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Deterioration

Epilepsia, 2006
Summary:  Intellectual deterioration in epilepsy may be real or apparent. The latter refers to delay in cognitive development such that performance against age‐related norms appears to drop. The former, real deterioration can occur due to concomitant degenerative neurological disease of which epilepsy is also a symptom, or it may happen as a ...
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Deteriorating Epilepsies: Severely Deteriorated Cases

Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 1990
Abstract: A total of 28 cases of severely deteriorated epileptic patients were seen at out‐ and inpatient services in the past 12 years. In 22 out of these 28 cases, the etiology for the deterioration was considered to be due to either repetitive intractable seizures or antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) or both. Although differential diagnoses were difficult
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Deterioration following craniectomy

Practical Neurology, 2013
A 35-year-old right-handed man was admitted to the rehabilitation unit, 4 weeks after a traumatic brain injury. He had been found unconscious in the street several hours after drinking with friends. On first admission to the emergency unit, his Glasgow Coma Scale score was 6 out of 15.
Mariam, Annan   +5 more
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Assessing intellectual deterioration

British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1986
Twenty patients fulfilling the clinical criteria of Alzheimer‐type dementia were assessed on the Wechsier Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS), the Schonell Graded Word Reading Test (SGWRT) and the National Adult Reading Test (NART). Fifteen normal elderly control subjects were administered the WAIS and the NART.
S, Hart, C M, Smith, M, Swash
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High altitude deterioration

Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B - Biological Sciences, 1954
High altitude deterioration means a gradual diminution in man’s capacity to do work at great heights. This is associated with insomnia, lack of appetite, loss of weight and increasing lethargy. These symptoms appear after a prolonged stay above 18000 ft. and there is great individual variation.
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