Dopamine production goes awry in the brains of Parkinson's patients, leading to the muscle rigidity and tremors associated with the disorder. |
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It is hard, though, to shake the notion that all of these tiny tremors and discordant sounds do not harbor some degree of chaos ahead. |
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This is the situation in pathological tremors such as that seen in Parkinsonism. |
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The authors conclude that thalamotomy and thalamic stimulation are effective treatments for patients with severe tremors. |
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The prolonged use of major tranquillizers can produce movement disorders, including tremors, tics, and smacking of the lips. |
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People had been predicting earthquakes and tidal waves, when we felt a few tremors. |
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By the time Ian had returned, I had developed violent tremors, my teeth chattering from the cold. |
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The mild tremors that shook Chennai residents from their Sunday morning slumber was just a preamble to the tragedy that lay in store. |
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A drive down Highway 1 takes you to the capital, Wellington, a splendid city, though one that is prone to earth tremors. |
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Early symptoms, such as a metallic taste, tinnitus, lightheadedness, and confusion, are followed by tremors and shivering. |
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This is the first time, however, that such tremors have been recorded under a transform fault. |
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Then, he spoke, and his voice was filled with so much fear that, though his body's tremors stopped, his voice continued to do so. |
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Each year, thousands of tremors of various degrees of intensity are recorded on that fault line. |
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In particular, there is potential for a neurotoxic metabolite, normeperidine, to accumulate and cause seizures, myoclonus and tremors. |
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Acupuncture may also help Parkinson's disease, by calming the tremors and easing stiffness. |
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Meanwhile, and further afield, the tremors resonating from the leaderene's misstep have been recorded on the outrage scale. |
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The prolonged use of neuroleptic drugs can produce movement disorders, including tremors, tics, and smacking of the lips. |
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Oh how we loved to see our fallen hero struggle through the tremors and slurred speech. |
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A lack of it is involved in Parkinson's disease, which causes tremors and twitches. |
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Diarrhoea, nervousness, rapid pulse, insomnia, tremors and, sometimes, anginal pains indicate the dose is too high. |
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The country lies along the East African rift and experiences occasional tremors and earthquakes. |
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Animals that had only slight tremors and no convulsions did not show any lesions. |
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His body shakes with tremors of grief, and I hold him until I fall asleep again. |
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As a result, patients suffer from muscle tremors, rigidity of movement, and balance and coordination problems. |
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Any imbalance in these neuro-modulators causes involuntary movements like chorea and tremors. |
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Two plates meet just off Sumatra's coast, grinding together and sending tremors through the region. |
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The surface of the suspension became matt, a painted slash of colour against the grey rock, as microfine tremors shot through it. |
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The three main symptoms are tremors, rigidity and slowness of movement, although not everyone will experience all three. |
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My shoulders tensed instantaneously, terrified tremors running through me, goose bumps rising on my exposed flesh. |
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Any new discovery is apt to cause excitement in academia, and tremors in the market. |
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Chronic exposure to low concentrations of diborane may cause headache, light-headedness, fatigue, weakness in the muscles, and tremors. |
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Harth arrived at the start of September 2001 and coped impressively with the tremors of terrorism. |
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The impact of victoriousness tremors magnanimously to stir the linens of reality and the visual records thereof. |
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Though fear raced in tremors through her entire being, she raised her chin and did not respond. |
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Symptoms range from slowness of movement, stiffness of the body and limbs, and tremors. |
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It was later discovered, though, that a rare series of small tremors, called foreshocks, occurred before the large quake hit the city. |
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Gas emissions and volcanic tremors have been high for months and the volcano has expelled boulders and trickled lava in recent weeks. |
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On average around three tremors measuring three on the Richter scale strike the UK every year. |
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To this day I can not look at a plate of aloo wadas without evoking tremors of gastric effervescence within. |
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There was little damage but within 28 hours the city was jolted by 19 tremors. |
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Dysarthria, muscular twitching or tremors are more serious and precede the onset of generalized convulsions. |
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They returned in August this year to install six seismometers, which are to record tremors for a year. |
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The sequential character is known as an earthquake swarm, a phenomenon of periodic tremors that can continue for months or even a year before quieting. |
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And, like caffeine, theobromine can cause sleeplessness, anxiety and tremors. |
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Repeated exposure to this mercuric compound caused hatters to develop tremors and brain damage. |
