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  • residual urine
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  • residual volume
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  • sensory epilepsy
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  • sleep-related epilepsy
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  • temporal lobe epilepsy
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  • tardy epilepsy
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  • residual nitrogen
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  • residual nucleus
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  • residual paralysis
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  • residual period
    ÀÜ·ù±â°£
  • residual proteinuria
    ÀÜÀç´Ü¹é´¢
  • residual quotient
    ÀÜ·ùÁö¼ö, ÀܱâÀ²
  • residual
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  • residual radiation
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  • residual radioactivity
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  • residual ray
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  • residual resistance
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  • residual schizophrenia
    ÀÜ·ùÁ¤½ÅºÐ¿­º´
  • residual shrinkage
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  • residual spray
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  • residual strain
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  • schizophrenia of residual type
    ÀÜ·ùÇü Á¤½ÅºÐ¿­º´(íÑë§úþïñãêÝÂæññø).
  • abdominal epilepsy
  • abortive epilepsy
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  • affect epilepsy
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  • akinetic epilepsy
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  • alcoholic epilepsy
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  • arithmetical epilepsy
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  • autonomic epilepsy
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  • benign partial epilepsy of childhood
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  • centrencephalic epilepsy
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  • childhood absence epilepsy
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  • complex myoclonic epilepsy
  • cortical epilepsy
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  • cryptogenic epilepsy
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  • diencephalic autonomic epilepsy
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RU radioulnar; rat unit; reading unit; residual urine; resin uptake; resistance unit; retrograde urogra...
RUV residual urine volume
RV random variable; rat virus; Rauscher virus; rectovaginal; reinforcement value; renal vein; residual ...
RV/TLC residual volume/total lung capacity
SRS schizophrenic residual state; sex reassignment surgery; Silver-Russell syndrome; simple repeat seque...
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IGE Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy
ILAE International League Against Epilepsy
JME Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy
JAE Juvenile absence epilepsy
MTLE Medial temporal lobe epilepsy
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nocturnal epilepsy An epilepsy syndrome characterised by nocturnal seizures only.
(05 Mar 2000)
supplementary motor area epilepsy A localization-related epilepsy syndrome in which seizures originate from the supplementary motor area of the mesial frontal lobe. Typical seizure semiology includes sudden bilateral tonic movements, vocalization, and preservation of consciousness. Attacks are often nocturnal.
(05 Mar 2000)
symptomatic epilepsy A group of epilepsy syndromes of diverse aetiologies with diffuse or multifocal cerebral involvement. Patients typically have a variety of generalised seizure types, including tonic, atonic, myoclonic, atypical absence, and generalised tonic-clonic seizures. Partial seizures may also occur. One classic syndrome is the Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.
Synonym: symptomatic epilepsy.
(05 Mar 2000)
diencephalic epilepsy Episodes of autonomic dysfunction presumably due to diencephalic irritation.
Synonym: diencephalic epilepsy, vasomotor epilepsy, vasovagal epilepsy.
(05 Mar 2000)
idiopathic epilepsy An epilepsy without evident cause; term often used to describe the genetic epilepsies.
Synonym: generalised tonic-clonic seizure.
(05 Mar 2000)
intractable epilepsy Epilepsy not adequately controlled by medication.
Synonym: pharmacoresistent epilepsy.
(05 Mar 2000)
occipital lobe epilepsy A localization-related epilepsy where seizures originate from the occipital lobe. Symptoms commonly include visual abnormalities during seizures.
(05 Mar 2000)
temporal lobe epilepsy Seizures with elaborate and multiple sensory, motor, and/or psychic components. A common feature is the clouding of consciousness and amnesia for the event. Some clinical manifestations may include more complex behaviours like burst of anger, emotional outbursts, fear or automatisms. The EEG often reveals spike discharges in the temporal lobe during sleep.
(27 Sep 1997)
early posttraumatic epilepsy Seizures beginning within one week after severe head injury.
(05 Mar 2000)
eating epilepsy Epileptic, often generalised, seizures provoked by eating; a type of reflex epilepsy.
(05 Mar 2000)
tonic epilepsy An attack in which the body is rigid.
(05 Mar 2000)
tornado epilepsy A type of focal epilepsy or partial seizure with an aura of severe vertigo and a feeling of being drawn up into space.
(05 Mar 2000)
epilepsy <disease, neurology> The paroxysmal transient disturbances of brain function that may be manifested as episodic impairment or loss of consciousness, abnormal motor phenomena, psychic or sensory disturbances or perturbation of the autonomic nervous system.
Symptoms are due to paroxysmal disturbance of the electrical activity of the brain. On the basis of origin, epilepsy is idiopathic (cryptogenic, essential, genetic) or symptomatic (acquired, organic). On the basis of clinical and electroencephalographic phenomenon, four subdivisions are recognised:
1. Grand mal epilepsy (major epilepsy, haut mal epilepsy) subgroups: generalised, focal (localised), jacksonian (rolandic)
2. Petit mal epilepsy
3. Psychomotor epilepsy (temporal lobe epilepsy, psychic, psychic equivalent or variant) subgroups: psychomotor proper (tonic with adversive or torsion movements or masticatory phenomena), automatic (with amnesia) and sensory (hallucinations or dream states or d‚j. Vu)
4. Autonomic epilepsy (diencephalic), with flushing, pallor, tachycardia, hypertension, perspiration or other visceral symptoms.
Synonym: epilepsia.
Origin: Gr. Epilepsia = seizure
(14 May 1997)
epilepsy, absence Epileptic seizures that consist of a sudden cessation of ongoing conscious activity without convulsive muscular activity or loss of postural control. These seizures may be so brief as to be inapparent, lasting seconds and occasionally several minutes. Absence seizures usually begin in otherwise neurologically normal children and rarely appear for the first time in adults. The seizures may occur hundreds of times per day and go on for weeks or months before it is recognised that a child is having seizures.
(12 Dec 1998)
epilepsy, complex partial Epileptic seizures that are episodic changes in behaviour in which an individual loses conscious contact with the environment. The onset of such seizures involves any of a variety of auras: deja-vu, an unusual smell, a sudden intense emotional feeling, a sensory illusion such as micropsia (objects growing smaller) or macropsia (objects growing larger), or other sensory hallucination. There may be a cessation of activity with some minor motor activity such as lip smacking, walking aimlessly, or other automatisms. The seizures may also be accompanied by the unconscious performance of highly skilled activities such as driving a car. When the seizure ends, the individual is amnesic for events that took place during the seizure and may take minutes or hours to recover fully to consciousness.
(12 Dec 1998)
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