What's the difference between bodily and tabes?

Bodily


Definition:

  • (a.) Having a body or material form; physical; corporeal; consisting of matter.
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to the body, in distinction from the mind.
  • (a.) Real; actual; put in execution.
  • (adv.) Corporeally; in bodily form; united with a body or matter; in the body.
  • (adv.) In respect to, or so as to affect, the entire body or mass; entirely; all at once; completely; as, to carry away bodily. "Leapt bodily below."

Example Sentences:

  • (1) When I eventually get hold of a human at Uber, I am told the only insurance cover is up to $1m to cover “bodily injury or property damage to third parties where the claim arises out of UberEats and UberRush operations”.
  • (2) Butler was convicted of grevious bodily harm and child cruelty, and sentenced to prison.
  • (3) Kathon is an anti-microbial agent that is used as a preservative in cosmetics and bodily hygiene products.
  • (4) Antibody studies show that TMA can combine with bodily constituents to form new antigenic determinants (NADs) which are probably the most immunogenic form of the compound.
  • (5) Yet consistent with the emotionality hypothesis, PD patients took as long to color-name positive words as to color-name fear and bodily sensation words.
  • (6) He told the Guardian prosecutors made a factual error in dismissing a charge of actual bodily harm.
  • (7) We conclude that the use of extradural blockade is effective as a means of conserving bodily resources in surgical patients both in the basal state and during total parenteral nutrition.
  • (8) Also, increasing the rotational stiffness of a canine-retraction appliance will result in greater inherent potential for canine root control and a greater probability of achieving bodily movement.
  • (9) Engel's hypothesis of pain-prone patients having a distinct pattern of developmental psychosocial experiences was tested in a controlled design including four groups of 20 patients each: A) psychogenic pain, B) organic pain, C) psychogenic bodily symptoms, and D) organic disease.
  • (10) Subjective ratings for mood and bodily symptoms were adversely affected by clomipramine but little altered by alprazolam.
  • (11) Our new approach emphasizes the use of natural stimulation in subjects free from bodily restraints.
  • (12) If he felt threatened his life was going to be taken away from him or he's going to have bodily harm then he had a right.
  • (13) It is suggested that these changes in respiratory rate, a relatively easily monitored bodily function, may provide the cues used by smokers for inferring the effect that smoking has on them, that is, stimulating versus relaxing.
  • (14) The concept of information overload, the effects of noise on performance and on chronic disease, the psychophysiological effects of driving in traffic and the behavioral and bodily effects of crowding in man and animals are all presented.
  • (15) Thirty years at the glittering coalface of alternative rock has finally provided security for Shields ("I've been OK for money since about 2008"), but has taken its toll spiritually and bodily.
  • (16) These reactions are common and some, such as reduced bodily self-esteem, sexual dysfunction and use of the disease as an alibi, are more common in men.
  • (17) Moreover, patients suffering from pain, with sleeping problems, with impairments of their bodily appearance or of their sex life rated significantly lower on life quality.
  • (18) Since the vast majority of neurologic manifestations involve and cross-effect several bodily systems, not all neurologic diagnoses are or will be easy.
  • (19) Additionally, psychological tests assessing well-being (Bf-S), bodily complaints (B-L), and state and trait anxiety (Stai-S and Stai-T) were administered.
  • (20) The present investigation analyzes the characteristics of traffic accidents involving psychiatric patients and comprises all persons who during the period 1970-74 have been admitted to a psychiatric in-patient institution and who during the period 1972-74 have been involved in a traffic accident causing bodily injury.

Tabes


Definition:

  • (n.) Progressive emaciation of the body, accompained with hectic fever, with no well-marked logical symptoms.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Electrodiagnostic data have not been previously reported in tabes dorsalis.
  • (2) Central motor and sensory conduction was studied by percutaneous electrical stimulation of brain and spinal cord and by somatosensory evoked potential techniques respectively, in patients with adrenoleukomyeloneuropathy, cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis, human T-cell lymphotropic virus-1-associated myelopathy and tabes dorsalis.
  • (3) Tabes dorsalis and diabetic osteoarthropathy must be differentiated from alcohol-induced syndrome.
  • (4) The absence of significant correlations between academic skills and self-esteem is underscored by the negative relationship between the TABE scores and the Dean alienation measures.
  • (5) The paper is concerned with roentgenoanatomical analysis of the osteoarticular system in 607 patients with syringomyelia (21), tabes dorsalis (42), diabetes mellitus (324), psoriasis (187) and traumatic injuries of the spine and spinal marrow (33).
  • (6) Unlike the previously reported finding of areflexia in tabes dorsalis, all 3 had hypocompliant detrusor hyper-reflexia with detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia and post-micturition residual urine.
  • (7) For the first time in the English literature, the uro-dynamic findings of a patient with tabes dorsalis are presented.
  • (8) Are described the three main diseases which provoke a neurogenic arthropathy, that is the tabes, the hydrosyringomyelia, the diabetic neuritis.
  • (9) Meningovascular and vascular syphilis were relatively more common than in the prepenicillin era; tabes dorsalis and general paresis were unchanged in relative frequency.
  • (10) A case of postural hypotension in a patient with tabes dorsalis is reported.
  • (11) Other causes of symptomless pneumoperitoneum include pneumatosis intestinalis, perforation in tabes dorsalis or coma, stercoral ulceration, physiological pneumoperitoneum in women due to exercise in the knee-elbow position, and vaginal douches with a bulb syringe or effervescent fluid.
  • (12) A case is presented of tabes dorsalis with spinal gumma producing collapse of the L5 vertebra followed by paraplegia.
  • (13) This situates the pathological process in the central axon of the sensory ganglion, as in tabes or clioquinol poisoning.
  • (14) Laboratory investigations revealed a major osteoporosis probably related to the neurochirurgical complications of the tabes dorsalis.
  • (15) The picture is similar to that of syringomyelia and tabes.
  • (16) Lancinating pain, as described in tabes dorsalis, was noted in four patients with chronic sciatica after several months of laminectomy.
  • (17) Originally associated with tabes dorsalis, the sign has now been found in a number of conditions with lesions in the area of the nucleus of Edinger-Westphal.
  • (18) Charcot joints of the spine are well-documented clinical entities most commonly associated with tabes dorsalis.
  • (19) Finally, various associations, without significance such as multiple sclerosis, diffuse muscular lesions and the classic spondylotic pseudo-tabes, should be rejected.
  • (20) Nine patients with tabes dorsalis and one patient with diabetic autonomic neuropathy were subjected to hypoxia to test the integrity of their carotid chemoreceptors.

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