Symptoms
in sentence
626 examples of Symptoms in a sentence
A lot of people don't know that Alzheimer's actually has physical symptoms, as well as cognitive
symptoms.
The concussion didn't heal properly, and after 30 days, I was left with
symptoms
like nonstop headaches, nausea, vertigo, memory loss, mental fog.
So I had to avoid everything that triggered my
symptoms.
Now this was anything that could trigger my
symptoms
and therefore slow down the healing process, things like bright lights and crowded spaces.
Now it wasn't a miracle cure for the headaches or the cognitive
symptoms.
But even when I still had the symptoms, even while I was still in pain, I stopped suffering.
However, there are 6.3 million people worldwide who have the disease, and they have to live with incurable weakness, tremor, rigidity and the other
symptoms
that go along with the disease, so what we need are objective tools to detect the disease before it's too late.
We see all the same
symptoms.
The speech actually becomes quieter and more breathy after a while, and that's one of the example
symptoms
of it.
It really is extraordinary, because you can recapitulate many, many diseases in a dish, you can see what begins to go wrong in the cellular conversation well before you would ever see
symptoms
appear in a patient.
And in the process, none of these things really are productive because you are treating the symptoms, not the causes of Africa's fundamental problems.
He generated neurons from these induced pluripotent stem cells from patients who have Lou Gehrig's Disease, and he differentiated them into neurons, and what's amazing is that these neurons also show
symptoms
of the disease.
Well, you could develop flu-like
symptoms.
So the next time you get dengue fever, if it's a different strain, you're more susceptible, you're likely to get worse symptoms, and you're more likely to get the more severe forms, hemorrhagic fever or shock syndrome.
One of these eases the
symptoms
of multiple sclerosis; the other one cures a type of blood cancer that we call T-cell lymphoma.
In what I call the flushed-and-plumbed world that most of us in this room are lucky to live in, the most common
symptoms
associated with those diseases, diarrhea, is now a bit of a joke.
And it's important, if you try to model this, you can think about normal development as a loss of cortical mass, loss of cortical gray matter, and what's happening in schizophrenia is that you overshoot that mark, and at some point, when you overshoot, you cross a threshold, and it's that threshold where we say, this is a person who has this disease, because they have the behavioral
symptoms
of hallucinations and delusions.
The tools that we have now allow us to detect these brain changes much earlier, long before the
symptoms
emerge.
Now the first example I'm going to show you is a patient with Parkinson's disease, and this lady has Parkinson's disease, and she has these electrodes in her brain, and I'm going to show you what she's like when the electrodes are turned off and she has her Parkinson's symptoms, and then we're going to turn it on.
We are now learning to understand what are the circuits, what are the areas of the brain that are responsible for the clinical signs and the
symptoms
of those diseases.
The implications of this, of course, is that we may be able to modify the
symptoms
of the disease, but I haven't told you but there's also some evidence that we might be able to help the repair of damaged areas of the brain using electricity, and this is something for the future, to see if, indeed, we not only change the activity but also some of the reparative functions of the brain can be harvested.
And over-the-counter sleeping pills can be highly addictive, leading to withdrawal that worsens
symptoms.
Stabilize sleep in those individuals who are vulnerable, we can certainly make them healthier, but also alleviate some of the appalling
symptoms
of mental illness.
And antipsychotic drugs relieve
symptoms
of schizophrenia by blocking the same serotonin receptors LSD and psilocybin bind to.
Now many of you will recognize her
symptoms.
Now we know that women are more likely to experience the
symptoms
of fatigue, sleep disturbance, pain and anxiety compared with men.
And these
symptoms
are often overlooked as
symptoms
of depression.
When she had recurring
symptoms
she went back to her doctor.
Linda's
symptoms
continued.
But for millions of us, those experiences linger, causing
symptoms
like flashbacks, nightmares, and negative thoughts that interfere with everyday life.
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