Results 321 to 330 of about 5,731,504 (362)
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Acquired amusia

2015
Recent developments in the cognitive neuroscience of music suggest that a further review of the topic of amusia is timely. In this chapter, we first consider previous taxonomies of amusia and propose a fresh framework for understanding the amusias, essentially as disorders of cognitive information processing.
Camilla N, Clark   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Acquired tracheobronchomalacia.

European journal of respiratory diseases, 1979
Acquired tracheobronchomalacia is seen in middle-aged and elderly people. Weakness of the tracheal and bronchial walls allows the posterior and anterior walls to draw nearer together during expiration and coughing, producing a varying obstruction. The main symptoms are dyspnoea, cough, phlegm and haemoptysis.
openaire   +2 more sources

Acquired Dyslexia

Seminars in Neurology, 1993
Abstract Unlike the ability to speak, which has presumably evolved over hundreds of thousands of years, the ability to read is a relatively recent development that is dependent upon both the capacity to process complex visual stimuli and the ability to engage phonologic, syntactic, and other language capacities.
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Acquired angioedema

Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1997
Acquired angioedema (AAE) is a rare disorder that has been categorized into two forms, AAE-I and AAE-II. AAE-I is associated with other diseases, most commonly B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders. AAE-II is defined by the presence of an autoantibody directed against the C1-inhibitor molecule.
openaire   +2 more sources

Acquired dyschromatopsias

Survey of Ophthalmology, 1987
Theories of color vision have been founded on behavioral observations of how the human eye distinguishes colors and mixtures of colors. Studies of congenital dyschromatopsias (inherited disorders of color vision) have been important to the development of these theories.
openaire   +2 more sources

Acquired blepharoptosis

Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery, 1996
A review is given of the aetiology and possible treatment of acquired (non-congenital), blepharoptosis, which is a common but not specific sign of neurological disease. The diagnostic categories of upper eyelid drooping are scheduled as (a) pseudo-ptosis due to a local process or overactivity of eye closure, including blepharospasm, and (b) true ptosis
openaire   +2 more sources

Acquired Keratoglobus

American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1974
D S, Jacobs, W R, Green, A E, Maumenee
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Cervical cancer prevention and control in women living with human immunodeficiency virus

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2021
Philip E Castle, Vikrant V Sahasrabuddhe
exaly  

ACQUIRED HAEMOPHILIA

The Lancet, 1981
J R, Duran-Suarez   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Acquired Ichthyosis

Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery, 2018
Daniel, Dalcin, Jennifer, Beecker
openaire   +2 more sources

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