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349 Sentences With "convulsions"

How to use convulsions in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "convulsions" and check conjugation/comparative form for "convulsions". Mastering all the usages of "convulsions" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And these tics manifested into full blown spasms, the spasms into convulsions, the convulsions into arm dislocations.
Enough exposure leads to convulsions, paralysis, respiratory failure and death.
Enough exposure leads to convulsions, paralysis, respiratory failure and death.
In the worst cases it causes comas, convulsions and death.
Newlyweds were chilling out from the convulsions of the sixties.
When ingested, strychnine causes muscular convulsions before death through asphyxia.
Within a minute, Ms. Salihin collapsed and went into convulsions.
What set off the convulsions of the last 30 years?
These convulsions have caused uproar in the Conservative Party's ranks.
Larger exposure can lead to convulsions, paralysis and deadly respiratory failure.
The drugs can cause convulsions; some have led to cardiac arrest.
Patients may also experience diarrhea or other gastrointestinal symptoms and convulsions.
Users describe painful convulsions leading to hallucinations and loss of consciousness.
Symptoms include fever, headache, vomiting, stiff neck, drowsiness, convulsions, and coma.
I woke up with physical convulsions, humping pillows or the air.
The symptoms included wild swings of emotion, tremors, catatonia, and convulsions.
After the convulsions of the Great Depression, Americans longed for predictability.
Patients may experience diarrhea or other gastrointestinal symptoms, followed by convulsions.
He vomited, had frequent convulsions and took 15 medicines a day.
One day she emerged, went into violent convulsions and fell still.
His book examines the long-lasting effects of the region's convulsions.
VX causes convulsions, and victims will often foam at the mouth.
They'd have seizures and convulsions, before slipping in and out of consciousness.
The cobblestones make for a rough ride, which leads to leg convulsions.
About two hours after the fight, Woolfe passed out and suffered convulsions.
Inmates who smoked the drug Monday started vomiting, hallucinating and having convulsions.
Yet the role of demography in the South's political convulsions runs deeper.
Israeli security folk see much good news in the Arab world's convulsions.
It then can progress into more serious symptoms like disorientation and convulsions.
Unlike the other categories of quake, these convulsions couldn't be satisfactorily explained.
She said she suffered convulsions and was afraid to go out alone.
Patients may experience diarrhea or other gastrointestinal symptoms, as well as convulsions.
After a frightening seizure with "violent convulsions," he goes to his mom.
Larger exposure can lead to loss of consciousness, convulsions, paralysis and respiratory failure.
The greater question is whether an election will end the convulsions of Brexit.
Inhaling VX vapour disrupts the nervous system within seconds, causing convulsions and suffocation.
Then, after a series of political convulsions, the Spanish monarchy fell in 1931.
There, a woman was sent to the hospital for erratic behavior and convulsions.
They could be dangerous: Some occasionally induced high fevers that could trigger convulsions.
The United States has been in convulsions after accepting just 12,000 Syrian refugees.
This can cause fever, bloody urine, jaundice, rash, convulsions and, in rare cases, death.
In such cases, headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance and convulsions may occur.
This wonderful volume not only reveals the deeper reasons for all the bizarre convulsions.
Seizures or convulsions are known potential side effects of nicotine toxicity, the FDA said.
Developed as nerve agents, organophosphates, at high doses, can cause nausea, convulsions and death.
Every year, children in India go to the hospital for fever, convulsions, and seizures.
Even before 1968, there were convulsions among miners and railroad workers, students and teachers.
When Campbell comes into the bathroom, he finds her having body convulsions on the floor.
Listeria can cause fever, muscle aches, headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance, and convulsions.
Large doses can cause convulsions, loss of consciousness, paralysis and death, because of respiratory failure.
Some charities had to close their doors; others, though they survived, were thrown into convulsions.
Unexpected convulsions can also afflict feverish children, accident victims or people with other neurological conditions.
Although markets looked more stable on Friday, the convulsions have come at an inopportune time.
It can cause paralysis, convulsions, vomiting and the partial or total collapse of bodily functions.
Exposure to large doses can lead to loss of consciousness, convulsions, paralysis and respiratory failure.
Among them are fever, diarrhea, aches, confusion, loss of balance and convulsions, the CDC said.
That bad news led to last-minute convulsions and a frantic search for more revenue.
It corroded veins, triggered convulsions and killed 5 percent of the patients who got it.
Vera was 11; she recalls how convulsions would seize her father and rattle his body.
For other groups, symptoms can include headache, confusion, loss of balance, convulsions and stiff neck.
Like, we issued thoughts in sentences and paragraphs instead of a series of social media convulsions?
Ingestion of the poison can cause convulsions, paralysis, and death in a wide range of animals.
These might include suffocating, foaming at the mouth, constricted pupils, convulsions and involuntary urination or defecation.
Each year, hundreds of children in India alone may be hospitalized with fever, convulsions and seizures.
For days afterwards, my whole body aches from the impact of the convulsions on my muscles.
"Because it was not detected soon, it proceeded up to the level of convulsions," Govella says.
For most, symptoms include headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance, fever, muscle aches and convulsions.
The art world is itself experiencing divisive convulsions between conservative institutional policymakers and their progressive workers.
Most are former military or paramilitary personnel seeking a two-state solution to Israel's agonized convulsions.
Even band members Brian Sella and Mat Uychich get moved to convulsions (to varying degrees of convincingness).
A month later, reports that Sanders was contemplating un-retirement would send the basketball world into convulsions.
