| Flatau's law | A law concerning the excentric position of the long spinal tracts; the greater the distance the nerve fibres run lengthwise in the cord, the more they tend to be situated toward its periphery. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| Flatau, Edward | <person> Polish neurologist, 1869-1932. See: Flatau-Schilder disease, Flatau's law. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Flatau-Schilder disease | Term used to describe at least two separate disorders described by Schilder: 1) Diffuse sclerosis or encephalitis periaxialis diffusa; a nonfamilial disorder affecting primarily children and young adults and characterised by progressive dementia, visual disturbances, deafness, pseudobulbar palsy, and hemiplegia or quadriplegia. Most patients die within a few years of onset; pathologically, there is a large, asymmetrical area of myelin destruction, sometimes involving an entire cerebral hemisphere, and typically with extension across the corpus callosum. 2) The leukodystrophies. Synonym: encephalitis periaxialis diffusa, Flatau-Schilder disease. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Flatau-Schilder disease |
(Fla
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| Flatau's l. |
the greater the length of the fibers of the spinal cord, the closer are they situated to the periphery.
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| Flatau's law |
see under law.
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| Flatau-Schilder d. |
Schilder's d.
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