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On examination at 4 years of age, she has a broad-based gait with tremors, head titubation, dysmetria, and dysdiadochokinesia. |
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The original buildings, constructed from dung and straw, tended to collapse whenever hit by one of the country's frequent earth tremors. |
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All the clues are there: the sulphuric stench of rotten eggs, dead birds falling from the trees, and tremors deep beneath the earth. |
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But the consumer electronics industry could feel the first tremors of VCR revolution and everyone wanted a piece of the pie. |
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There had been some warning tremors during the preceding two years, as profit margins on Sony's consumer-electronics products began to fall. |
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Small amounts of alcohol may temporarily reduce the tremors in about half of all cases. |
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They also may have eating difficulties as a result of hand tremors and muscle spasms. |
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Clinical signs can also include changes in behaviour such as lack of co-ordination, tremors or an abnormal gait. |
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This morning, we were abruptly awoken by tremors that shook our tents from left to right. |
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In spite of several tremors in 2009, the port activity remains dynamic and extension projects are multiplying. |
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The smallest vibration recalls the cruel tremors of the earthquake which in thirty seconds plunged the city into desolation, crying and tears. |
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Any speculation about the re-opening of the Basilica is quite premature, if only because to date the tremors have still not entirely ceased. |
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It gets its name from the tremors that occur shortly after birth in mice with defective quaking proteins. |
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The disease grew progressively leading to tremors and rigidity, especially in the patient's right arm. |
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Signs of toxicity in mice included: excitement followed by sedation, ataxia, tremors, convulsions. |
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The spokesman added that people who evacuated buildings were frightened because the tremors would be felt more in multi-storey offices than on the street. |
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Symptoms of overdose may include anxiety, drowsiness, tremors, slurred speech, and transient high blood pressure. |
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Symptoms can range from muscle tremors to cardiac arrhythmia, and even cardiac arrest. |
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Convulsions can occur to anyone as part of delirium tremors, the withdrawal syndrome that may follow when excessive drinking stops. |
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These symptoms may include extreme fatigue, tremors, loss of balance, and sometimes even paralysis. |
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This medicine is used to treat the stiffness, tremors, spasms, and poor muscle control of Parkinson's disease. |
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It's not delirium tremors and chromosome breakage and only a small number of users would be seriously harmed. |
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A first-person video taken from what looks like a hospital ward, or a DMV of sorts, as the first tremors of the earthquake strike. |
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Some mice that received nanoparticles or ions also exhibited various symptoms, such as tremors or hypopnea. |
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Indeed, it is often the case that an area can find itself subjected to a number of tremors, where the effects will overlap and magnify each other. |
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Early signs are often movement-related, including tremors, stiffness, and problems with walking. |
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Most victims were crushed by falling buildings or buried by mudslides but four people died of heart attacks after the tremors on Wednesday, officials said. |
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Rats treated with 1 gram per day for eight weeks exhibited ptyalism, muscle tremors and transient pale extremities. |
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They also say the robotic computer's ability to filter out routine hand tremors and scale down movements when tinier cuts are needed means more precision. |
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Other types may cause slight tremors of the face, or staring spells. |
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Parkinson's disease is a common neurodegenerative disorder, predominantly of the elderly, manifested by rigidity, tremors and movement difficulty. |
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As her hand rubs his back in a comforting, circular motion, she can feel the tremors of exhaustion and fear reach her fingers through his silk bathrobe. |
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Signs of toxicity in all species included hypoactivity, salivation, tremors, ataxia, opisthotonos and clonic convulsions. |
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Signs of toxicity include decreased motor activity, ataxia, piloerection and tremors. |
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In some patients, the tremors that characterize the disease actually worsened, possibly because the transplanted cells were emitting too much dopamine. |
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A telescope is normally bolted to a vast concrete plinth around which the observatory dome can rotate without touching it, and the instrument isolated from tremors. |
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Intravenous administration to mice produced bradypnea, ataxia, clonic convulsions, exophthalmia, and tremors. |
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Much work needed to be done on the masonry, which was damaged by moisture, freezing and thawing, and earth tremors. |
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It is sensitive to earth tremors not felt by humans and calls in concert when a quake impends. |
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Like other so-called depressants, ethanol slows down the pulse rate and reduces muscle tremors that can make a shot go off target. |
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These may vary from insomnia, jumpiness and sweating to more severe symptoms such as tremors, hallucinations, and convulsions. |
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Withdrawal symptoms may range from jumpiness, sleeplessness, sweating, nausea and vomiting, to tremors, seizures, hallucinations and even death. |