Large doses of LSD are more likely to cause convulsions, coma, heart and lung failure, or death.
Redback spider bites are highly venomous and can cause severe pain, nausea, excessive sweating and even convulsions.
But as a response to Europe's populist convulsions, it is one of the most intriguing attempts around.
Agitation for referendums in other parts of the EU might grow, despite the convulsions in Britain's polity.
Typical symptoms that follow include headache, stiff neck, fever, muscle pain, confusion, loss of balance and convulsions.
Yet, for some, Italy's current political convulsions can be traced back to one key moment in 2016.
She also had an electrode with a long cord taped to her face to capture facial convulsions.
The succession at Daimler, unlike most other of the industry's recent executive convulsions, was planned and orderly.
"Seizures or convulsions are known potential side effects of nicotine toxicity," the agency said at the time.
Once the disease begins to spread, headaches, stiff neck, loss of balance and convulsions are also common.
And there are the manifestations of illness, legs that hurt, spasms and convulsions, coughing fits and vomiting.
The stress of trauma can not only cause paresis, but also temporary blindness, tremors, numbness or convulsions.
Symptoms include: headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance, convulsions, fever, and muscle aches, according to the CDC.
It's the sort of seemingly unremarkable situation that can trigger convulsions in the brain of an autonomous vehicle.
When sodium is diluted, the user becomes disorientated, may experience convulsions, go into a coma, and eventually die.
"An Impeccable Spy" is also a story of the era's convulsions, for which Sorge is a fitting avatar.
The side effects of working with this shade ranged from sores to convulsions to, in many cases, death.
Reports suggested that as many as 12,000 kids experienced dizziness, blurred vision, and convulsions after watching the show.
Executed inmate's convulsions put spotlight on midazolam Some inmates executed with midazolam convulsed and gasped after receiving injections.
She dropped her food, wobbled when she walked and shuddered with convulsions, biting her tongue until it bled.
They will start convulsions, and stop breathing and then lose vision, and there are other problems -- vomiting, everything.
"Crew noticed a person suffering convulsions and requested to make an emergency landing in Hermosillo, Sonora," reads the statement.
Some children develop encephalitis (swelling of the brain), which can lead to convulsions, loss of hearing, and intellectual disabilities.
There are still plenty of convulsions and moments of falling down the stairs to meet your ugly, broken fate.
There is another way of thinking about Brexit, Trumpism and other political convulsions, which does not fill a book.
Some of the side effects of exposure to VX include convulsions, loss of consciousness, paralysis, and fatal respiratory failure.
Two months earlier, while at work delivering electrical supplies, he crashed into a telephone pole after going into convulsions.
Listeria, on the other hand, can cause fever, muscle aches, headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance, and convulsions.
The Independent reports that 17-year-old Julio Macias Gonzalez started having convulsions while having dinner with his family.
Gaucher is caused by mutations in the GBA gene and leads to serious joint pain, convulsions, and cognitive impairment.
Songs like "Slit Your Guts" and "Benedictine Convulsions" are textbook examples of how to do a heavy groove right.
Despite China's stock market convulsions, investors flocked to the country's first initial public offering under rules implemented on Jan.
Symptoms included from hypotension, coma, convulsions, and four of the subjects had to be hooked up to mechanical ventilation.
The symptoms, like fever, convulsions, cerebral hemorrhage or intercranial pressure, were all things treated by trepanantion at the time.
During Donald Trump's first three months in the White House, America found ways to compartmentalize the convulsions of Washington.
And convulsions in financial markets could make fixing GE and its debt-riddled balance sheet even trickier to manage.
Some children develop encephalitis (swelling of the brain), which can lead to convulsions, loss of hearing, and mental retardation.
Acute poisoning with the pesticide can cause nausea, dizziness, convulsions and even death in humans, as well as animals.
" Its use induced convulsions, vomiting and left Mr. Zubaydah "completely unresponsive, with bubbles rising through his open, full mouth.
Reports say Verzilov is receiving treatment at the toxicology wing of Moscow's Bakhrushin City Clinical Hospital after experiencing convulsions.
The babies, many of whom will eventually suffer convulsions, need brain stimulus therapy promptly to improve their chances of survival.
Some case descriptions are limited to tremors or fainting, while others describe extended convulsions like the one our patient experienced.
But people who are at high risk, they can get fever, muscle aches, headaches, a stiff neck, confusion and convulsions.
Guilherme, she said, has already started having muscle spasms, which doctors say are a predictor of convulsions later in life.
The account went from having about 5,400 followers to more than 41,000 by the time the sports world's convulsions ended.
On its 200th anniversary, an exhibition running through March charts how the museum has navigated the convulsions of Spanish history.
Convulsions rocked her tiny body as she lay under warming lights in the nursery of the Baptist Health Richmond hospital.
For years the country&aposs bubbly behavior — especially in its over-heating property markets — gave markets convulsions almost like clockwork.
In fact, we know now thujone does not cause hallucinations, although excessive amounts can result in convulsions and renal failure.
Instead, in short, meditative chapters that mimic her subjects' fractured experiences, she captures the feelings of people drawn into the convulsions.
But nowadays, people undergo ECT while completely sedated and with safer, smaller doses of electricity, avoiding the possibility of severe convulsions.
Whether it's the Fed or the election, Wall Street is showing the natural convulsions that come with surprise, confusion, and fear.
