「paralysis」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 192件
serious accident left a young man at risk of | paralysis after a fall. |
e of law in Council Bluffs, where he died of | paralysis, after a long period of sickness. |
s of entertainments, but he died suddenly of | paralysis, aged 64, and was buried at the cost of frie |
Pseudo-Hypertrophic or Myosclerotic | Paralysis Among Myopathies (1901). |
e effects of his 1966 accident, with partial | paralysis and aphasia. |
ude abscesses in the auditory canals, facial | paralysis, and enlarged tonsils producing asphyxiation |
He also suffered from creeping | paralysis and had to wear a neck brace, even on televi |
gut contents escape into the blood, causing | paralysis and death. |
In February 1802 Bradbury was stricken with | paralysis and totally disabled, he was removed from th |
in 1841, aged 67, at Hartlebury Palace, from | paralysis, and was buried in the churchyard of the par |
Disabled by | paralysis and limited to a wheelchair later in life, W |
esented with neurologic compromises: tremor, | paralysis, and excessive salivation as well as tooth l |
otoxin blocks sodium channels, causing motor | paralysis and respiratory arrest within minutes of exp |
congenita (as well as hyperkalemic periodic | paralysis and the potassium-aggravated myotonias) is c |
npleasant effects including vomiting, muscle | paralysis, and trembling at higher dosages. |
pped her very hard, which resulted in facial | paralysis and a burst left eye vein. |
ge of 40, after succumbing to the effects of | paralysis, and was interred at St. Joseph Cemetery in |
Faced with the possibility of | paralysis and the inability to have children, she unde |
edical needs in the 3 testbeds of blindness, | paralysis, and central nervous system impairments. |
e of Francis of Assisi, he was overcome with | paralysis and died immediately. |
for Diseases of the Nervous System including | Paralysis and Epilepsy. |
ges of misshapen monsters and twisted metal, | paralysis and victory, loneliness and introspection". |
ate syndrome that would lead to his complete | paralysis, and an unusual brain injury Silk lost of al |
the first, the symptoms of headache, fever, | paralysis, and sporadic coma disappearing, allegedly, |
developed a synthetic neurotoxin that causes | paralysis and a deep suggestive state of the mind that |
it disrupts neurotransmission, resulting in | paralysis and death of the parasite. |
nomenon, which he described as sensations of | paralysis and vibration accompanied by a bright light |
er; shortly after that, he was stricken with | paralysis, and lived out his last years in the Montefi |
ail court at Westminster, he was seized with | paralysis, and being removed to the Westminster Palace |
This leads to | paralysis and eventually death. |
Progressing generalised disorder with | paralysis and sensory signs." |
This leads to uncontrolled spasming, | paralysis, and eventual death. |
The sting will cause | paralysis and/or death. |
neuronal diseases, such as several types of | paralysis, apoplexy and epilepsy. |
ous neuronal problems, such as chronic pain, | paralysis, apoplexy and epilepsy. |
A | paralysis as a child left him crippled for the rest of |
that a mere coin in the mouth may result in | paralysis as some myths say that a stake through a vam |
at unites football lovers that have cerebral | paralysis, as well as a youth scout, and lives in Mosc |
duce the severity and duration of attacks of | paralysis associated with the more serious form of alt |
iratory Foundation of the National Infantile | Paralysis Association, the first such organisation in |
He died following a stroke of | paralysis at St. Petersburg, while on his way home fro |
Lando I was in a | paralysis at that time and his son Lando II took up ar |
He died of | paralysis at Barrow on 12 June 1808, and was buried in |
Lando was in a | paralysis at that time and his son Lando II took up ar |
Dawes died of | paralysis at the deanery, Hereford, on 10 March 1867, |
Some three years before Gregory's death, | paralysis attacked his left side and gradually spread |
The | paralysis became total and he could not even talk. |
the 2008 season because he was "at risk for | paralysis because of a lower back and spine injury.... |
surgery has a 5% chance of causing complete | paralysis but does not tell you. |
dologies explicitly seek to prevent analysis | paralysis by promoting an iterative work cycle that em |
childhood, he had been miraculously cured of | paralysis by the Holy Cross. |
soned in a tomb on Earth, kept in a state of | paralysis by an energy beam transmitted from the main |
The symptoms of periodic | paralysis can also be caused by hyperthyroidism, and a |
However, in some cases, profound | paralysis can develop and even become fatal before any |
transporters that cause hypokalemic periodic | paralysis can precipitate occasional attacks of severe |
are additional situations in which analysis | paralysis can be identified, but in which the phenomen |
e whether to live paralyzed until a cure for | paralysis can be developed, or to die of one's afflict |
er, the symptoms expand to slight or partial | paralysis, cerebral dysfunction, anxiety, insomnia, co |
muscular incoordination, tremors, posterior | paralysis, coma, and death. |
age; anemia; liver and kidney damage; facial | paralysis; coma; and death. |
ht, developing into pain in the left arm and | paralysis, combined with such frequent vomiting that h |
10 days and include fever, headache, partial | paralysis, confusion, nausea and even coma. |
