It may be assumed that the postoperative isokinetic deficit is caused by neuromuscular dysfunction. |
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Natural recovery from balance system dysfunction is mediated by a process of central adaptation known as compensation. |
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But, as in all instances of dysfunction, miscommunication seems to lie at the root of the problem. |
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Motor dysfunction involving the gall-bladder and biliary tract may play a role in nonulcer dyspepsia. |
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The most serious side effects include gastrointestinal bleeding and perforation, renal dysfunction, and platelet dysfunction. |
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The focus on individuals' psychological dysfunction is not confined to education. |
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The swallowing difficulty begins suddenly, along with signs of cerebellar dysfunction and, sometimes, Horner's syndrome. |
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Lesions may also affect the palate, pharynx, and larynx, causing palatal dysfunction, dysphagia, dysphonia, and aspiration. |
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The downside is the social dysfunction I witness amongst the spectators because of alcohol consumption. |
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Many people with ischaemic heart disease or diabetes have systolic dysfunction or heart failure. |
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An archetypal loner who chain-smokes, drives when drunk and rarely has a fresh pint of milk in the fridge, he is dysfunction personified. |
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Orgastic dysfunction refers solely to the impairment of the orgastic component of the female sexual response and not arousal in general. |
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Family structure is crumbling, and dysfunction in relationships is at an all-time high. |
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The most common cause of stress incontinence is dysfunction of the urethra or bladder neck, which leads to urethral insufficiency. |
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There is no down-and-dirty talk about dysfunction, or any bruising hurt of being left for another woman, or any real passion. |
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Sinus node dysfunction is usually caused by drugs such as digoxin, quinidine, or procainamide. |
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Writer's cramp is the commonest form of focal hand dystonia and is thought to be due to basal ganglia dysfunction. |
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Lactic acidosis, rhabdomyolysis, and multiple organ dysfunction syndromes can complicate this disease. |
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She admits that there has been an element of dysfunction in all her relationships. |
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Evidence of central nervous system dysfunction should trigger a diagnosis of heatstroke rather than heat exhaustion. |
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Excessive diuresis might be an important cause of renal dysfunction while taking spironolactone. |
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Other diagnoses included sepsis, liver failure, neurological dysfunction, and recent cardiopulmonary arrest. |
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Endotoxemia and sepsis also induce mitochondrial dysfunction, sarcolemmal injury, and weakness and fatigability of the diaphragm. |
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Subtle signs of frontal lobe dysfunction may be demonstrated by testing stereognosis. |
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Early mechanical ventilation decreases the sarcolemmal injury and associated diaphragmatic dysfunction. |
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It is also possible, however, that direct compression of axons may induce axonal damage independent of Schwann cell dysfunction. |
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The PCD phenotype results from axonemal abnormalities and dysfunction of motile cilia and flagella. |
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Differentiating reactive airway dysfunction syndrome from other types of work-related asthma is generally straightforward. |
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In fact, for those whose sexual dysfunction is emotionally related albizzia can be very effective. |
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Every time I visited home since my grandma died, I saw more and more chaos and dysfunction in my family. |
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Symptoms of hyperprolactinaemia include amenorrhoea, galactorrhoea, infertility, loss of libido and erectile dysfunction. |
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His poor ability to make relationships with others indicated high levels of psychological dysfunction. |
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It calls to mind a world of social dysfunction hiding beneath the surface of everyday life. |
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The manifestations of hypertensive crises are those of end-organ dysfunction. |
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Purpura may be secondary to thrombocytopenia, platelet dysfunction, coagulation factor deficiency or vascular defect. |
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For another, he's heavily medicated with antidepressants with the main side effects of sexual dysfunction and disinterest. |
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Where do poverty, dysfunction, violence and high mortality rates fit into the analysis? |
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This is of great importance, as muscle dysfunction is potentially remediable. |
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Among women with more regular menses, many have variable degrees of ovulatory dysfunction. |
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The roots and rhizomes are widely used in the treatment of menopausal symptoms and menstrual dysfunction. |
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Its pathogenesis is thought to involve cone and amacrine cell dysfunction in the retina. |
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Add to this stained teeth, bad breath, red eyes, lank hair, discoloured fingers and erectile dysfunction, and the list grows alarming. |
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Two open reports have suggested that yohimbine is an effective treatment for SSRI-induced sexual dysfunction. |
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The procedure was uneventful, and the patient has fully recovered without tricuspid valvular dysfunction or other sequelae. |
