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Motor neuron disease

Neuromuscular Disorders, 1996
Wheels and gears whirred. The metal chair rolled to face right at the flick of the switch by a scalloped finger sculpted from its melting muscles.
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Motor Neuron Diseases

2014
The loss of afferent and efferent signal transduction following traumatic peripheral nerve injury has immediate and long-term effects on target organs (e.g., muscles and sensory receptors) as well as somatosensory and motor brain areas. The goal of surgical peripheral nerve repair is to mitigate these negative outcomes by restoring the continuity of ...
Wolfgang Löscher, Eva L. Feldman
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Motor Neuron Disease

1999
Motor neuron disease (MND) refers to the group of degenerative disorders characterized by progressive weakness and atrophy of skeletal muscle due to the selective dysfunction and degeneration of upper and/or lower motor neurons. In adults, the most common of these disorders is amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, i.e., Lou Gehrig’s disease), which ...
Bruce A. Rabin, David R. Borchelt
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Motor Neuron Disease

1985
The most severe denervating disorders are those due to degeneration and loss of motor nerve cells. Poliomyelitis is an example of acute anterior horn.cell disease attributable to the cytopathic effects of the virus, but is unlikely to require diagnostic muscle biopsy.
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Onconephrology: The intersections between the kidney and cancer

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2021
Mitchell H Rosner   +2 more
exaly  

Motor Neuron Disease

Neurologic Clinics, 2015
Richard J. Barohn, Mazen M. Dimachkie
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Motor Neurone Disease

Reviews in Clinical Gerontology, 1995
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Motor Neuron Diseases

2015
Abstract The motor neuron disorders are a clinically diverse group of diseases that share a pathologic loss of the motor neurons. The most common adult-onset disorder is amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Other forms include the spinal muscular atrophies, infectious motor neuronopathies, and rare focal forms of anterior horn cell loss ...
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Motor neuron disease

1983
Abstract Motor neuron disease, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, is so called because it is characterized by a selective degeneration of the motor neuron involving both the corticospinal pathways and those which originate in the motor nuclei of the brainstem and the anterior horn cells of the spinal cord, though in some patients only ...
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