mage to the central nervous system can cause | paralysis, convulsions, and death. |
Ray Woodard would never let this | paralysis define him or who he was. |
inspires her artworks but also by the sleep | paralysis disorder and hypnagogic and hypnopompic hall |
ers, of which the most valuable are two on a | paralysis due to tumour of the brain. |
ment of interferon, until Casey develops leg | paralysis, due to Chris Taub and Amber putting her on |
It causes progressive bulbar | paralysis due to involvement of motor neurons of the c |
experiments on cats regarding muscle atonia ( | paralysis) during REM sleep. |
riptions for maladies, ranging from madness, | paralysis, dysentery, fertility, stomach ache and ulce |
ocystitis, seizures, mental retardation, and | paralysis, each of which is a complication resulting f |
Municipal | paralysis ensued until December 1846, when Mills was e |
super armor and you not get hp bug, freeze, | paralysis, etc. |
old, snake bite, influenza, colds, hysteria, | paralysis, fever, rabies, to treat arrow poison in Bra |
ase is initially blocked (leading to a brief | paralysis), followed by a period of massive overexcita |
creases and the nematodes experience flaccid | paralysis followed by death. |
er presented macaque monkeys with particular | paralysis following specific surgeries of the motor co |
Tietgen suffered partial | paralysis following a minor brain hemorrhage in 1896. |
Doug is also the President of the Lone Star | Paralysis Foundation. |
news story about her shooting and subsequent | paralysis from the waist down. |
uary 12, 2005, was ignored, resulting in her | paralysis from the waist down |
Electric shock therapy was supposed to cure | paralysis, gout, haemorrhoids, epilepsy. |
owing ailments: arthralgia, stiff shoulders, | paralysis, hardenings, bruises, sprains, chronic indig |
This finding suggests that facial muscle | paralysis has a selective effect on processing of emot |
Tick | paralysis has killed thousands of animals, mainly cows |
t the effect of their laziness; this general | paralysis has its source in your policy which, from ma |
ory overstimulation and hypokalemic periodic | paralysis have similar triggers and treatments, and si |
of the symptoms of pumiliotoxins are partial | paralysis, having difficulty moving, being hyperactive |
Faced with the prospect of | paralysis, he vowed to return to non-chemical means of |
virtually helpless because of blindness and | paralysis, he offered to serve him as an amanuensis. |
polarization, which could sequentially cause | paralysis, heart contraction, and changing the senses |
and nervous stimulants used in facial palsy, | paralysis, hemiplegia, fibromyalgia, etc. |
He was attacked by | paralysis in 1880, and again in 1883. |
logical problems - this can often cause mild | paralysis in the legs |
ose a bipartisan cabinet in an effort to end | paralysis in government. |
of 3-6%, and has caused death by respiratory | paralysis in a few minutes at 10% concentration. |
be dangerous to humans, but serves to cause | paralysis in their fast moving prey choices. |
t with small fighters would induce temporary | paralysis in an enemy's command structure. |
he James Madison football team that suffered | paralysis in a game-time injury. |
ck and a neck injury that caused temporarily | paralysis in April 2008. |
stion of hexachlorophene led to weakness and | paralysis in laboratory rats. |
pounds are mainly used for peripheral muscle | paralysis in surgery, but some centrally acting compou |
(nerve degeneration in the spinal cord) and | paralysis in the mentally insane. |
reports suggested that he was suffering from | paralysis in his lower body, while others said he was |
ot cause death, at least through respiratory | paralysis, in spite of its potency, because the approp |
cations are piperazine, which causes flaccid | paralysis in the adult pinworms, and pyrvinium pamoate |
He died of | paralysis in 51. |
He died of | paralysis in 1856. |
Polio can cause severe deformities and | paralysis in children. |
case appears to be a result of facial nerve | paralysis instead of severe self-mutilation), required |
power by releasing a powder that causes the | paralysis into the air. |
The | paralysis is caused by degeneration of peripheral nerv |
Dr. Hyman believes that Sylvia's | paralysis is psychosomatic, and though he is not a psy |
Vocal cord paresis (or | paralysis) is weakness of one or both vocal folds that |
The most severe form results in | paralysis, is usually fatal by age 2, and is the most |
Although tick | paralysis is of concern in domestic animals and livest |
long after the offending tick is gone, tick | paralysis is chemically induced by the tick and theref |
Analysis | paralysis is an example of an anti-pattern. |
abbreviated FTS, also known as flaccid trunk | paralysis) is a condition that causes trunk paralysis |
His career was ended by | paralysis late in 1791, and a repetition of the stroke |
Visna infection may progress to total | paralysis leading to death via inanition; however, if |
mal potassium blood concentrations) periodic | paralysis, myotonia congenita and paramyotonia congeni |
Paralysis occurs secondary to degeneration of the moto | |
It results in a temporary | paralysis of the diaphragm that makes it difficult to |
He wanted to follow the sea, but a | paralysis of his right leg made that impossible. |
Weakness, drowsiness and | paralysis of throat may appear in less than 1 hour aft |
The venom of cone snails cause | paralysis of their fish prey. |
the use of chymopapain include anaphylaxis, | paralysis of the legs, or death. |
