Muscle weakness

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    Bell's Palsy

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    BELLS PALSY Overview Bell's palsy is a sudden weakness and paralysis of the muscles in the face. This makes half of your facial muscles appear to tire. On that side, you may have trouble smiling or closing your eye. It is also known as facial palsy, there is no specific age of occurring. The exact cause is usually unknown, but it is assumed to be the cause of swelling, compressed and inflammation of the nerve that control of facial muscles. It might be a reaction that occurs after bacterial or…

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    This single critical condition has claimed the lives of 287,000 people each year everywhere from the age of an infant to the age of your current peers to the age of the elderly (Heart Failure Statistics, 2016) . There are about 5.1 million people in the United States alone that suffer from this serious, possibly fatal, condition and die within five years of diagnosis (Heart Failure Fact Sheet, 2015). Not to mention, 1.4 million people under the age of 60 years old have this condition, and as a…

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    sub-acromial/suprahumeral area are compacted together. Compression can initiate painful friction, stress and mechanical wear on the shoulder. Classic signs and symptoms include pain when flexing or abducting the shoulder above 80 degrees and weakness in the shoulder muscles, which are often detected when the patient is given the Hawkins-Kennedy and Neer impingement tests. This impingement disorder mostly stems from athletes and individuals whose jobs require constant overhead lifting, but can…

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    Physical Therapy Benefits

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    athlete’s body physically. The goal of physical therapy is to get an athlete back to the point where he or she can perform normal tasks without difficulty, pain, or risk. The therapist uses exercises and rehabilitation to strengthen an athletes muscles, improve flexibility, and add stability to avoid future injuries. All of these are parts of physical therapy that help benefit the athlete by helping them gain strength and increases their ability to prevent injury. Many therapists in clinics…

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    competitive. The use of performance-enhancing drugs was first made illegal on June 1, 1965 and shortly to follow were the dismissal of several riders from races that year. Anabolic steroids were first used by the Soviet Union in the 1970s to encourage muscle growth in strength sports, but they had also found use among endurance athletes such as cyclists to accelerate recovery. After these major turning points in the history of PED use in cycling, numerous deaths and positives tests would…

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    deterioration of motor neurons that are located in the brain, brain stem, and spinal chord. This disenables signals from the brain to communicate with the muscles, disabling the extremities to function, or paralyzing them [1]. Symptoms include but are not limited to muscle tightness and weakness, slurred speech, cramps, difficulty eating, and an extreme weakness to a particular limb [Website]. The twenty-first chromosome is known to be linked to Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis as well as the…

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    covering. These are sometimes called a slipped disk or a ruptured disk. A herniated disk occurs with the inside of the disk pushes out through a tear into the hard part of the disk. It can affect the nervous around it. Which causes the pain, numbness or weakness in an arm or leg. In some cases some people do not have symptoms from a herniated disk. They also most likely do not need surgery to fix the problem. What causes a hereditary disk is sometimes just aging. When you age your spinal disk…

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    fraying of some bones or even seizures. The younger the infant is the more likely they will suffer symptoms such as seizures. The older the infant is more likely they may endure failure to thrive (low body weight) or a malformed skeleton due to the weakness of the bones. These would make it difficult to function normally. Different tests can be utilized to diagnose vitamin D-deficiency (nutritional) rickets. Some laboratory tests measure the amount of calcidiol, which would decrease in a case of…

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    Joint pains and inflammation causes Knee is that largest joint in the body. The knee is located at the juncture of three bones, the femur, the tibia and the patella. The femur (the upper leg bone) and the tibia (the shinbone) are connected by the anterior and posterior cruciate ligaments. The joint is cushioned by the meniscus, a tough cartilage material, during movement. The patella (or kneecap) is a small bone, encased in tendons, that glides up and down in the groove on the top of the femur…

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    muscular dystrophy. Muscular dystrophy is characterized by progressive muscle degeneration (Muscular Dystrophy Association). Muscle weakness appears in early childhood and progressively worsens; children with DMD are generally wheel-chair dependent by adolescence. Along with the DMD affecting the skeletal system, the cardiac muscles are also affected and result in cardiomyopathy. Cardiomyopathy is a heart disease where weak cardiac muscle prevents the heart from pumping blood efficiently.…

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