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Upon his commitment, he was described as a "hopeless" case of locomotor ataxia.
He died at his home on the night of May 19, 1907, following an attack of locomotor ataxia.
Asking the doctor at lunch whether he had read Hagenheimer's new book on locomotor ataxia.
Locomotor ataxia is the inability to precisely control one's own bodily movements.
Bishop died in Philadelphia on May 15, 1905, suffering from locomotor ataxia.
Walker was lecturing on locomotor ataxia to a wardful of youngsters.
Wheeler died at the age of 42, of syphilitic locomotor ataxia.
He resigned his post as surgeon in 1892 due to his own locomotor ataxia condition.
The disease caused him considerable pain and partial paralysis from locomotor ataxia in the years prior to his death.
Jonas declares he once spoke of locomotor ataxia in hearing and she said she knew too well what that was.
Early signs of an overdose or excessive use are muscular tremors, chorea, and locomotor ataxia.
Locomotor ataxia
De Gourmont's health continued to decline and he began to suffer from locomotor ataxia and be increasingly unable to walk.
The use of drugs to cure syphilis, he says, not only does not cure, but also causes locomotor ataxia.
Anaesthesia of the Trunk in Locomotor Ataxia (1897)
Pilling died of locomotor ataxia, now called Tabes dorsalis, a disease associated with untreated syphilis, in 1895.
"Periodic violent emesis without an apparent cause can be one indication of locomotor ataxia, but you've no other symptoms of it.
The waters, which are both hot and cold, are used in cases of rheumatism, sciatica, locomotor ataxia and nervous maladies.
He died in Hove, England of what was called tabes dorsalis, also known as locomotor ataxia, on April 3, 1918.
However, Brush's health deteriorated quickly after becoming majority owner in 1902, as he suffered from locomotor ataxia, a nervous system affliction, as well as rheumatism.
tabetic locomotor ataxia
Apoplectiform, Epileptiform, and Hemiparetic Attacks in Locomotor Ataxia (1888)
Sickly since his brush with death in the Civil War, Altgeld had suffered from locomotor ataxia while governor, impairing his ability to walk.
Long suffering from locomotor ataxia, Leland Stanford died of heart failure at home in Palo Alto, California, on June 21, 1893.
"It was a singular coincidence," she continued, "that at the instant that you called I was reading your paper on 'Locomotor Ataxia,' in the Lancet."