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absence e. epilepsy characterized by absence seizures, usually having its onset in childhood or adolescence; called also petit mal, petit mal e., absence, and minor e.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
absence s. the seizure seen in absence epilepsy, consisting of a sudden momentary break in consciousness of thought or activity, often accompanied by automatisms or clonic movements, especially of the eyelids. On the electroencephalogram it is characterized by a specific symmetrical spike and wave type occurring at three cycles per second. Called also absence.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
absence seizure A generalized seizure, usually lasting less than 20 seconds, characterized by a blank stare & sometimes blinking, eye rolling or chewing movements. Can occur many times a day. Often mistaken for daydreaming. Usually begins in childhood. Outgrown by approximately 75% of children. Formerly called petit mal.
Ãâó: www.epilepsysandiego.org/common_terms.htm
absence is a generalized seizure where a person's consciousness is interrupted. This is sometimes confused with 'day dreaming'
Ãâó: www.epilepsysupport.org.uk/Html/Information/Glossa...
absence An interest in what is not found in a literary work against what is. Since publication of Pierre Macherey? A Theory of Literary Production in 1978, ?uch absences have been accorded more overt theoretical attention. According to Macherey the book is not self-sufficient but is necessarily accompanied by a certain absence without which it would not exist, and he draws our attention to the fact that Freud relegated the absence of certain words to the unconscious?(Hawthorn).
Ãâó: english.montclair.edu/isaacs/605LitResearch/literm...
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