier. |
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Traumatic brain injury is the term used for any injury of the intracranial structures and cerebral parenchyma resulting from trauma to the head. |
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Similar results were seen with glaucoma, schizophrenia, dextrocardia, and cerebral palsy. |
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Paradoxical cardiac and cerebral arterial gas embolus during percutaneous lead extraction in a patient with a patent foramen ovale. |
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Volumetric development of the fetal telencephalon, cerebral cortex, diencephalon, and rhombencephalon including the cerebellum in man. |
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These reactions occurred as a consequence of cerebral edema secondary to dilutional hyponatremia. |
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Measuring the effects of remifentanil on cerebral blood flow and arterial arrival time using 3D GRASE MRI with pulsed arterial spin labelling. |
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However, this would be a pleonasm, since all higher functions are cerebral. |
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Tumors that erode the supraorbital plate and dura mater may cause cerebrospinal fluid leakage, pneumatocele, meningitis, or cerebral abscess. |
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Less subtle abnormalities include cerebral infarction and EEG, BAER, and ultrasonographic or pneumographic abnormalities. |
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Test-retest reliability of hand-held dynamometric strength testing in young people with cerebral palsy. |
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Roisin can only communicate with her eyes and is permanently disabled, she has dyskinetic cerebral palsy and needs a wheelchair to get around. |
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Serum S-100beta protein is a potential biochemical marker for cerebral oedema complicating severe diabetic ketoacidosis. |
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The shortage of oxygen left him with dyskinetic cerebral palsy and brain damage, requiring extensive care for the rest of his life. |
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Potentially posterior cerebral artery occlusion resulting in a homonymous hemianopia. |
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Pneumosinus dilatans after prolonged cerebrospinal fluid shunting in young adults with cerebral hemiatrophy. |
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Cranial CT demonstrated a left cerebral hemiatrophy and a secondary enlargement of the left lateral ventricle. |
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Chronic defluxion from the nose, with sense of stuffing and fulness, occasionally attends cerebral congestion. |
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Abdominal hernia noticed coincidentally with exacerbation of abdominal and cerebral distress, requiring occasional narcotic. |
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Her worldview may also be favorably tweaked by her having a godbrother with cerebral palsy. |
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Brown, a writer and painter, was born with cerebral palsy and was only able to control his left foot. |
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In 1965, Patricia Neal suffered three burst cerebral aneurysms while pregnant with their fifth child, Lucy. |
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By 25 November 1900 Wilde had developed meningitis, then called cerebral meningitis. |
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Vesicles of the forebrain are usually paired, giving rise to hemispheres like the cerebral hemispheres in mammals. |
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Sheen next appeared in the 2007 film Music Within as a political activist with cerebral palsy. |
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That same year, Hallam died suddenly and unexpectedly after suffering a cerebral haemorrhage while on a holiday in Vienna. |
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The first area is Wernicke's area, which is located in the posterior section of the superior temporal gyrus in the dominant cerebral hemisphere. |
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They also speculate that there is an overall decrease in cerebral blood flow to the brain. |
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Lissencephaly refers to a diffusely smooth-surfaced cerebral hemisphere without sulcation. |
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The large surface area of the human cerebral cortex results in a pattern of gyri and sulci. |
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He was later diagnosed with athetoid cerebral palsy after his brain was starved of oxygen for 20 minutes during birth. |
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Natasha Lambert, 16, has athetoid cerebral palsy, which affects her limbs and means she has to use a wheelchair. |
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Clothing firm Boden recently used 8-year-old Holly Greenhow, who suffers from athetoid cerebral palsy, in an online ad campaign. |
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Wheelchair-bound Natasha Lambert was born with athetoid cerebral palsy, which affects her limbs and speech. |
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Dylan Bittles suffers from quadriplegia cerebral palsy, which severely limits his movement. |
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The six-year-old has severe quadriplegic cerebral palsy and epilepsy and requires round-the-clock care. |
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The influences of normal sleep states as well as the effect of SDB on cerebral hemodynamics are discussed. |
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It was valued as a cerebral activity whose aesthetic legitimacy was grounded in complexity and polysemy. |
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Reassuringly, the report pointed out that most infants with low Apgar scores will not develop cerebral palsy. |
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In these patients, repeated apnoeic episodes during sleep may lead to changes in cerebral metabolism. |
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Cherry's rap sheet includes breaking into a house and barricading a man suffering from cerebral palsy in his bedroom. |
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The economic cost of not prioritizing implementation of even basic cerebral recanalization techniques is staggering. |
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The most inspiring, however, was a simple wish to walk for three-year-old Kiley Griggs, born premature and diagnosed with cerebral palsy. |
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The effect of quinine on the electroretinograms of children with pediatric cerebral malaria. |
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Astroglial and cognitive effects of chronic cerebral hypoperfusion in the rat. |
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Lana, from Choppington, has cerebral palsy, which affects her independent mobility and requires additional postural support. |
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Born with cerebral palsy, Sweeney doesn't speak but chooses letters on a board with a laser pointer she wears attached to a baseball cap. |
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Some brainists might suppose that a postmortem study of Einstein's brain would provide clues as to the cerebral processes underlying genius. |
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Reye's syndrome is an acquired condition with hepatic and cerebral manifestations. |
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Ben Baddeley, who has cerebral palsy, can now walk without leg splints and a body brace after selective dorsal rhizotomy. |
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Yet the same NHS is denying children with cerebral palsy the right to a Selective Dorsal Rhizotomy operation because it costs too much. |
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Aidan is one of fewer than 100 people in the world with cerebral neuro blastoma, a highly malignant brain tumour. |
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Parnassians advocated of cerebral, rational, ornamental, non-emotional and metrified verses. |
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A computed tomography scan of the brain showed diffuse cerebral edema with tentorial herniation. |
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Chronic cerebral hypoperfusion elicits neuronal apoptosis and behavioral impairment. |
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The major outcome measure was relative changes in hypothalamic regional cerebral blood flow after the drink. |
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Stacey died after two days and Sofie survived but was later diagnosed with cerebral palsy. |
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There were no pathologic signs in the evaluation of cerebral, cervical, and thoracolumbar magnetic resonance imaging. |
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