Exposure can cause loss of consciousness, convulsions, paralysis, respiratory failure, and death, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Are these Freudian fits, "Crucible"-like convulsions, orgiastic reveries, initiation ceremonies (into femininity, etc.) or sly performances from attention-hungry adolescents?
On the fifth day of this routine, Peters finally had the seizure, a camera capturing the convulsions she had in bed.
In another, a man shrouded in tear gas falls into convulsions before soldiers toss him on the back of a motorcycle.
Symptoms of exposure may include the pupils of the eyes shrinking to pinpoints, rapid breathing, vomiting, convulsions, paralysis and respiratory failure.
Meanwhile, signs and symptoms of encephalitic EEE include fever, headache, irritability, restlessness, drowsiness, vomiting, diarrhea, convulsions, and going into a coma.
"The absence of Evo would generate a kind of social dismemberment and convulsions that are characteristic of Bolivia's history," he says.
But there won't be massive convulsions in public opinion because everyone has known for three years what was going to happen.
According to the emergency dispatch audio, emergency personnel were called around 6:30 AM about a man having seizures and convulsions.
This swelling can then lead to headaches, drowsiness, convulsions, and coma, with death coming as quickly as two days after symptoms start.
Exposure to a large dose of the agent may result in convulsions, loss of consciousness, paralysis and respiratory failure leading to death.
Thus "Aryanised", their cottage would, by an extraordinary twist of fate, offer a ringside seat to the many convulsions of German history.
Beaten down and often near starvation, people at the grass roots played a significant role in ending one of history's worst convulsions.
But amid Brazil's economic and political convulsions over the last two years, many Haitians lost their jobs or sank deeper into poverty.
Every now and then, it seems, France needs to go through convulsions of abrupt change in order to free itself from l'immobilisme (paralysis).
These internal convulsions have rendered a country once a byword for stability into one seeking a refoundation of its national sense of itself.
Trump has a history of targeting Merkel on the issue, which has led to political convulsions not only in Germany, but across Europe.
Spain is the next country set to test the resilience of southern Europe, after recent political convulsions in Italy battered global financial markets.
Zivot warned Bucklew would likely experience "suffocation, convulsions, and visible hemorrhaging" for "more than a few minutes to many minutes" before falling unconscious.
The adverse consequences had become extreme: car accidents, overdoses, other people's overdoses, sepsis, convulsions, kidney infections, being arrested, eviction, destitution, degradation, and fear.
I fell in love with Yemen's beauty and friendliness on my first visit, in 2002, but this enchanting country is now in convulsions.
The increasingly barbaric convulsions of violence on both sides have changed the calculus in Beijing, which has been telegraphing a potentially harder line.
The Mahdi Army was blamed for death squads that committed reprisals on Sunnis during the country's worst sectarian convulsions in 2006 and 2007.
But there are some who gag at the mere mention of "goat cheese" or go into convulsions over the faintest whiff of Brie.
After this, the patients are wheeled into a small room, where they receive general anesthesia and a muscle relaxant to avoid full-body convulsions.
"The market is having convulsions, and to stop them, the Fed has to give the drugs back," said Schiff, CEO of Euro Pacific Capital.
Professor Raphael Pitti, a doctor who viewed videos taken at the scene, said patients appeared to have had convulsions more typical of sarin poisoning.
"He was non-responsive to numerous testing, was showing low levels of brain function, and his body was undergoing convulsions/shaking," reads the site.
Kaylee soon sought out the dangerous drug, which can cause hyperthermia, convulsions, cardiovascular issues and insomnia, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
He found her shivering and feverish and rushed her to a hospital where she "had convulsions and almost went into a coma," Jacqueline says.
Promising results Cyclosporine A has some severe side effects, including convulsions and diarrhea, yet some patients have experienced something quite unusual: unwanted hair growth.
A powerful chemical weapon, the poison kills by sending the nerve system into overdrive causing convulsions, paralysis and eventually death due to respiratory failure.
Restaurant employees noted that Ms. Wongso showed no emotion after Ms. Salihin went into convulsions and made no effort to come to her aid.
If caught quickly, AES patients can often recover with simple rehydration treatment, doctors said, but delayed care can lead to convulsions and eventual death.
Although he isn't clear what the connection to his seizures is, he wonders whether the convulsions trigger a smarter, clearer part of his brain.
The 21-year-old artist, whose real name was Jarad A. Higgins, went into convulsions during a drug raid at Midway Airport in Chicago.
When a magnitude 7.2 quake hit my hometown, Kobe, in 1995, the earth's convulsions were far stronger than any recreated on a shake table.
It would be interesting to know how those market convulsions affect Trump's finances, but of course we can't tell because he's keeping his returns secret.
He probably then had loss of bladder and bowel control, convulsions, seizures, and finally death while on the way to the hospital just minutes later.
Among the others: the drop-off in Chinese tourism to the United States, diminished U.S. exports to China, and the ongoing convulsions in financial markets.
I learned later that upon arriving in the E.R., I had passed out and gone into convulsions, regaining consciousness while I was on the gurney.
Due to untreated convulsions, progress has evaporated for otherwise functional people and those with severe disabilities who had managed to improve their mobility or speech.
The fungus, called artbrinium, produces toxins that can cause vomiting, staring to one side, convulsions, spasms and coma, according to the World Health Organization (PDF).
Their success has caused convulsions in Merkel's fragile coalition of conservatives and center-left Social Democrats who have dominated German politics since World War Two.
We witness prominent men cheat on their wives or girlfriends, or otherwise make evident that they are sexual beings, without such revelations leading to convulsions.