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Children with VUR who are toilet-trained should be evaluated for voiding dysfunction. |
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Sinus node dysfunction can occur perioperatively because of increased vagal tone caused by anesthesia or surgical intervention. |
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In patients with diastolic dysfunction, the cornerstones of treatment depend on the underlying cause. |
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Her usual pedicurist who noted the recently greatly thickened skin on her feet first alerted her to the likelihood of thyroid dysfunction. |
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Toxic shock syndrome can present with hypotension, erythema, fever and multisystem dysfunction. |
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In recent years, extensive studies have found sildenafil citrate successful as a treatment for sexual dysfunction in the West. |
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Ganglioneuroma is a benign tumor of the sympathetic nervous system that rarely produces symptoms of endocrine dysfunction. |
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It revealed negative views of the elderly such as sexual dysfunction and ultraconservatism. |
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Viral infection can cause dysfunction of M2 muscarinic receptors leading to increased release of acetylcholine and airway hyperreactivity. |
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Others look, quite understandably, at democratic or social dysfunction and wish that we had machines that could help us fix it. |
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Autonomic dysfunction can cause urinary retention or, less frequently, bladder or bowel incontinence. |
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With long-term administration, restlessness, sleeplessness, mydriasis, headaches and cardiac dysfunction can occasionally appear. |
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Newer antidepressants may cause sexual dysfunction, including loss of desire and anorgasmia, in both sexes. |
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These findings raised the possibility that the mutant Ant may form an unselective channel that causes mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death. |
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Studies using near-infrared spectroscopy provide evidence of respiratory muscle dysfunction during exercise in chronic heart failure. |
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Renal dysfunction and cough necessitate discontinuation of therapy in less than 10 percent of patients. |
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Instead of being a mere brain fart, this became a fascinating cognitive dysfunction. |
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His partial paraplegia improved over the course of a year, after which he presented for treatment of erectile dysfunction. |
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Left ventricular dysfunction causes activation of several neurohormonal systems to maintain blood pressure and adequate circulation. |
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A neurological examination is performed to look for any signs of brain dysfunction. |
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Echocardiograms did not reveal left heart dysfunction or valvular disease in any patient. |
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Older patients, particularly women, may have vegetative symptoms and cognitive dysfunction. |
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This leads to a dysfunction of the water metabolism or leukorrhea, due to the downward flowing of kidney essence. |
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Sepsis can produce ventilatory failure because of respiratory muscle dysfunction and increased metabolic demands. |
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Left ventricular systolic dysfunction was documented by either two-dimensional echocardiography or radionuclide ventriculography. |
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She was offered a referral for speech therapy, which is a widely used treatment for vocal cord dysfunction. |
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These patients with lower spinal cord involvement often present with myelopathies, cauda equina syndrome, paraparesis, or bladder dysfunction. |
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More fundamentally, such statistics do not address the issue of the conditions that give rise to social dysfunction. |
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The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends meningococcal vaccine for children with splenic dysfunction. |
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The first is to stabilise the market in periods of market dysfunction, such as when the market is very liquid. |
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Patients with left ventricular dysfunction after MI are at risk for sudden arrhythmic death. |
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This is about the link between criminality and deprivation, family dysfunction and poor education. |
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Because the urethra and trigone are estrogen-dependent tissues, estrogen deficiency can contribute to urinary incontinence and urinary dysfunction. |
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Subclinical thyroid dysfunction, with abnormal thyroid-stimulating hormone and normal free thyroxine and triiodothyronine levels, also is associated with cardiac changes. |
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How this leads to dysfunction, racial tension, and a skewed justice system. |
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No issue better captures the dysfunction of Washington than the trumped up debate over the Keystone XL pipeline. |
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The film is more than unusual in its attempt to connect society's dysfunction and popular misery with the actions of a hypocritical, mendacious ruling elite. |
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Coming home represents an enduring challenge for veterans, but dysfunction and tragedy are not their only fate. |
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But Gates does so having experienced the dysfunction up-close and across administrations, over decades of service. |
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Sildenafil, the first oral drug marketed for the treatment of erectile dysfunction, relaxes smooth muscle in the corpora cavernosa, enabling erection during arousal. |
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We can still talk about the possibilities for the bravery of love that no amount of dysfunction in Washington can deny. |
