Neurologic manifestation/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Neurologic manifestation, or pages that link to Neurologic manifestation or to this page or whose text contains "Neurologic manifestation".
Parent topics
- Signs and symptoms [r]: Clinical manifestations that can be either objective when observed by a physician, or subjective when perceived by the patient. [e]
Subtopics
- Agnosia [r]: A perceptual disorder that is the loss of the ability to comprehend the meaning or recognize the importance of various forms of stimulation that cannot be attributed to impairment of a primary sensory modality. [e]
- Akathisia [r]: A feeling of restlessness associated with increased motor activity, as it may occur as a manifestation of nervous system drug toxicity or other conditions. [e]
- Anomia [r]: A language dysfunction characterized by the inability to name people and objects that are correctly perceived. [e]
- Aphasia [r]: A cognitive disorder marked by an impaired ability to comprehend or express language in its written or spoken form. [e]
- Apraxia [r]: A group of cognitive disorders characterized by the inability to perform previously learned skills that cannot be attributed to deficits of motor or sensory function. [e]
- Ataxia [r]: Impairment of the ability to perform smoothly coordinated voluntary movements. [e]
- Decerebrate rigidity [r]: Extensor reflexes are exaggerated leading to rigid extension of the limbs. [e]
- Decorticate rigidity [r]: Flexion of the elbows and wrists with extension of the legs and feet. [e]
- Dysarthria [r]: Disorders of speech articulation caused by imperfect coordination of pharynx, larynx, tongue, or face muscles. [e]
- Prosopagnosia [r]: The inability to recognize a familiar face or to learn to recognize new faces. This visual agnosia is most often associated with lesions involving the junctional regions between the temporal and occipital lobes. [e]
- Straight leg raise [r]: The straight leg raise, also called Lasègue sign or Lasègue test, is a test done during the physical examination to determine whether a patient with low back pain has an underlying herniated disk [e]
- Tremor [r]: Cyclical movement of a body part that can represent either a physiologic process or a manifestation of disease. [e]
- Decorticate rigidity [r]: Flexion of the elbows and wrists with extension of the legs and feet. [e]