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Clinical features of pemphigus
Clinics in Dermatology, 1983Abstract Pemphigus is an autoimmune, blistering disease that affects the skin and mucous membranes. 1 It affects all ages. Pemphigus has been reported in children and young adults. The mean age of onset is the sixth decade in most large series, the range being 12–88 years.
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Classification and Clinical Features
2011Several classification systems for the neuropathies have been proposed. Some are based on presumed aetiology whereas others refer to topographical features or disease pathogenesis. However, the inter-relationship of aetiology, mechanisms and symptoms is complex and poorly understood, and, as such, this traditional classification is of little use in ...
Andrew J M Boulton, Loretta Vileikyte
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Leukemia Research, 1992
MDS is primarily a disease of the elderly. Cases who give a history of exposure to X-rays, cytotoxic drugs or leukaemogenic chemicals may be younger. Many cases of MDS present because of an incidental blood count. The most prominent clinical features are those of anaemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia.
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MDS is primarily a disease of the elderly. Cases who give a history of exposure to X-rays, cytotoxic drugs or leukaemogenic chemicals may be younger. Many cases of MDS present because of an incidental blood count. The most prominent clinical features are those of anaemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia.
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Advances in oto-rhino-laryngology, 2002
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de Leenheer, Els M.R. +6 more
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de Leenheer, Els M.R. +6 more
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Clinical Features of Huntington’s Disease
2018Huntington's disease (HD) is the most common monogenic neurodegenerative disease and the commonest genetic dementia in the developed world. With autosomal dominant inheritance, typically mid-life onset, and unrelenting progressive motor, cognitive and psychiatric symptoms over 15-20 years, its impact on patients and their families is devastating.
Ghosh, R, Tabrizi, SJ
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Clinical feature of neuroferritinopathy
Rinsho Shinkeigaku, 2012Neuroferritinopathy is an autosomal dominant, adult-onset disorder characterized by the deposition of iron and ferritin in the brain and a decreased level of serum ferritin. The disease is caused by mutations of the gene encoding ferritin light chain polypeptide.
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THE CLINICAL FEATURES OF TICK BITE
Medical Journal of Australia, 1977The clinical features of bites by the Australian scrub tick, Ixodes holocyclus, are reviewed. Eight cases of tick bite are summarized, including six new cases of tick paralysis in children. In almost all cases neuroparalysis became worse transiently, after the tick had been removed.
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Clinical Features of Infections
2001Infections in the elderly often present in an atypical, nonclassical fashion. Furthermore, the differential diagnosis of infectious diseases in the elderly differs from the young because it is dependent on both the clinical setting and the patient’s underlying functional status.
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