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The condition differs from the other forms of amaurotic idiocy by virtue of lack of fundal changes and the presence of significant cerebellar dysfunction. |
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Physical examination showed signs of cardiac dysfunction, including sinus tachycardia, distended jugular veins, hepatomegaly, and clubbing of the fingers. |
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The franchise has been mired in dysfunction since it was acquired by owner Dan Snyder 15 years ago. |
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A series of exams, including blood tests and angiograms, revealed that all of the subjects had a severe dysfunction of the left side of the heart. |
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The impact of stress can result in family dysfunction manifested by excessive worry, denial, and noncompliance, anxiety about parenting and discipline, and overprotectiveness. |
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A lifelong bleeding diathesis may suggest a congenital platelet dysfunction, but an onset in adulthood does not necessarily exclude a congenital problem. |
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But what Shteyngart describes is the sort of dysfunction that occasionally plagues even the best and most solvent carrier. |
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This was as much an audit of past failures as an expose of current dysfunction. |
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Myocardial dysfunction is a potential consequence of major burn injury. |
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Might as well laugh along with the Griswolds at the forthcoming dysfunction. |
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While you or your partner might not be aware of it, stress and tension are the leading causes of erectile dysfunction. |
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A blow-by-blow guide to the four stages of market-related sexual dysfunction. |
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Patients usually present to their general practitioner but a definitive diagnosis of left ventricular systolic dysfunction can only be achieved by cardiac imaging. |
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The evaluation of erectile dysfunction includes a sexual history, a genital examination, a serum testosterone level, and prolactin and thyrotropin levels. |
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The orgasmic dysfunction is reflected in fears, anxieties, and worries as well as in negative states of mind, such as sexual burnout and sex-irrelevant attentional focus. |
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Naturopathic philosophy also suggests that genetics determine underlying susceptibility to disease or dysfunction, but not actual disease manifestation. |
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Most, if not all, postoperative organ dysfunction and morbidity associated with major operative procedures may be related to changes induced by stress caused by the operation. |
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The conceptual basis of progressive left ventricular dysfunction has now turned to neurohormones such as norepinephrine, angiotensin and aldosterone. |
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It seems at this point that dysfunction and defeatism are institutionally baked into the culture of the team. |
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Erectile dysfunction jokes have become a staple for comedy in the last 15 years. |
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We belong to a fraternity created by the dysfunction of history and the immaturity of this democracy. |
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Nearly half of men aged 70 and older have been diagnosed with erectile dysfunction or impotence. |
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Another approach is using drugs to antagonise the peripheral effects of opioids so that bowel dysfunction is reversed, speeding discharge from hospital. |
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We speculated that pigmentation of the meibomian glands in this patient was due to obstructive dysfunction of the meibomian glands as well as to the use of liquid eyeliner. |
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By longstanding historical demonstration, the U.S. Congress specializes in paralysis, indecision, and dysfunction. |
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No regime embodied the dysfunction of the Middle East like Saddam's Baath Party. |
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But with a bipartisan alliance of radicals in Washington, the logjam of political dysfunction will finally be broken. |
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At the moment Rowan Williams is beached by his institution's dysfunction. |
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The classic signs of raised jugular venous pressure and fine basal crepitations become evident at the later stages of heart failure when there is severe dysfunction. |
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Exclusion criteria included any prior history of vestibular dysfunction, tinnitus, hearing loss, or any central vestibular or oculomotor dysfunction. |
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Symptoms such as anorexia, nausea, vomiting, postprandial fullness, and diarrhea, all presumably secondary to gastric dysfunction, may be responsible. |
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Genuine cases of sexual dysfunction should be handled by general practitioners and specialists, not spruiked for by billboards, magazine ads and radio commercials. |
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I was able to cover the three hundred dollar rent and second mouth to feed no sweat, and Jack and I co-existed in clueless dysfunction for about four months. |
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The speech described the dysfunction of the European economy and presented a rationale for US aid. |
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Changes in urinary pattern such as polyuria, oliguria, anuria, enuresis, and excessive thirst can be associated with tubular dysfunction. |
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These eventually culminate in pulmonary hypertension and biventricular dysfunction. |
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However, during systemic inflammation, immunoparalysis may occur resulting in neutrophil dysfunction. |
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So in order to avoid unpleasant side effects like lethargy and sexual dysfunction, most recent trials also gave men testosterone supplements. |