No one predicted that the convulsions would happen when they did, and not even China's most famous savants can safely predict what will happen next.
He decided between the two careers when he was only 4 years old, after a severe cold gave him a 104-degree fever and convulsions.
The child's severe malnutrition case was complicated by a genetic neurological disease, which causes convulsions and muscular problems, and makes digestion difficult, the nurse said.
We have discovered massive black holes at the center of many galaxies and have observed the convulsions of space as black holes collide and merge.
But anti-government activists say Syrian military helicopters dropped barrel bombs filled with chemicals on Douma, suffocating some residents and sending others into violent convulsions.
Venomous bites can cause symptoms including swelling, death of tissue around the injury, low blood pressure, convulsions, hemorrhage, respiratory paralysis, kidney failure, coma and death.
Federal Election Commission paved the way for unlimited money via Super PACs and anonymous donations by corporations, and it has driven liberals to near convulsions.
The up-and-coming artist, whose cause of death remains unknown, went into convulsions while officers in Chicago searched the private plane he arrived in.
Rome had planned to kick off the IPO on July 13, but was forced to delay it by a few days after the recent market convulsions.
Their success has caused convulsions in Merkel's fragile coalition of conservatives and centre-left Social Democrats (SPD), who have dominated German politics since World War Two.
Their success has caused convulsions in Merkel's fragile coalition of conservatives and center-left Social Democrats (SPD), who have dominated German politics since World War Two.
Listeria contamination can cause gastrointestinal issues and, in some cases, headache, stiff neck, convulsions, muscle aches, fever, confusion, and loss of balance, according to the CDC.
As elsewhere in the Administration, the communications department was having serial personnel convulsions: the hiring and firing of Anthony Scaramucci ; the resignations of Spicer and Hicks.
"We all eat lychee around here," said Kamini Kumari, whose 3-year-old daughter Anupa fell sick with convulsions but recovered after days in the hospital.
Pregnant women usually experience fever and other flu-like symptoms when infected, while others can also experience headaches, stiff necks, confusion, loss of balance and convulsions.
The convulsions inherent to the legislative process, whether in the form of committee-room tirades or Twitter diatribes, are merely symptoms of a healthy representative democracy.
The researchers looked at a composite of adverse outcomes for the baby, including stillbirth, neonatal death, brain hemorrhage, oxygen deprivation, troubled breathing, convulsions and required ventilation.
According to researchers, some individuals react to stings more severely than others, with symptoms ranging from headache, fever and nausea to low blood pressure, seizures and convulsions.
Arched in extremis, she was an undulating feast, her breasts softly bouncing, her nipples hard and dark as she pressed the last convulsions from her thirsty sex.
James Owen Weatherall, a philosopher, now examines how scientists' conceptions of supposedly empty space have changed in the light of these convulsions in his latest book, "Void".
A febrile seizure is a seizure — convulsions or uncontrollable body movements — that's associated with fevers in young children, typically between 6 months and 5 years of age.
"Listeriosis can cause fever, muscle aches, headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance and convulsions sometimes preceded by diarrhea or other gastrointestinal symptoms," according to the USDA.
David Bowie premiered the Johan Renck-directed video for "Lazarus" on Thursday, and it's a brilliantly disturbing four minutes - all hospital beds, convulsions and woozily deranged saxophones.
The level of graphical detail and fidelity in this scene is frankly staggering, with all sorts of little twitches and convulsions happening across the alien dude's face.
That means we'll immediately return to status Obama ante—nonstop convulsions of real and imagined scandals that will dominate Washington for at least the next four years.
"If you kill him, I'm going to die on your doorstep with convulsions in front of every camera in the world," Harbury said, addressing the Guatemalan government.
Breathing hydrazine for short periods may cause coughing and irritation of the throat and lungs, convulsions, tremors or seizures, according to the US Agency for Toxic Substances.
LONDON — A man who died after going into convulsions while flying from Colombia to Japan was found to have swallowed 1983 tiny packages of cocaine, officials said.
Last week's market convulsions, which saw the largest decline in the S&P 500 Index since the 1987 crash, were triggered by the Fed's previous rate cut.
ROME — Italy's political convulsions have raised new fears about the future of the euro, the single currency of the European Union that was introduced 16 years ago.
Writing about Burma, Thant Myint-U's focus is on convulsions of the last 15 years, from a seemingly unshakable military dictatorship to the beginnings of democratic rule.
Symptoms such as convulsions, in addition to the dozens of deaths and hundreds of injuries reported, suggest sarin, which is a much more efficient weapon, they said.
I have juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, which means I didn't have a generalized seizure—when electrical energy sweeps through your brain and causes convulsions—until I was 16.
"At this point, I know that she's sick, she's hurting, she's probably already into convulsions, her liver is shutting down as we speak," Mr. Lovell told the station.
There wasn't one particular moment with CNN anchor Jake Tapper that made headlines – instead, it was the whole, 133-minute-long interview that sent the Internet into convulsions.
Also formative was the Talking Heads video for "Once in a Lifetime," the one where David Byrne works up a sweat doing kooky convulsions in a bow tie.
Since the twin convulsions of 2016, Trump and Brexit, a cottage industry has evolved dedicated to explaining these phenomena, especially to liberals shocked and appalled by them both.
After the Soviet Union collapsed, those were replaced with anniversary themes like "art and revolution," celebrating the convulsions of 1917 as nourishment for Russia's great avant-garde art.
