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Definition of Apractic
1. Adjective. Having uncoordinated muscular movements, symptomatic of a CNS disorder.
Definition of Apractic
1. Adjective. of or relating to the condition of apraxia ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Apractic
1. apraxia [adj] - See also: apraxia
Medical Definition of Apractic
1. Marked by or pertaining to apraxia. Synonym: apractic. (05 Mar 2000)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Apractic
Literary usage of Apractic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by American Neurological Association, Philadelphia Neurological Society, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association, Boston Society of Psychiatry and Neurology (1916)
"There is nothing in the article which has not already been published, but he lays
further stress upon the apractic nature of motor aphasia. 2. Brain Tumor. ..."
2. Psychiatric-neurologic Examination Methods: With Special Reference to the by August Wimmer (1919)
"apractic disturbances are always due to lesions in the ... apractic disturbances
are also observed in more diffuse diseases of the brain (arteriosclerotic ..."
3. Mental Adjustments by Frederic Lyman Wells (1917)
"The extreme of simultaneous dissociations — with one side of the body normal and
the other side apractic or delirious —seems to have arisen under organic ..."
4. Diseases of the nervous system: A Text-book of Neurology and Psychiatry by Smith Ely Jelliffe, William Alanson White (1917)
"apractic disturbances are occasionally met with in frontal tumors, and those
involving or pressing upon Brocas' convolution, left side, ..."
5. General Paresis by Emil Kraepelin (1913)
"Speech disorder when present is more ataxic or paretic than apractic, fe, it may
be slurring and indistinct without distortion in the arrangement of words ..."
6. A Clinical Manual of Mental Diseases by Francis Xavier Dercum (1917)
"Focal brain symptoms are not present unless it be the aphasie and apractic
disturbances. The pupillary reactions appear to be diminished. ..."