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Groups at risk for zinc deficiency include the elderly, children in developing countries, and those with renal dysfunction. |
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Though the idea is controversial, some evidence suggests a link between aging and mitochondrial genome dysfunction. |
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The main potential applications are postprostatectomy and postradiotherapy, diabetes associated erectile dysfunction, and Peyronie's disease. |
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By this time, after 20 years of imperial dysfunction, the Ming army was in steep decline. |
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An insomniac should be differentiated from a short-sleeper, who needs less than 6 hours of sleep per night and has no symptoms or dysfunction. |
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There is no doubt that patients with vulvodynia from vestibulitis experience psychosexual dysfunction due to their severe dyspareunia. |
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Low-grade inflammation and dysfunction of high-density lipoprotein and its apolipoproteins as a major driver of cardiometabolic risk. |
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There is an enormous neurological consequence to mechanorecptor dysfunction, which is related to how these cells are wired into the spinal cord. |
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The patient also demonstrated difficulty turning his head to the left, which accounted for right accessory nerve dysfunction. |
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Pain is predominately while sitting, anorectal pain, sexual dysfunction, and in severe cases, incontinence. |
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Effective treatment of neurogenic detrusor dysfunction by combined high-dosed antimuscarinics without increased side-effects. |
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Our next book was less depressing, yet boasted the wildly popular themes of severe family dysfunction and kaballah. |
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Imbricating the muscle realigns the direction of tension upward to further treat palatal dysfunction. |
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Metalloproteinase inhibition ameliorates hypertension and prevents vascular dysfunction and remodeling in renovascular hypertensive rats. |
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Bethanechol chloride for treatment of Clomipramine induced orgasmic dysfunction in males. |
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People are much more reassured by functionality than by dysfunction. |
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The patient did not show any signs of Parkinsonism such as bradykinesia or cognitive dysfunction suggesting CNS lesion. |
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It showed that skin barrier dysfunction predicts food allergen sensitisation at two years of age. |
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The accusatory words hint of family disturbance, dysfunction and that ugly British tendency to sexualise prematurely our little girls. |
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Heavy menstrual periods may not be based entirely upon dysfunction of the uterus. |
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The erectile dysfunction drug tadalafil has been approved for treatment of the signs and symptoms of benign prostatic hyperplasia. |
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The temporomandibular joint may also be affected and result in micrognathia or other jaw dysfunction. |
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Cacosmia and neuro-behaviocal dysfunction associated with occupational exposure to mixtures of organic solvents. |
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Such term includes such conditions as perceptual disabilities, brain injury, minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia, and developmental aphasia. |
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This creates a risk of the joint dysfunction reappearing despite stabilization of the mandible and the temporomandibular joints. |
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Corticospinal tract damage accompanies motor dysfunction in a mouse model of closed-head mild traumatic brain injury. |
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When cells suffer metabolic stress or mitochondrial dysfunction, ATP is catabolized, and metabolic recovery is compromised. |
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Brain neurotransmitters play a key role in female sexual dysfunction, notably the compound monoamine oxidase. |
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Muscle overactivity and movement dysfunction in the upper motoneuron syndrome. |
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A spare tyre has already been linked to erectile dysfunction, memory problems, diabetes, cancer and heart disease. |
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Today, CFS also is known as myalgic encephalomyelitis, postviral fatigue syndrome, and chronic fatigue and immune dysfunction syndrome. |
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In rhabdomyolysis, precipitation of myoglobin is enhanced in an acidic environment causing renal dysfunction. |
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Convergence dysfunction was defined by patients' near point of convergence amplitude. |
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These free fatty acids are subject to oxidation, resulting in stellate cell activation, mitochondrial dysfunction, and subsequent fibrosis. |
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Kolaviron prevents carbendaziminduced steroidogenic dysfunction and apoptosis in testes of rats. |
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In reality, these two are inseparable and occur together along with neurohormonal stressors and other molecular dysfunction. |
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Effect of long-term enalapril therapy on neurohormones in patients with left ventricular dysfunction. |
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Standard operating procedures for neurophysiologic assessment of male sexual dysfunction. |
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Inflammatory status and endothelial dysfunction may also impair the expression of brain-derived neurotropic factor. |
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When I was about six months' pregnant, I started to feel uncomfortable when I walked and I was diagnosed with symphysis pubis dysfunction. |
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Late manifestations include kidney dysfunction, ureteric obstruction and squamous cell carcinoma of the bladder. |
