His left leg buckled on him, and the look of surprise on his face sent Cath into convulsions of laughter. |
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Other therapeutic uses include management of convulsions, leprosy, and rheumatic pain. |
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Illnesses that most commonly cause febrile convulsions include viral upper respiratory infections such as flu, ear infections, or roseola. |
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One girl in a blue sari was now shaking her long mane of hair backwards and forwards as she was seized by a series of impossible convulsions. |
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Acute neonatal hypocalcaemia results in tetany and convulsions, usually at 5 to 14 days of age. |
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There has also been reported a bitter principle that acts on the central nervous system and produces tetanoid convulsions. |
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We excluded provoked seizures, acute symptomatic seizures, and febrile convulsions. |
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Two weeks later, he was referred back to hospital after becoming semi-conscious and having convulsions. |
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The decision should also take into account a likely traumatising parental experience as in febrile convulsions. |
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Animals that had only slight tremors and no convulsions did not show any lesions. |
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If hyponatremia develops rapidly, muscular twitches, irritability and convulsions can occur. |
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The reasons were unknown, but onlookers seem to agree it looked like convulsions or spasms. |
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If the child has a history of epilepsy, it can be difficult to tell the difference between febrile convulsions and epileptic fits. |
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Febrile convulsions are fits that sometimes happen in a child with a high temperature. |
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Her ordeal began in November when she started having fits and convulsions despite no previous history of health problems. |
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Stertorous breathing may occur after epileptic convulsions, but does not typically occur after psychogenic non-epileptic convulsions. |
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Elsewhere in the city, however, the convulsions of anarchy appeared to be petering out. |
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Their original application was in febrile diseases where symptoms of high fever, delirium and convulsions occurred. |
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The mere sight of a small eel hanging on the line after taking a bait intended for other fish, is enough to send most anglers into convulsions. |
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Symptoms of epilepsy can include brief loss of awareness, muscle contractions, convulsions, mental confusion and sometimes lack of consciousness. |
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His entire body ached, his convulsions had strained muscles he didn't even know he had and he felt decidedly weak. |
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Many conditions with an onset in early childhood, such as autism, convulsions, and sudden infant death syndrome, do not have an obvious cause. |
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The medicines are indicated for anxiety, insomnia, convulsions, and muscle relaxation. |
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Many parents' dread of fevers has to do with the fear of fever convulsions or brain damage. |
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Swelling also may occur in the brain and can cause emergency symptoms such as seizures or convulsions. |
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If treatment is not immediate, the victim's condition can deteriorate to convulsions, brain damage, and eventual death. |
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Such substances cause an increase in heart rate, blood pressure, and body temperature, hallucinations, convulsions, and respiratory depression. |
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Are his lame slapstick antics intended to send us into convulsions of laughter? |
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The convulsions of the earth's climate are only part of a familiar, doom-laden equation. |
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Can we develop early warning systems to protect ourselves from nature's convulsions in earthquake and storm? |
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A watery gateway to the USA's Pacific Northwest, the Sound itself is a giant product of Earth's violent convulsions. |
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It was another week of extraordinary developments and violent financial convulsions. |
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Then the dollar began to stabilize, which threw the Dow into violent convulsions until October 2002, when the dollar resumed its downtrend. |
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The economy is stagnating and the effects of a war threaten to cause violent social convulsions. |
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Once the basic networks were in place, the economic and political convulsions of the 1920s and 1930s led to the second stage. |
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Whoever would have thought that an item no bigger than an aspirin tablet would have caused such moral, social and even political convulsions? |
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The debasement of the media can be traced in relation to the great political convulsions of the past 30 years. |
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The country is undergoing pangs of change and this is causing social convulsions that occasionally take on violent forms. |
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The recent convulsions on the stock markets have generated new interest in alternative investments, such as art, furniture and jewellery. |
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These scandals are all part of the general social convulsions and sea changes of modernism-postmodernism. |
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But from the standpoint of their political consciousness, the stock market convulsions must have a fundamentally healthy impact. |
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Huge sobs shuddered throughout her body, causing involuntary convulsions to tremble in her heart. |
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Epileptics were supposedly possessed by spirits that threw them to the ground and tormented them with convulsions. |
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She collapsed on New Year's Day suffering from critically high blood pressure and eclampsia with convulsions. |
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Anticonvulsant drugs may also be prescribed to protect against convulsions due to eclampsia. |
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Febrile convulsions can be frightening for parents, especially as they look like epileptic fits. |
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The downhills offer little relief, as long leaping strides will send your quads into convulsions. |
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Tiger bone is used to treat arthritis and muscular atrophy, and rhino horn to treat fevers, convulsions, and delirium. |
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I was racked with convulsions as I tried to muffle the incessant hacking by stuffing my scarf in my mouth. |
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This reaction can include anxiety, agitation, muscle twitches, nausea, confusion and convulsions. |
