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Results 1 - 6 of 6 for Left hemiplegia
  1. ... Walker malformation may experience muscle stiffness and partial paralysis of ... tissue connecting the left and right halves of the brain (agenesis of ...
  2. ... progressive muscle stiffness (spasticity) and the development of paralysis of ... tissue that connects the left and right halves of the brain (the corpus ...
  3. ... certain cranial nerves can cause swallowing problems, facial paralysis, a sense of smell that is diminished (hyposmia) ... and differences in appearance between the right and left sides of the face (facial asymmetry). Affected individuals ...
  4. ... progressive muscle stiffness (spasticity) and the development of paralysis of the lower limbs (paraplegia). Hereditary spastic paraplegias ... type of spastic paraplegia, the tissue connecting the left and right halves of the brain (corpus callosum) ...
  5. ... difficulties. They have muscle stiffness that results in paralysis of the arms and legs (spastic quadriplegia) and ... acids. As a result, sulfites and other compounds left over from the partial breakdown process abnormally accumulate ...
  6. ... progressive muscle stiffness (spasticity) and the development of paralysis of the lower limbs (paraplegia). Spastic paraplegia type ... almost all affected individuals, the tissue connecting the left and right halves of the brain (corpus callosum) ...