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Increased myocardial fibrosis and left ventricular dysfunction in Cushing's syndrome. |
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Currently, there are no compelling data to describe the extent of visual loss or dysfunction associated with CVI in children or ABI in adults. |
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These tumours are typically associated with ovulatory dysfunction and galactorrhoea in women and with hypogonadism in men. |
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Post surgical debridement, the patient's pressor requirement and renal dysfunction improved dramatically. |
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If functional outcomes are reported, they are limited to dyspareunia, urinary and defecatory dysfunction. |
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However, varicocele is mainly a vascular pathology with endothelial dysfunction as the main pathogenetic factor. |
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They identify incest, patricide, rage, familial dysfunction, even homoeroticism as the key social issues that inhabit Gothic spaces. |
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The disease is presumably due to dysfunction of the brain's diencephalic reticular system. |
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Patients present with a pentad of fever, haemolytic anaemia, thrombocytopenia, renal impairment and neurological dysfunction. |
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No players in the study had dysarthria, Parkinson's Disease or cerebellar dysfunction. |
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Treated patients had fewer organ dysfunctions and fewer days with organ dysfunctions and were more likely to reverse existing organ dysfunction. |
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Detrusorurethral dyssynergia leading to urinary retention and renal failure arising from tubular dysfunction are later sequelae. |
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This caused muscle atrophy, hind limb dysfunction, peripheral neuropathy and even premature death of these mice, according to the authors. |
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Delirium is a nonspecific neuropsychiatric disorder that occurs in medically ill patients, signifying global encephalopathic dysfunction. |
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Natural history of markers of collagen turnover in patients with early diastolic dysfunction and impact of eplerenone. |
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Eplerenone, a selective aldosterone blocker, in patients with left ventricular dysfunction after myocardial infarction. |
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Effect of chitosan on lingual hemostasis in rabbits with platelet dysfunction induced by epoprostenol. |
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There is a strong link between erectile dysfunction and cardiovascular disease as the risk factors for both are the same. |
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The more severe the erectile dysfunction gets, the higher the level of homocysteine. |
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Morse's experimentation with and expectations of erectile dysfunction medications aren't uncommon, health care providers say. |
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After many tests, he has been diagnosed with binocular dysfunction and an esotropia problem. |
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Chronic eustachian tube dysfunction can lead to retraction of the tympanic membrane and bone erosion. |
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A It sounds as if you may be suffering from a condition called eustachian tube dysfunction which sounds a lot more complex than it actually is. |
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Eustachian tube dysfunction can occur if the tube becomes too narrow or blocked. |
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Severe sepsis is defined as sepsis plus sepsis-induced organ dysfunction or tissue hypoperfusion. |
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Hypovitaminosis D is associated with insulin resistance and beta cell dysfunction. |
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Psychobiological correlates of smoking in patients with erectile dysfunction. |
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A psychosexual assessment may be offered during the initial consultation in the sexual dysfunction clinic. |
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Mitochondrial dysfunction in focal segmental glomerulosclerosis of puromycin aminonucleoside nephrosis. |
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Down-beat nystagmus is usually due to bilateral dysfunction of the flocculus of the cerebellum. |
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She also had thermoregulatory changes, gastrointestinal involvement, and central nervous system dysfunction. |
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The untreated allergic rhinitis can lead to serious complications and damage the patient's ear, with infection in the middle-ear and the Eustachian tube dysfunction. |
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To overcome difficulty with physical coordination, which was caused by a visual dysfunction, she studied the Dalcroze system of eurhythmic training. |
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Hyperprolactinemia may also contribute to sexual dysfunction, as prolactin inhibits central dopaminergic activity, ultimately resulting in hypogonadism. |
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However, the range for curative treatments is very limited and the side effects include infertility, erectile dysfunction, incontinence and proctitis. |
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Increased nitric oxide also has been demonstrated in the spermatic veins of patients with varicocoele, which could be responsible for the spermatozoal dysfunction. |
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The present findings support the conclusions of an earlier trial using an animal model, in which pomegranate juice reversed erectile dysfunction symptoms. |
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Since the introduction of antiretroviral therapy, there have been numerous reports of increased erectile dysfunction in men, but proving a link is problematic. |
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Dubai Erectile dysfunction is no longer about a man's deflated machismo. |
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Erectile dysfunction drugs are one of the most popular methods of treating erectile problems caused due to anxiety, stress, or relationship problems. |
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Long-term reliability, however, is questioned because ankle fusion has been associated with premature arthritis, pain, and dysfunction of the adjacent hindfoot joints. |