Similar side effects are associated with hydroxychloroquine, another form of the drug, which is also linked to convulsions and "mental changes" by the US National Library of Medicine.
Symptoms of dogs that intake the toxic algae typically include vomiting, weakness or staggering, drooling, difficulty breathing, convulsions, seizures and eventually potential death, according to Pet Poision Helpline.
Every time the men of Pakistan see her addressing a world forum or meeting a head of state, half of them go into convulsions because they feel dishonored.
The president's whims and resentments have led to stock market convulsions and may soon result in painful tariffs that affect American farmers, an important part of his base.
The outcome can be disastrous: a condition called serotonin syndrome, which starts with shivering, diarrhea, hyperthermia, and palpitations and can progress to muscular rigidity, convulsions, and even death.
But once in you find two vertically oriented plasma screens that show the convulsions of a humanoid CGI cat who briefly appears to share Leckey's hairdo and beard.
In 1997, flashing lights in the popular television cartoon "Pokemon" were tied to more than 600 cases of convulsions, vomiting, irritated eyes and other symptoms among children in Japan.
Cincinnati safety Kyriq McDonald collapsed and appeared to go into convulsions in the middle of a play during the second quarter against Ohio State on Saturday in Columbus, Ohio.
Hundreds of people affected Anti-government activists claimed Syrian military helicopters dropped barrel bombs filled with chemicals on the town, suffocating some residents and sending others into violent convulsions.
As 19193 came to a close, people around the world were celebrating the holidays, grateful for the return of peace on earth after the convulsions of the Great War.
At moments, Cummings combines virtuosic leaps and dancerly lunges with writhing convulsions and repetitive movements as if cleaning a floor or tending to a hot meal on a stove.
Being bitten by a redback spider could result in intense pain in the affected area, sweating, muscle weakness, and in severe cases nausea, vomiting and convulsions, according to Museum Victoria.
We know we don't KNOW our favorite TV characters, as in really know them, but somehow we can still erupt in tears and convulsions when they're taken away from us.
But there are more and more of these looting episodes, and Venezuela has traumatic recent memories of what happens when food riots spread into nationwide convulsions of violence and mayhem.
The symptoms described in reporting from media, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and other open sources—such as the WHO—include miosis (constricted pupils), convulsions, and disruption to central nervous systems.
That&aposs because it&aposs unclear what the right dose is for babies at this age, and overdoses can cause "convulsions, rapid heart rates, and death," according to the FDA.
But, by the middle of last century, as China struggled to move past decades of war, famine, and political convulsions, a rapidly industrializing West had absconded with the silk trade.
LOS ANGELES — In their quest to make tall buildings safe during earthquakes, engineers have for decades relied on calculations that represent the tremors and convulsions that a building can endure.
Symptoms, which usually arise anywhere from 15 minutes to several days after exposure, include diarrhea or vomiting, weakness or staggering, drooling, difficulty breathing and convulsions or seizures, the EPA reports.
Symptoms usually arise anywhere from 15 minutes to several days after exposure and include diarrhea or vomiting, weakness or staggering, drooling, difficulty breathing and convulsions or seizures, the EPA reports.
Referring to sexual violence and humanity's dark side — with toothy heads devouring legs, and unidentifiable bodies cavorting with orgiastic abandon — Erban's art gives visible form to convulsions of existential dread.
And in 1997, flashing lights in the popular television cartoon "Pokemon" were tied to more than 600 cases of convulsions, vomiting, irritated eyes and other symptoms among children in Japan.
When a song her ex used to favor inadvertently shows up on a playlist, her stoicism gives way to physical convulsions and hyperventilation as she tries, desperately, to hold it together.
Meanwhile, rising powers such as China, Russia and Iran are closely watching the developments to determine whether the convulsions in the West give them an opening to advance their own interests.
Earlier this year, Oklahoma said it would begin using nitrogen gas, which causes "complete inability to move, loss of consciousness, convulsions, and eventually death" when oxygen levels dip below 10 percent.
"He couldn't stand, he couldn't lift his head, he was hypothermic, he was having convulsions, and really having trouble breathing," veterinarian Sarah Kanther told ABC about the condition Tipsy arrived in.
AIN AL-ISSA, Syria — Aisha Khadad was an English teacher, a wife and mother to two small children with another on the way, when Syria's violent convulsions caught up with her.
The festival is less musically focused than previous Carnegie festivals (like last year's installment dedicated to the Venetian Republic), but instead gestures outward toward the era's broader political and cultural convulsions.
At the center of these convulsions, the Forum has pitted those who want to move on and celebrate national accomplishments against those who caution that Germany risks forgetting what it was.
The country's premier ballet company, which has defined grace, speed and precision since the days of its co-founder George Balanchine, is now also a stage for the era's #MeToo convulsions.
Sources told PEOPLE at the time that Moore collapsed into convulsions at her L.A. home in January 2012 and was hospitalized before going to rehab for addiction and an eating disorder.
Chahrour focuses on the physical consequences of that rupture, using violent convulsions to depict the breakdown of the body as it fights against cultural restrictions on love while yearning for reunion.
He shows how the old Enlightenment faith in reason and expertise developed in the 17th century, as a hopeful and desperate response to the bloody convulsions of the Thirty Years' War.
According to Rogue, the person who suffered the seizure told him that it was a tonic-clonic seizure, which causes convulsions and loss of consciousness, but it's not clear what caused it.
Two Mexican gray wolf pups died this month of eastern equine encephalitis, or EEE, a deadly virus spread by mosquitoes that can cause brain swelling, convulsions and fever in humans and animals.