It is characterised by irreversible | paralysis of the hind legs because of the degeneration |
k and suffered a spinal injury, resulting in | paralysis of his legs. |
Injury to these fibers results in | paralysis of the lower face, but only weakness of the |
Paralysis of the posterior cricoarytenoid muscles may | |
clude retinal degeneration, ophthalmoplegia ( | paralysis of eye muscles), ptosis (drooping eyelids). |
he suffers the cancer of his mother and the | paralysis of his father. |
troke in 1836 which left him for a time with | paralysis of his facial muscles and difficulty speakin |
which affects nerve impulses and can lead to | paralysis of muscles and may eventually end in asphyxi |
acteristically neuropathic in character, and | paralysis of the hand and then the whole arm. |
al until his departure in 1698 caused by the | paralysis of his right hand because of a stroke. |
Symptoms include | paralysis of the biceps, brachialis, and coracobrachia |
s palsy, a neurological disorder that causes | paralysis of the facial muscles and sensitivity to lig |
m x hortorum) and is responsible for causing | paralysis of the Japanese beetle. |
s referred to as paralytic dementia, general | paralysis of the insane, or "maladie de Bayle" in medi |
rformed extensive research involving general | paralysis of the insane, and while at Saint-Yon he pub |
ion as the result of weakness/paresis and/or | paralysis of the musculature of the oral mechanism nee |
terian Hospital, there was pain in the legs, | paralysis of the legs, muscle wasting in lower lumbar |
27, when the premiership, vacant through the | paralysis of Lord Liverpool, fell to Canning, the chie |
tial environmental concerns contributed to a | paralysis of the city's transportation systems after a |
Paralysis of the left arm ended his career in 1866. | |
bulbar palsy is characterized by progressive | paralysis of muscles innervated by cranial nerves. |
He suffered a massive stroke and | paralysis on October 12, 2008, leaving him unable to s |
hometown of Tuburan, after a long bout with | paralysis, on August 10, 1924. |
He died of | paralysis on 6 July 1720, and was buried on 9 July in |
He died of | paralysis, on 24 July 1844 aged 70. |
heral nervous system may result in weakness, | paralysis, or a lack of coordination of the motor-spee |
organization ever since, often resulting in | paralysis or conflicting courses of action. |
ea and vomiting in small doses, and anxiety, | paralysis, or death in larger amounts. |
inability to pronounce, not due to muscle | paralysis or weakness |
No relation with | paralysis or paraplegia was intended. |
angled in bureaucracy, saying it risks total | paralysis otherwise. |
pted) including Bell Palsy (one-sided facial | paralysis), polio, and stroke. |
He suffered from | paralysis, poor eyesight and neurological problems, as |
but was in Worcester when a second attack of | paralysis proved fatal. |
In contrast, hyperkalemic periodic | paralysis refers to gain-of-function mutations in sodi |
found at the neuromuscular junction, causing | paralysis, respiratory failure and death in the victim |
o the bombardment of ACh, leading to flaccid | paralysis, respiratory failure, and other signs and sy |
Flaccid | paralysis resulting from cholinergic crisis can be dis |
Hypokalemic periodic | paralysis results from mutations in subunits of sodium |
At higher concentrations, | paralysis, seizures, and coma may result. |
Randolph died at age 60, suffering from | paralysis, September 12, 1813 while visiting the home |
alth at the time, suffering from illness and | paralysis that required hospitalization in early 1944. |
e in Man' (OMIM) 170390), a form of periodic | paralysis that includes significant heart rhythm probl |
nnels which occurs in PSP produces a flaccid | paralysis that leaves its victim calm and conscious th |
m in a coma for two weeks and with left-side | paralysis that ended his football playing career. |
He did suffer temporary | paralysis to his right arm after birth due to forceps |
Cricket | paralysis virus antagonizes Argonaute 2 to modulate an |
iary structure of the ribosome-bound cricket | paralysis virus IRES RNA. |
Cricket | Paralysis Virus (CrPV) was initially discovered in Aus |
que and statistics to identify Israeli acute | paralysis virus as a potential cause of massive deaths |
6 states that the Type 1 syndrome of chronic | paralysis virus (CPV) "is recognized by trembling bees |
Acute bee | paralysis virus - a Western honey bee virus |
als and one condition, hyperkalemic periodic | paralysis, was first identified in the descendants of |
The assault led to her | paralysis, which created massive guilt for Kwok-Yip. |
itiate the National Foundation for Infantile | Paralysis, which focused on supporting research on pol |
s early as 1840 Rice suffered from a type of | paralysis which began to limit his speech and movement |
nters until 1857, when he was struck down by | paralysis while engaged on portraits of the Duke and D |
Afterward, he recovered from | paralysis, with team doctors reporting his condition w |
similar to that for other types of periodic | paralysis, with dichlorphenamide the drug of first cho |
owever is known to have side-effects such as | paralysis with high risk of other diseases, being just |
h is characterized by ipsilateral oculomotor | paralysis with contralateral tremor and hemiparesis ca |
Ascending | paralysis with concomitant anaesthesia and analgesia. |
"Ascending | paralysis without sensory signs or symptoms. |
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