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Other evidence of the presence of mitochondrial dysfunction in ASD patients is the fact that genes involved in the electron transport chain are downregulated. |
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Women with pelvic organ prolapse may have concomitant voiding dysfunction. |
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They said that Urogynecology is an upcoming subspecialty gaining interest in providing optimum care to women suffering from pelvic floor dysfunction and urogenital disorders. |
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Common neurological complications of untreated Graves' disease include cognitive dysfunction, tremor, ophthalmopathy, myopathy and polyneuropathy. |
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Pharyngeal dysfunction after total and subtotal oesophagectomy. |
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But in fact I was diagnosed with something called symphysis pubis dysfunction which was excruciatingly painful whenever I had to walk, and even lying down became painful too. |
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An estimated one in five women suffer with pregnancy-related pelvic girdle pain or symphysis pubis dysfunction, which is a misalignment or stiffness of the pelvic joints. |
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Hyaluronate sodium, marketed worldwide for over two decades as LegendA or HyonateA, is an injectable solution that treats noninfectious joint dysfunction in horses. |
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Immune Globulin Intravenous products have been reported to be associated with renal dysfunction, acute renal failure, osmotic nephrosis, and death. |
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A clinical trial of the angiotensin-convertingenzyme inhibitor trandolapril in patients with left ventricular dysfunction after myocardial infarction. |
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Essential thrombocytemia is a rare myeloproliferative disease characterized by a persistent increase in platelet numbers and platelet dysfunction. |
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The only human illness so far proved to occur from dioxin exposure is chloracne, an acne-like skin disorder and short-term reversible nerve dysfunction. |
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Top-down control analysis of the cadmium effects on molluskan mitochondria and the role of oxidative stress in cadmium-induced mitochondrial dysfunction. |
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It is indicated in the treatment of joint dysfunction of the carpus or fetlock in horses due to non-infectious synovitis associated with equine osteoarthritis. |
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Perilunate injuries consist of perilunate dislocations, and perilunate fracture dislocations belong to the carpal instability complex type of wrist dysfunction. |
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Sildenafil citrate is widely used as a primary pharmacological treatment of erectile dysfunction in men with and without underlying cardiovascular disease. |
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Eyelid scrubbing with Johnson's Baby Shampoo and hot compresses help people with posterior blepharitis, a dysfunction of the meibomian glands that line the eyelid margins. |
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Arterial stiffness and endothelial dysfunction can be determined using pulse wave velocity, and, brachial and aortic augmentation index, respectively. |
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The possible local causes in our case probably could have been eustachian tube dysfunction, small and sclerotic mastoids, and a congenitally dehiscent tegmen and sinus plate. |
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A natural treatment made from Saw Palmetto berries can have a significant effect in reducing sexual dysfunction in men with prostate problems, a new clinical trial has found. |
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They arise as a result of a dysfunction of embryologic development during the 10th week of gestation when epithelial tissue over the laryngotracheal groove fails to resorb. |
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Ischemia reperfusion during cardiac procurement is associated with a distinct form of myocardial injury which may cause organ dysfunction after transplantation. |
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In aqueous tear deficient dry eye, lacrimal glands do not produce enough tears, whereas meibomian gland dysfunction results in evaporative dry eye. |
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Posterior fossa syndrome is characterized by transient mutism, emotional lability, cognitive deficits, weakness, ataxia, and cranial nerve dysfunction. |
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It meets the medical definition of disease in that it is a physiological dysfunction of the human organism with environmental, genetic and endocrinological aetiologies. |
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This is due to smoking tobacco being among the leading causes of many diseases such as lung cancer, heart attack, COPD, erectile dysfunction, and birth defects. |
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The multidisciplinary follow-up showed no cardiac dysfunction or permanent lesions but confirmed a severe psycho-motor delay and left hemiparesia. |
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However, in contrast to the facilitative actions in subcortical structures, high levels of catecholamine release in prefrontal cortex result in cognitive dysfunction. |
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If the patient had no serious hemorrhoids or defecatory, urinary, or erectile dysfunction and the device was not displaced, we considered the surgery to be successful. |
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Furthermore, elevated TG levels may influence mechanisms associated with the development of CVD, including thrombogenesis, endothelial dysfunction, and oxidative stress. |
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There was no evidence of other proximal tubule dysfunction, as evidenced by the absence of glucosuria, phosphate wasting, bicarbonate wasting, or metabolic acidosis. |
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Margaret Dunne, who specialises in psychosexual, fertility and relationship therapy, understands erectile dysfunction cannot be fixed simply by popping a pill. |
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The excitotoxicity produced by abnormal levels of glutamate is thought to be responsible for the neuronal cell dysfunction observed in Alzheimer's disease. |
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