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What Is The Name Of This Disease

What is the name of the disease in which in the morning there is pain in the waist?

Hi its not a disease but its a lifestyle injury…low back ache.

What is the name of that disease where you can't control what you say? Where your thoughts blurt out...?

Not Turrets ... That just makes you curse...etc. The long explanation is that you are unable to distinguish your conscious thought from your unconscious so you inadvertently say your thoughts.

What is the name of the condition/disease where a guy is SO EXCESSIVELY DELICIOUS yet is dripping in humbleness?

Dripping in humbleness? Sounds sticky.

Be careful of making assumptions based on pictures. I know you've heard the cliche "You can't tell a book by its cover".

What is the name of the disease in which a person forgets the name of others or anything?

When we find ourselves in the middle of falsehood, constant abuse, lying, gaslighting and all forms of manipulation, etc your brain overworks to maintain a balanced true view of what is happening. You are living outside of your body instead of being focussed with what is happening with you. That causes havoc. Your concentration goes haywire. You are floating in nowhere land. You become mentally tired.The reasons above could bé your problem.There are specific diseases that cause a lot of damage to your memory as well.

What is the name of the disease that Charlotte had in Sex in the City?

I remember the episode it was, it was Real Me. The second episode of the 4th season. I remember her saying the her vargina was depressed. I want to know if it is real thing, cuz I think I may have the same symptoms.

What is the name of the disease characterized by:?

From looking at pictures of the caretaker in Scary Movie 2, it looks like he is afflicted by a deformity such as Claw hand rather than a disease characterized underdeveloped arms.

I found that many occurrences of shortened limbs are a result from the skeletal dysplasia associated with dwarfism. In relation to the upper limbs affected by short-limb dwarfism, rhizomelic pertains to proximal (humerus) shortening, mesomelic refers to middle (ulna/radius) shortening, and micromelic describes the shortening of the entire limb.

Many similar types of abnormalities occur from recognized syndromes. Holt-Oram syndrome is a genetic disorder that causes upper limb defects, and VATER syndrome is an association of various congenital defects that include radial dysplasia.

Some preaxial deficiencies affect the development of the upper limbs, and are classified by the differences in their effects. Of these, type 1 results in a shortened radius, and type 2 results in a hypoplastic radius.

Humeroradial synostosis, or the union of the humerus and radius by osseous tissue, could also cause shortening of the arms.

From my research I saw that all occurrences of underdeveloped arms resulted were caused by a more general condition that resulted in other ailments as well. Although I wasn't able to determine a singular cause of what you described, but hopefully some of this information will prove to be useful in helping you find what you are looking for. Good luck!

I need a complicated name of a disease?

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis is a form of motor neurone disease (ALS, sometimes called Maladie de Charcot) is a progressive,[1] fatal, neurodegenerative disease caused by the degeneration of motor neurons, the nerve cells in the central nervous system that control voluntary muscle movement. In the United States and Canada, the condition is often referred to as Lou Gehrig's Disease, after the New York Yankees baseball star who was diagnosed with the disease in 1939 and died from it in 1941, at age thirty-seven; today, renowned physicist Stephen Hawking is likely the best-known living ALS patient. The disorder causes muscle weakness and atrophy throughout the body as both the upper and lower motor neurons degenerate, ceasing to send messages to muscles. Unable to function, the muscles gradually weaken, develop fasciculations (twitches) because of denervation, and eventually atrophy because of that denervation. The patient may ultimately lose the ability to initiate and control all voluntary movement; bladder and bowel sphincters and the muscles responsible for eye movement are usually (but not always) spared.

Cognitive function is generally spared except in certain situations such as when ALS is associated with frontotemporal dementia.[2] However, there are reports of more subtle cognitive changes of the frontotemporal type in many patients when detailed neuropsychological testing is employed. Sensory nerves and the autonomic nervous system, which controls functions like sweating, generally remain functional.

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