Seizures or convulsions are known potential side effects of nicotine poisoning and have been reported in relation to intentional or accidental swallowing of nicotine-containing e-liquids, according to the FDA statement.
The autopsy findings corroborate law enforcement accounts that Mr. Higgins had gone into convulsions while officers searched a private jet that had been carrying the hip-hop star for drugs and guns.
In 1986, when he was twenty-five, he left a senior post at a state genetics laboratory and, inspired by the convulsions of perestroika, drifted among Moscow's quasi-underground directors and filmmakers.
At high levels, it can cause convulsions, nosebleeds, loss of nervous system control, and involuntary shitting and pissing your pants, according to a fact sheet I found on the University of Kentucky website.
Yet for all these formulaic talents, in his outlook and appeal Mr Cruz is an idiosyncratic product of the convulsions that followed the financial crisis and Barack Obama's election, and of his upbringing.
Meet "Tony," the 31-year-old author of "Hey, big spender," a personal essay in Toronto Life that sent Twitter into convulsions last week: My mom does my laundry and makes my meals.
For those watching these midterm convulsions from overseas, there's a fascination that America (yes, America!) is experiencing some of the same political maelstroms that have played out in other parts of the world.
However, the warning turned out to be correct, and Max Hauser, a Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement agent, ended up getting exposed despite using a protective suit and respirator, resulting in convulsions and hospitalization.
Not knowing quite what to do with the "treasure," the author discovers that the hair and other body parts are wonderful in the treatment of: Whooping cough Syphilis Grippe Childbearing and other convulsions.
Here's what you need to know: • The country's recent political convulsions have raised fears about the future of the euro, the common currency of the European Union, drawing uncertainty far beyond its borders.
The New York Times reported last year that at least 6,000 addicts had been subjected to punitive electroshock therapy, which causes painful convulsions, even though China supposedly banned it in 2009, after an outcry.
The Cultural Revolution, in which perhaps a million or more people were killed, ranks among the 20th century's convulsions of terror that have included the Stalinist terror and the genocides in Cambodia and Rwanda.
We have learned what it looks like when a party eventually wakes up to itself being overtaken and undone and throws itself into convulsions to rescue itself from a creature of its own creation.
Children will learn about traditional remedies and the age-old uses of ginger (to combat nausea), mint (to quell vomiting), cinnamon (to reduce inflammation) and lavender (to ease convulsions) in this hourlong interactive tour.
Almost 200 million years later at the end of the Devonian period, the evolution of trees might have driven such convulsions in climate and ocean chemistry that 97 percent of the world's vertebrates died.
I'm reading histories of hurricanes and trying to write something about these juggernauts "that seem to announce the last convulsions of the universe," as an 18th-century friar described major hurricanes such as Maria.
The ground all around her is strewn with bodies, some wracked with convulsions, thrashing around in the mud as rescue workers attempt in vain to hose off the chemical agent that has blanketed them.
Playing off each other's looks and convulsions, they create an electric and  energy that carries throughout the "Gone" video and keeps its viewer absorbed until the very end, despite the minimalist setting and spontaneous choreography.
The doctors and nurses rushed in, and after the convulsions—which took about 60 seconds—were over, they gave her a generous shot of sedative to put her to sleep and calm down her brain.
They go to sleep apparently healthy, and wake up with a high fever and brain swelling that leads to convulsions, seizures and, in a third of the cases, death — often within 215 to 25 hours.
MAIQUETIA, Venezuela (Reuters) - Venezuelan plumber Marcos Heredia scoured 20 pharmacies in one day but could not find crucial medicines to stop his epileptic 8-year-old from convulsions that caused irreparable brain damage late last year.
Elsewhere, different free-speech issues abounded: college campuses in convulsions over who should opine and how; tech behemoths pondering how to control (and profit from) the blizzard of online chatter; authoritarian governments snuffing out digital dissent.
Just as the cultural twentieth century began late, with the modernist convulsions of 22001-20163 (Picasso, Matisse, Stein, Pound, Schoenberg, Stravinsky), so it ended early, its verities collapsing under the pressure of political and economic tumult.
The convulsions of the Democrats in 1924 are, in broad movements, mirrored in the rived and bedraggled pilgrimage of the Republicans in 2016 as they stagger toward their convention behind Donald J. Trump and his rivals.
The ongoing political convulsions on the island, including federal corruption arrests last week, prompted the White House to contend on Tuesday that President Trump had been right in the past to call Mr. Rosselló's administration incompetent.
It may be backed by the Chinese government, part of its growing interest in Latin America, or may simply be a private investment cast adrift by the convulsions of China's stock markets and its slowing economy.
He had even selected his latest version of Elizabeth in the person of the young Catherine Wordsworth, who was born with a condition consistent with Down syndrome and died of "convulsions" at the age of three.
Another study published in 2013 spells out the parallels between zombies and rabies: zombies are imagined to be as aggressive as rabid animals, with similar drool problems; and they sometimes hobble, mimicking the convulsions of rabies victims.
The book in its entire first half is something like a dossier, and we know the dossier matters: It's the case file of someone who was witness to the clashes and convulsions of his own historical era.
Those convulsions had been thought to be beneficial in tiny doses in the past, and in the late 19th and early 20th centuries it was used in small doses as an athletic performance enhancer, and recreational stimulant.
In a sign of the Hong Kong government's wish to avoid more convulsions, it has postponed deliberating a second contentious piece of legislation that would criminalize insults to China's national anthem, Hong Kong news media reported Wednesday.
