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1 into adulthood, we use the term 'alternating hemiplegia'.
2 ges were seen in six people with alternating hemiplegia.
3 explained premature mortality of alternating hemiplegia.
4 ctional correlates over and above effects of hemiplegia.
5 rk in the plegic lower limbs of persons with hemiplegia.
6 entia (35 [28.7%] vs 34 [11.4%]; p <0.0001), hemiplegia (14 [11.5%] vs 12 [4.0%]; p=0.004), malignanc
8 I was used to study 11 patients with chronic hemiplegia after unilateral stroke that spared regions o
10 Recent theories propose that anosognosia for hemiplegia (AHP) results from specific impairments in mo
11 terally during pedalling for 15 persons with hemiplegia and 12 neurologically intact age-matched cont
13 tis was stronger for diplegia (compared with hemiplegia and quadriplegia) and for cerebral palsy with
16 rticoids (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 31.50), hemiplegia (aOR, 28.48), neuralgia (aOR, 4.81), optic at
18 The delusional features of anosognosia for hemiplegia can be explained as a failure of this re-repr
19 le brains, which could explain the prolonged hemiplegia, coma, and seizure phenotype in this variant
20 ee clinical forms of spastic cerebral palsy (hemiplegia, diplegia, and quadriplegia) and for cerebral
22 dominant disorder characterized by transient hemiplegia during the aura phase of a migraine attack.
23 litis/trauma, and one each of hemiconvulsion-hemiplegia epilepsy and perinatal ischaemic insult) and
24 h a 5-day history of progressive right-sided hemiplegia, expressive aphasia, mild bulbar palsy, and r
29 G recordings of 52 patients with alternating hemiplegia from nine countries: all had whole-exome, who
30 for hemiplegia, i.e. apparent unawareness of hemiplegia, have been clinically observed to show 'tacit
31 gram abnormalities are common in alternating hemiplegia, have characteristics reflecting those of inh
33 r awareness can occur called anosognosia for hemiplegia, i.e. the denial of motor deficits contralate
39 ts in significant nerve dysfunction, such as hemiplegia, mood disorders, cognitive and memory impairm
44 ases diagnosed with both COS and alternating hemiplegia of childhood (AHC), and for whom two distinct
45 miplegic migraine type 2 (FHM2), alternating hemiplegia of childhood (AHC), and rapid-onset dystonia
46 al hemiplegic migraine (ATP1A2), alternating hemiplegia of childhood (ATP1A2/A3), rapid-onset dystoni
48 d-onset dystonia parkinsonism or alternating hemiplegia of childhood causes a dramatic reduction of N
50 ac investigation is warranted in alternating hemiplegia of childhood, as cardiac arrhythmic morbidity
51 lial Hemiplegic Migraine type 2, Alternating Hemiplegia of Childhood, Rapid-onset Dystonia Parkinsoni
52 -associated syndromes, including alternating hemiplegia of childhood, rapid-onset dystonia-parkinsoni
59 ks can be accompanied by seizures, coma, and hemiplegia; patients expressing the R192Q mutation exhib
60 motor performance observed when persons with hemiplegia pedal in a horizontal position is exacerbated
62 that, despite stroke producing contralateral hemiplegia, surviving regions of motor cortex actively p
63 antly more common in people with alternating hemiplegia than in an age-matched disease control group
66 tion following extensive lesions (pure motor hemiplegia) to incomplete basilar pontine syndrome and r
67 young man with migraine with aura including hemiplegia, we identified a novel SLC1A3 mutation that p
70 CSF rhinorrhea occurred in one patient, and hemiplegia with homonymous hemianopsia developed as a co