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The typical side effects are nausea, loose stools, polyuria, hand tremors and weight increase. |
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Earthquakes range from tremors so weak as to be detectable only by sensitive small-motion seismographs, to catastrophic. |
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Her symptoms included arm tremors stiffness in her neck and the loss of sight, which was eventually regained. |
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In other words, they should be capable of absorbing energy and tremors without suddenly rupturing. |
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Motor symptoms vary from complete paralysis to tremors, tics, contractures, or convulsions. |
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The disaster agency said tremors were still wracking the volcano, but that scientists didn't expect another major eruption. |
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The symptoms of cholinesterase inhibition are nausea, vomiting dizziness, tremors, salivation and constricted pupils. |
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Rapid respiration, tremors and tachycardia were observed in all treated groups, hypersensitivity in mid and high dose groups, and hunched, thin appearance and red or mucoid nasal discharge in the high dose group. |
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The earth tremors resumed and made a bourdon to the loud psalms that they sang, interspersed with the odd ode of Horace recited by Silas. |
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Essential tremor, a neurological disorder that causes hand tremors, is suspected by some researchers to be a forme fruste of Parkinson's Disease. |
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Symptoms, which can include tremors, stiffness, slowness of movement and speech impairment, can sometimes be managed through medication and surgery. |
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We show that inharmonic and harmonic tremors have different source characteristics and that the cumulative source amplitudes of inharmonic tremor are consistent with previous estimates of ejecta volume. |
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In terms of its effect, there is little noticeable difference between, say, a 1.0 and 2.0 – these cause tremors that vary only in degree of imperceptibility. |
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Still, the essay makes good reading, and this is precisely because young Kristol, in his boyish impressionability, was alive to the intellectual tremors of his own moment, which were huge. |
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Symptoms may include insomnia, irritability, restlessness, poor attention span, loss of memory, headaches, anemia, muscle tremors and stomach cramps. |
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The conservation team also equipped the statue with seismic reinforcements to help it withstand earth tremors and other shocks, bringing it up to modern standards. |
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There have been no reports on any considerable crust tremors in the Kamchatkan towns or villages. |
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Without ever sinking into a simulacrum of romanticism, Prokofiev nevertheless gives free rein to his pen here, favoring diaphanous textures and the nocturnal tremors of solo strings. |
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Patients lay untended and unfed in overcrowded, filthy wards. In this section Now wait for the political tremors Beating swords into oil shares Improving? |
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Mercury may cause muscle tremors, personality and behaviour changes, memory loss, metallic taste, loosening of the teeth, digestive disorders, skin rashes, and brain and kidney damage. |
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Upping the ante, the energy minister Panagiotis Lafazanis, who heads Syriza's militant wing, sent tremors through the party last week, saying it should step down rather than impose policies it had not been elected to enforce. |
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This insecticide causes a rapid excitation of the insect nervous system, leading to involuntary muscle contractions, prostration with tremors, and paralysis. |
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Symptoms of mercury poisoning may include shyness, tremors, memory problems, changes in vision and hearing, mental retardation and liver and kidney damage. |
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Massive undersea tremors triggered so-called tsunamis off the island of Sumatra, itself located in a seismically volatile area of the Indian Ocean. |
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Parkinson patients lack the neurotransmitter dopamine and have such symptoms as tremors, speech impediments, movement difficulties, and often dementia later in the course of the disease. |
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These symptoms may include: anxiety, sweating, insomnia, rigors, pain, nausea, tremors, diarrhea, upper respiratory symptoms, piloerection, and rarely, hallucinations. |
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This covering has been developed using a multiaxial textile material included in a mortar with captors to help analyse the consequences of the tremors. |
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The signs observed included lacrimation, ataxia, tremors and bradypnea. |
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Symptoms of cholinesterase inhibition include salivation, sweating, headache, nausea, muscle twitching, tremors, incoordination, blurred vision, tears, abdominal cramps, diarrhoea and chest discomfort. |
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But the prospect of fracking for oil and gas, a proven inducer of earth tremors, on Balcombe's doorstep has unleashed an earthquake on the local political landscape. |
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Effects for prolonged Exposure: Chronic mercury poisoning results in nervous irritability, weakness, tremors, gengivitis, erethism and greying of lens of the eye. |
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For example, one might apply for a grant from the Rotary Club or RCL Québec for a low-income client who needs an electric toothbrush because of arm tremors. |
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Review inhaler technique at each visit, and consider a valved holding chamber for all patients, especially those with tremors or poor hand-breath coordination. |
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I'm amazed the Greens have not blamed recent earth tremors on just talking about it. |
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Test drilling for shale gas was suspended in Lancashire in 2011 after earth tremors at a fracking site near Blackpool. |
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Fracking causes earth tremors, which is why it is forbidden in much of California. |
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The tiny amount of fracking carried out has already caused earth tremors in what has been, up to now, a very stable part of the world. |
