|
Definition of Procursive epilepsy
1. Noun. Epilepsy in which a seizure is induced by whirling or running.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Procursive Epilepsy
Literary usage of Procursive epilepsy
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1889)
"procursive epilepsy is a form of disease in which the attack is manifested by an
impulsive running forward, accompanied generally by a fit, ..."
2. Annual of the Universal Medical Sciencesedited by [Anonymus AC02809657] edited by [Anonymus AC02809657] (1895)
"example of procursive epilepsy of much purer type is recorded by Potts, J*$H The
patient, a child 3 years old, in the first attack was- observed to run ..."
3. Occidental Medical Times (1894)
"The first detailed publication on procursive epilepsy appeared in the Archives
de Neurologic, in 1887. In it the authors, Bourneville and Bricon, ..."
4. The Practice of Medicine by Horatio C. Wood, Reginald Heber Fitz (1897)
"This procursive epilepsy is rarely preceded by an aura: it is sometimes dne to
organic diseases of the brain, but may represent idiopathic epilepsy, ..."
5. State Hospitals Bulletin by New York (State), State Commission in Lunacy, New York (State). State Hospital Commission, New York (State). State Commission in Lunacy (1896)
"A CASE OF procursive epilepsy. BY DANIEL H. ARTHUR. MD. Assistant Physician,
Middletown State Hospital. It is only occasionally among the epileptic insane ..."
6. The Lancet (1898)
"I believe that in some cases, as in so-called procursive epilepsy, the two
stages—that of the fit proper and the post- ..."
7. Organic and Functional Nervous Diseases: A Text-book of Neurology by Moses Allen Starr (1913)
"This has been termed procursive epilepsy. It occurs in children and is often the
first sign of the disease. It continues and is usually succeeded by attacks ..."