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Mega-doses of folic acid can produce convulsions, interfere with the anticonvulsant medication used by epileptics, and disrupt zinc absorption. |
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Strychnine, atropine, cocaine, certain snake venoms, and other poisons cause convulsions, resulting from altered nerve conduction in the brain and spinal cord. |
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This can lead to convulsions, seizures and permanent brain damage in some. |
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It is specific for asthma and oppressed breathing, hiccup, whooping cough, spasmodic croup, tetanus, hydrophobia, hysteria paroxysms and hysterical convulsions. |
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Larger doses of fluoride can cause life-threatening hypocalcemia with convulsions, tetany, decreased myocardial contractility, ventricular arrhythmias, and cardiac arrest. |
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Peter's wink sent Jes right back into convulsions and minor hysterics. |
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Symptoms of chronic intoxication include anorexia, gastrointestinal disturbances, debility, confusion, dermatitis, menstrual disorders, anemia, convulsions, and alopecia. |
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Over-exposure to thallium may cause nerve damage, emotional changes, cramps, convulsions and eventually coma which can lead to death caused by respiratory paralysis. |
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His body went into convulsions as the violent seizure began. |
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Symptoms may range from palpitations and severe sweating to paralysis, convulsions, and death. |
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Admit that you sometimes get uncontrollable convulsions like that. |
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Most children with febrile convulsions do not develop epilepsy. |
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It has been postulated that mesial temporal sclerosis may be related to a complicated delivery, febrile convulsions during childhood, and status epilepticus. |
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The administration is embarked on a course of action that will, once the lies and fearmongering are exploded by events, produce political convulsions at home and abroad. |
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It will suffer other upsets and reversals, and pass through other convulsions. |
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Serious side effects, such as convulsions, are more likely to occur in younger patients and would be of greater risk to infants than to older children or adults. |
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Knocked cold, Lakpa collapsed on the rocks, heaving in convulsions, Kodas wrote. |
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Only this time, the return fire had a rare twist, one that could produce Washington convulsions. |
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The election results thus portend a new period of social convulsions. |
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When the convulsions stop, put the person in the recovery position. |
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A virtual passenger four years ago against France following pre-match convulsions, the 25-year-old was clearly a man who had laid a ghost to rest. |
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Children may have high fever, rectal prolapse and convulsions. |
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Signs of an overdose include convulsions and pinpoint pupils of the eyes. |
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If the castor beans are ingested, the toxin can cause stomach irritation, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, increased heart rate, profuse sweating, collapse, convulsions and death. |
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Related indications included convulsions, dysrhythmias, hypotension and severe metabolic acidosis. |
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High-pressure oxygen acts on the central nervous system and may cause convulsions or death. |
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Groans, and convulsions, and a discolored face, and friends weeping, and blacks, and obsequies, and the like, show death terrible. |
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In the late stages, jaundice, generalized edema, oliguria, neuropathy, fever, convulsions, and eventual death are frequently seen. |
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Whatton pointed out that Huskisson's pulse did not stabilise and that he was in convulsions for the entire time Whatton attended him. |
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Addisonian crisis which causes severe pain, convulsions and unconsciousness. |
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The film compresses all of Nash's hospitalization into one where he received insulin shock therapy to the point of grand mal convulsions. |
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A 2-year-old child with neuro-developmental delay presented acutely with convulsions and opisthotonus. |
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The convulsions that racked the country I observed detachedly, as I got ready to go. |
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As an example, he pointed to Dicentra formosa, or Western bleeding heart, which can cause convulsions. |
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Women have aborted, men have committed suicide, and both men and women have been thrown into convulsions during the fearful agony of renal colic. |
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Systemic symptoms include fever, chills, malaise, nausea, vomiting, arthralgias, myalgias, headache, anorexia, abdominal pain, weakness, and convulsions. |
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Neither Mr Toots nor Mr Feeder could partake of this or any other snuff, even in the most stinted and moderate degree, without being seized with convulsions of sneezing. |
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Myristicin, a monoamine oxidase inhibitor and psychoactive substance, can induce convulsions, palpitations, nausea, eventual dehydration, and generalized body pain. |
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Tonic clonic seizures cause convulsions and at the other end of the spectrum Petit Mal seizures or absences lead to someone becoming blank and unresponsive. |
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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 political convulsions of the late 18th century associated with the American and French revolutions massively augmented the widespread appeal of patriotic nationalism. |
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Earthquakes and convulsions of nature shake Earth on a regular basis. |
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In the pentylenetetrazol test performed in rats, EHT 0202 increased the doses of PTZ required to induce clonic and tonic convulsions, as well as death. |
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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 are often mixed with those of the underlying illness but may include cardiac dysrhythmias, confusion, convulsions, muscle cramp and tetany. |
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They exhibited signs of disease such as high fever, dyspnea, depression, and diarrhea, and nervous signs such as ataxia, incoordination, and convulsions. |
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In high concentrations, hydrogen sulfide can cause shock, convulsions, inability to breathe, extremely rapid unconsciousness, coma and death with as little as a single breath. |
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