Your question should be WHO is Lou Gehrig. He was a famous American baseball player. He was forced to stop playing ball due to an illness, MND.Motor neurone disease (MND) is a neurodegenerative disease that causes rapidly progressive muscle weakness. Specifically, the disease affects nerve cells (motor neurons) that control the muscles that enable you to move, speak, breathe and swallow.MND is also known as Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) or Lou Gehrig’s disease.
Yes you should capitalize the name of cities. You would capitalize it because it is a proper noun.
In the year 1824 a scientist named Charles Bell published a paper discussing this previously unknown disease called Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. In 1939, baseball player Lou Gehrig contracted this disease. Since he was so well known at the time, the disease was nicknamed the Lou Gehrig Disease.
Yes because, That is a street and where your house or apartment can be
Lateral
Yes steven hawkin is unfortunately paralised but he is still able to type on machine that speks for him. Because he is in a wheel chair he should be perfect to feature on the show robot wars, he would completely smash all the other robots with his lazer beam eyes and his sonic penis
Weakness may be all over the body or in only one area, side of the body, limb, or muscle. Weakness is more noticeable when it is in one area. Weakness on the left or right side may occur: After a stroke After injury to a nerve During a flare-up of multiple sclerosis There are two types of weaknesses, Subjective and Objective. Subjective means that you feel weak, but there is no real loss of strength. For example, you may feel weak if you have an infection such as mononucleosis or the flu. Objective means there is a loss of strength that can be noticed during a physical exam. There are diseases that cause weakness: stroke, Addison's Disease, Hyperparathyroidism, Low sodium, potassium, Thyrotoxicosis, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS),Bell's palsy,Cerebral palsy, Guillain-Barre syndrome, Multiple sclerosis Pinched nerve (for example, caused by a slipped disk in the spine). A doctor should be consulted if it does not go away.
The most common cause for tongue fasciculations is BFS, or Benign Fasciculation Syndrome. As the name would suggest, this little understood condition is harmless and generally comes and goes, though some people suffer from it for years. However, any type of persistent fasciculation should be addressed with your physician so that other causes, both treatable and untreatable, might be ruled out. Never attempt any sort of self-diagnosis based on information found on the internet, particularly where fasciculations are concerned. It should also be noted that when checking the tongue for fasciculations, the tongue should be left at rest entirely inside the mouth. Nearly all tongues will fasciculate once you stick them out, and, in fact, it is often difficult for patients to hold their tongues still even at rest on the floor of their mouths. I would suggest that many laypeople are too quick to self-diagnose fasciculations of the tongue.
yes
Fatigue and tremors are the most common symptoms of Muscular Sclerosis. Information on this condition is easily available, but a doctor visit should confirm or deny the presence of this condition.
lynch incision or lateral incision
thigh