" The news sent convulsions through the community of Las Vegas shooting survivors who have come to call themselves the Route 91 Family, posting constantly on private Facebook groups and getting together for what they call "meet-greets.
McMeekin points to what he calls a resurgence of Marxist-style philosophy, warning readers to be wary of "openly avowed socialists" like Bernie Sanders — as if right-wing ideologies played no part in the 20th century's convulsions.
Such has been the case with the SoundCloud rap era, which just saw the loss of its third prominent star in just over two years: Juice WRLD, who died after going into convulsions at a Chicago airport.
The two women had been meeting at a cafe in a central Jakarta mall when victim Wayan Mirna Salihin took a sip of a cyanide-laced drink, collapsed on the floor and went into convulsions, according to prosecutors.
"Teething infants suffer from itching of the gums, fever, convulsions, diarrhea, especially when they cut their eye teeth," Hippocrates observed in 4th century BC. For hundreds of years, medical professionals believed that teething caused the deaths of children.
I fancy one that would focus on the onsets of Morley's stylistic convulsions, including several that I haven't mentioned here, to emphasize the demonic restlessness of his sensibility, which could hardly be farther from that of, say, Saenredam.
The reduced dosage has created complications, like the threat of convulsions and the need to monitor his father 24 hours a day to make sure his insulin levels do not spike, which could send him into a coma.
For Fox News employees who have weathered 15 months of convulsions at the network, the news about Ms. Brandi's leave came as a surprise, and another sign that the fallout from Mr. Ailes's scandal has yet to cease.
A historian's examination of the 18th-century revolutions in urban Britain, America and France reminds us that the democratic structures that have supported us for so long came about as a result of convulsions of the established order.
In January 2012, after months of partying and drastic weight loss, Moore collapsed into convulsions at her L.A. home and was hospitalized before going to rehab for addiction and an eating disorder, sources told PEOPLE at the time.
And unlike his controversial novel "Blue Lard," which featured a sex scene between clones of Stalin and Khrushchev and was condemned as pornographic by a pro-Putin youth group, it offers little commentary on the convulsions of Soviet history.
The court's deadlocked ruling Thursday that effectively blocks Barack Obama's controversial executive actions on immigration, sent convulsions through the 2016 election campaign, dealt a shattering blow to the President's legacy and suddenly left four million undocumented people fearing deportation.
The popular conception of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) still exists from a famous scene in the 1974 movie One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest—Jack Nicholson with the bulging eyes and convulsions and coming out of it like a vegetable.
Josephine Manley, Karwah's sister, told Time magazine that they rushed her back to hospital after she lapsed into convulsions following the birth, but said staff refused to touch her because she had contracted the deadly virus in late 2014.
Although the Lakers have the second-worst record in the league, Russell has played encouragingly, and his antics now come across as endearing: He pantomimed full body convulsions when Nance dunked in a game against the Golden State Warriors.
" In 193, the veterinarian Michael Fox went so far as to call dogs "Canis over-familiaris," arguing that domestication had resulted in "psychosomatic symptoms such as depression and anorexia nervosa, asthma, diarrhea, convulsions or paralysis of the hind limbs.
I generally resist both convulsions and immersions but have to admit that, despite its unusually interactive nature, I'm drawn to "Gloria: A Life," the new stage event — it's not just a play — about the activist and feminist Gloria Steinem.
Once Vienna's least-favorite son, Schiele has become the embodiment of the cultural, political, and sexual convulsions that ripped Europe apart in the opening decades of the 21th century — flash points that continue to ignite through the present day.
"The apparent ejection of a large quantity of material six decades prior tells us that the late stages of stellar evolution are complicated, and that stars might undergo multiple violent convulsions before they truly die," said Guillochon in an email.
Like the fake demonic possession in The Crucible, or the supposed Satanic rituals in Caryn Waechter's modern update, The Sisterhood Of Night, the fits have an eerie power over the Lionesses, as member after member succumbs to convulsions and hospitalization.
Severely low magnesium levels—which are usually only found in people who are extremely sick or hospitalized—can lead to tremors, convulsions, weakness, electrical disturbances in the heart, low calcium, low potassium levels, and even a potentially fatal heart arrhythmia.
If we wish to avoid reliving the traumatic political convulsions of the Watergate era, we must awaken people to the consequences for our country if the steady erosion of the rule of law currently taking place continues for years to come.
The surprise outcome, defying late polls that showed Hillary Clinton with a modest but persistent edge, threatened convulsions throughout the country and the world, where skeptics had watched with alarm as Mr. Trump's unvarnished overtures to disillusioned voters took hold.
" The liveliest number here seemingly takes inspiration from the film "The Birdcage," when Robin Williams, as the club proprietor Armand Goldman, puts his body through en encyclopedic array of motions — hip swivels, convulsions, vogueing — while calling out references: "Fosse, Fosse, Fosse!
I think the convulsions we are seeing in Australian politics right now — in fact , since John Howard was defeated in 2007 — are a culmination of decades-long trends that center on the slow decline of our two big political parties.
With only a rudimentary grasp of modern Chinese, I spent much of my three-day journey north trying to decipher the Hong Kong magazine's articles that were wrestling with China's past political convulsions under Mao, its present challenges and future possibilities.
That puzzling paradox of a strong currency in a politically disintegrating economic system owes mainly to the euro area's improving cyclical growth dynamics, engineered by a supportive monetary policy, and to trading bets ignoring the convulsions of the European project.
