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Page "Lafora disease" ¶ 2
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Symptoms and disease
Symptoms and progression of the disease can vary.
Symptoms of dementia can be classified as either reversible or irreversible, depending upon the etiology of the disease.
Symptoms and signs may mimic those of almost any form of heart disease.
Symptoms of the disease can vary between individuals and even among affected members of the same family, but usually progress predictably.
Symptoms of Huntington's disease commonly become noticeable between the ages of 35 and 44 years, but they can begin at any age from infancy to old age.
Graves ' disease Symptoms
Symptoms of Canavan disease, which appear in early infancy and progress rapidly, may include mental retardation, loss of previously acquired motor skills, feeding difficulties, abnormal muscle tone ( i. e., floppiness or stiffness ), poor head control, and megalocephaly ( abnormally enlarged head ).
* Symptoms of rust disease are correlated to relatively high moisture.
Symptoms of stable ischaemic heart disease include angina ( characteristic chest pain on exertion ) and decreased exercise tolerance.
Symptoms may include fever and headache, but the distinguishing characteristic of this disease is attacks of severe pain in the lower chest, often on one side.
Symptoms include poor growth, loss of muscle coordination, muscle weakness, visual problems, hearing problems, learning disabilities, heart disease, liver disease, kidney disease, gastrointestinal disorders, respiratory disorders, neurological problems, autonomic dysfunction, and dementia.
Symptoms include restlessness, loss of coloration, lumps on the body as cysts develop, difficulty swimming, curved spines as the disease progresses, and secondary infections, such as fin rot and bloating.
Symptoms may begin suddenly with the onset of the disease and steadily become more prevalent with each progressive small stroke.
Symptoms of this infection vary greatly, but the disease primarily affects the lungs.
Symptoms are typically first experienced in early childhood and can be very difficult to understand ; the rarity of Fabry disease to many clinicians sometimes leads to misdiagnoses.
Symptoms of opisthorchiasis caused by Opisthorchis viverrini and by Opisthorchis felineus are indistinguishable from clonorchiasis caused by Clonorchis sinensis, so the disease by these three parasites should be referred as clonorchiasis.
* Mikulicz's syndrome: Symptoms characteristic of Mikulicz's disease when occurring as a complication of another disease, such as leukemia or sarcoidosis.
Symptoms generally involve less neurological involvement but the disease still causes gout and kidney stones.
Symptoms of the disease continue when he is 30 years old.
Symptoms of the disease include dying branches and stems.
Symptoms are also similar to Lou Gehrig's disease and multiple sclerosis.

Symptoms and begin
Symptoms of CMT usually begin in late childhood or early adulthood.
Symptoms should begin to improve within 5 minutes, though full recovery may take 10 – 20 minutes.
Symptoms of toxicity begin to appear about 6 hours following ingestion.
Symptoms of late-onset Tay – Sachs-which typically begin to be seen in adolescence or early adulthood – include speech and swallowing difficulties, unsteadiness of gait, spasticity, cognitive decline, and psychiatric illness, particularly a schizophrenia-like psychosis.
Symptoms of arsenic poisoning begin with headaches, confusion, severe diarrhea, and drowsiness.
Symptoms can take as long as a week to show up, but most often begin two to four days after ingestion.
Symptoms may begin within 16 hours of exposure and typically peak two to four days after onset.
Symptoms usually begin in early adulthood ; diagnosis prior to age 13 is rare.
Symptoms commonly begin to appear once the stones reach a certain size (> 8 mm ).
Symptoms of dysmenorrhea often begin immediately following ovulation and can last until the end of menstruation.
Symptoms typically begin one to two weeks after infection and may wane and reappear cyclically.
Symptoms may begin early in life or in adulthood and include enlarged liver and grossly enlarged spleen ( together hepatosplenomegaly ); the spleen can rupture and cause additional complications.
Symptoms begin in the late luteal phase of the menstrual cycle ( after ovulation ) and end shortly after menstruation begins.
Symptoms begin some six days after exposure ( between 4 and 28 days, with the average being 16 to 17 days ) and last about a week.
Symptoms begin shortly after ingestion.
Symptoms of colic begin to appear within the first day, and all LWS-afflicted foals die within the first few days of life.
Symptoms usually appear in men at about ages 8 – 25, but may sometimes begin later.
Symptoms most often first appear in early childhood ( the toddler stage ) when children begin to walk.
Symptoms may begin at any age, and may develop quickly or slowly.
Symptoms usually begin two to three days after exposure, and can progress to lower respiratory infections such pneumonia.
Symptoms begin between the ages of 3 and 6 months with irritability, fevers, limb stiffness, seizures, feeding difficulties, vomiting, and slowing of mental and motor development.
Symptoms typically begin sometime between the ages of 5 to 15 years, but in Late Onset FA may occur in the 20s or 30s.

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