Results 211 to 220 of about 1,511,765 (248)
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Movement

Paediatric Respiratory Reviews, 2017
Primary ciliary dyskinesia is an inherited disease characterized by impaired ciliary function leading to diverse clinical manifestations, including chronic sinopulmonary disease, persistent middle ear effusions, laterality defects, and infertility. Our understanding of the complex genetics and functional phenotypes of primary ciliary dyskinesia has ...
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Eye movements

Current Opinion in Neurology, 1995
Several areas with different saccade-related functions in the frontal cortex are outlined in this review: the frontal eye field, the supplementary eye field, the supplementary motor area, and the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Other recent findings that are discussed are that cerebellar midline lesions, including the oculomotor vermis (lobulus VI and ...
U, Büttner, L, Fuhry
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Peripheral Movement, Induced Movement, and Aftereffects from Induced Movement

Perception, 1981
Substantial rotatory induced movement and aftereffects associated with induced movement were observed in a large static patterned disc bounded at its periphery by a rotating patterned annulus. The area of the annulus was less than one tenth that of the disc, so its peripheral location seemed to be important in eliciting these phenomena.
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TARSAL MOVEMENTS

The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. British volume, 1951
1) Supination and pronation are the only material tarsal movements; other terms describe their hypothetical components only. 2) The subtalar and talo-navicular joints form a single joint functionally, which may be called the peritalar joint. 3) Peritalar movement comprises a wide range of supination and pronation of the foot about an axis which ...
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Movement Disorders

Neurologic Clinics, 1993
This article focuses on the current knowledge about movement disorders associated with alcohol and drug abuse. Chronic alcohol use can produce a wide spectrum of movement disorders including tremor, withdrawal parkinsonism and dyskinesias, cerebellar ataxia, and asterixis.
F, Cardoso, J, Jankovic
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Movement or Movements?

1997
Protagonists active in the movement argue that it was because of infant welfare that infant mortality went down. Historians of infant welfare generally adopt this position. In the 75-year history of baby health services in New South Wales, Karen O’Connor asserts that the infant welfare movement ‘played a major role in reducing the enormously high ...
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Chloroplast Movement

Annual Review of Plant Biology, 2003
The study of chloroplast movement made a quantum leap at the beginning of the twenty-first century. Research based on reverse-genetic approaches using targeted mutants has brought new concepts to this field. One of the most exciting findings has been the discovery of photoreceptors for both accumulation and avoidance responses in Arabidopsis and in ...
Masamitsu, Wada   +2 more
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Movement disorders

Medical Clinics of North America, 2003
Movement disorders are commonly encountered in clinical practice. The diagnosis of movement disorders relies on a focused history and neurologic examination. Diagnostic steps include (1) identification of the phenomenology of the movements (eg, tremor); (2) characterization of appropriate clinical syndromes; and (3) differential diagnosis of specific ...
Maria Graciela, Cersosimo   +1 more
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