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If focal tremors, myoclonus, or seizures occur, patients should be evaluated neurologically and placed on anticonvulsant therapy if not already instituted. |
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While a large earthquake can trigger tremors in distant, tectonically active regions, earthquakes and icequakes have been considered unconnected events. |
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Tracking such tremors, which are generated by the upward movement of magma from the asthenosphere, has proved to be an effective means of determining the onset of eruptions and is now widely used for prediction purposes. |
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Dr. John Pinckney soon gave a diagnosis of cerebellar hypoplasia, a syndrome in which parts of the brain's cerebellum are underdeveloped, causing unsteady gait, head tremors and balance deficits. |
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Physical symptoms may include nausea and vomiting, blurred vision, muscle twitches and tremors, elevated blood pressure, fluid in the lungs, chest pain, and other lung damage. |
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Moreover, it noted that the biggest losses, from Cyclone Nargis and the Sichuan tremors, could have been substantially reduced had schools been built more earthquake-resilient. |
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The chemical can make meat leaner, but can also be the cause of heart palpitations, diarrhoea and muscle tremors. By comparison, Walmart's offence in Chongqing was minor. |
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These agents decrease the speed at which the body breaks down caffeine, which can increase the effects of the caffeine ingested, leading to excitability, heart palpitations, tremors and perspiration. |
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By inhalation: headaches, drowsiness, irritation of mucous membranes in nose and throat, breathing difficulties, dizziness, nausea, tremors, visual difficulties, loss of consciousness. |
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The prospect – one that would bring the crisis full circle three years after George Papandreou also proposed holding a referendum – has been quick to send tremors through Europe. |
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To achieve this, after the early tremors and shake-ups due to office closures and reassignments of staff, we have sought to secure a net strengthening of staff in the field over those at Headquarters. |
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For the experiment, the building has not been spared: covered in this textile fitted with detectors, it was placed under a vibrating table in order to simulate greater and greater seismic tremors. |
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The patient had generalized tremors during the third infusion, but subsequent findings were uneventful. |
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This event caused extensive damage in Calais both through its tremors and possibly triggered a tsunami, though this has never been confirmed. |
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Nutmeg is highly neurotoxic to dogs and causes seizures, tremors, and nervous system disorders which can be fatal. |
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Small tremors which cause small, nondamaging tsunamis, also occur frequently. |
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It has a throw of 3000 feet and the area is still geologically active and subject to earth tremors. |
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The optometrist has been losing patients ever since he developed tremors in his hand. |
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Within 10 minutes, muscle tremors, lacrimation, urination, defecation, salivation and hard breathing occur. |
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The tremors were picked up in a seismogram in the survey's office at about 1am yesterday. |
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Initial symptoms include truncal ataxia, unsteady stance and gait, tremors and slurred speech. |
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Infected animals develop tremors and incoordination that progress to decumbency and death. |
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The remaining alternative, a three-drug cocktail, gave her tremors, double vision, and balance problems. |
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The reported clinical features include generalised convulsions, acute confusional state, psychosis, tremors, cerebellar ataxia, motor aphasia, and generalised myoclonus. |
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Symptoms of yew poisoning include an accelerated heart rate, muscle tremors, convulsions, collapse, difficulty breathing, circulation impairment and eventually cardiac arrest. |
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The earthquake sent tremors down to Tokyo, 190 miles south, where high-rise buildings with the most advanced antiearthquake technology swayed for a couple of minutes. |
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Accelerographs will record shifts in the structures due to tremors. |
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There is indisputable proof that fracking not only causes minor earth tremors but can trigger off a major earthquake in zones where they are likely. |
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When the day arrived for the reentrance try, I approached the exam site, down in the financial district, with fewer tremors than on my last such encounter. |
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Instead, seismometers can focus on measuring waves created by moonquakes, tremors created by a variety of sources, including the tidal tug of the Earth. |
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At these doses, the treatment related signs that were observed in these animals include ataxia, bradypnea, tremors, ptosis, decreased activity, emesis, and mydriasis. |
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The epyllion fad, for example, thrived in Elizabeth's late masterful reign, but its tremors, like its muse, endured long after the turn of the halcyon sixteenth century. |
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During the following 10 hours, the bird exhibited tachypnea and showed progressive neurologic signs of weakness, incoordination, tremors, and depression. |
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It requires a great deal of patience as you wait and wait for the needle on the seismometer to begin scratching more earnestly as it detects tremors in the ground. |
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Signology was characterized by anorexy, diarrhea, dehydration, muscular tremors, wobbly march, sternal or lateral decubitus, pedalling, opisthotonos, dyspnea and death. |
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Last September 15, Phivolcs raised alarm over the possibility of eruption of Mt Mayon after it observed increasing incidences of tremors and rockfalls. |
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