So I thought why not take an extreme subject — like psychotics in a prison for the criminally insane — and see if something resembling a classical ballet could be made out of their behavior, their movements, their tics, convulsions and obsessions.
The book's focus is on the convulsions of the last 15 years, from a seemingly unshakable military dictatorship to the beginnings of democratic rule, but examining the legacy of Burma's colonial past is crucial to grasping what's happened more recently.
The country was imprinted with trauma, by the epic deceit of the British conquest and then the blood bath of the British departure, known as Partition, which carved out Pakistan from India and set off convulsions of Hindu-Muslim violence.
It was in the fall of 2013, during a conference call with colleagues in Atlanta, that someone mentioned "Jamaican vomiting sickness," an outbreak in the West Indies that for many decades caused brain swelling, convulsions and altered mental states in children.
Symptoms of epilepsy vary based on their type Epilepsy symptoms manifest differently based on their severity, from convulsions and a loss of consciousness to a brief lapse in awareness accompanied by rapid blinking, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke says.
The convulsions come from something called spasticity, a condition that results when nerve signals—as innocent as a muscle tick or as worrisome as the touch of a hot stove—don't reach a person's brain, where they would normally be shut off.
This view is supported by Brown, though he added that antidepressant use during pregnancy has also been associated with neonatal adaptation syndrome (in which a baby suffers convulsions, tremors and poor feeding, among other symptoms) and depression at the beginning of adolescence.
It's true that in the past, ECT was performed (and sometimes forced) on patients using high amounts of electricity that would pass through the brain, and that this could seriously harm people and cause muscle convulsions so powerful they would break bones.
"There was a lot of cocaine in his system — enough to cause a quick and severe psychotic episode, as well as convulsions and extremely high blood pressure and heart rate — and other terrible mental and physical strains," his father wrote by email.
What advice do you have for Silicon Valley out there that is maybe in the 2007 moment, maybe this is never going to happen, everything's going to be fine, what advice do you have for an industry going through its own convulsions?
Mr. Nunes's sustained work last term to scrutinize the origins of the Russia investigation and accuse federal law enforcement officials of acting out of anti-Trump political bias sent convulsions through what in quieter times is one of Congress's more bipartisan bodies.
The mayhem in Ecuador, a country with a history of political convulsions and economic crises, represents the biggest challenge to President Lenín Moreno since he took office in a 2017 election after a decade in power by Rafael Correa, a former ally.
That doesn't mean Trump or any of these other populists can't commit crimes or do horrible things, but it suggests that the drama of today is more of an echo of past Western convulsions than it is a hinge moment in history.
But it also raises a question that Mr. Putin himself seems to be wrestling with: Can he ever step away from power without sending the rigid Russian political system into convulsions and endangering his own legacy and, in extremis, even his own security?
In two dazzling collections of essays, "Slouching Towards Bethlehem" and "The White Album," Joan Didion used her own experiences — and observations and anxieties — as a kind of index to the times, as America lurched through the convulsions of the 1960s and '70s.
From his stately, heavily symbolic Beethoven Frieze (1902) to the society portraits that effervesce into pure sensuality in the last decade of his life, Klimt seemed determined to perpetuate classicism's symmetry and balance despite the convulsions wracking the first two decades of the 9453th century.
That denial led to a bit of recovery with yields back down to 2.54% by Friday, although the convulsions in the rates market has led some commentators - most notably Bill Gross - to proclaim the beginning of the end of the bond market's bull run.
The market convulsions began when Navarro, who heads Trump's newly created National Trade Council, told the Financial Times newspaper that the euro was like an "implicit Deutsche Mark" whose low valuation gave Germany an edge over the United States and its European Union partners.
The fund was up 7.04 percent a day before Britain's referendum on membership of the European Union but surrendered those gains after the shock 'leave' result triggered global stock market convulsions and steep falls in the value of listed European financial companies, the source said.
If you had to guess which detail from these scenes would trigger the rest of the story, you would probably point to the bond—awkward, unromantic, yet closer than that of mentor and pupil—between Jenny and Julien, or else to the kid with convulsions.
Three years later, as my city now confronts a new set of convulsions in response to a not-guilty verdict in another police shooting that left a young black man named Anthony Lamar Smith dead, I've returned to what I wrote back in 2014.
The face of Aparicio, in the leading role, is not placidly resigned but serene in its stoicism, and if she is less a participant than a bystander during the major convulsions of the era, well, few of us can claim to be much more.
It's a combination that will be familiar to fans of Mr. le Carré's George Smiley books, in which marital infidelity — with its convulsions of deception and betrayal — is at once personal and political, an ingenious tradecraft means of attack and a maker of lost faith.
For all of the financial convulsions that WeWork, the office space company that sought "to elevate the world's consciousness," has gone through since its efforts at an initial public offering fell apart last month, nothing about the way the company works, in the end, has fundamentally changed.
The U.S. Federal Open Market Committee is in the midst of a two-day policy meeting after flagging off a historic interest rate hike cycle in December but a slowdown in China and convulsions in global markets could steer it off its course later this year.
For a graphic on Timeline of events in Bolivia, click here "Evo Morales does not qualify to run for a fourth term," Anez, a conservative former senator, told a news conference on Thursday, adding the country's "convulsions" were because he had run in defiance of term limits.
He bombards opponents with an assiduous fluidity that makes him one of the most aesthetically pleasing athletes in the world; the fact that he no longer wants to play beside the second-best player ever, on the NBA's second-best team, has induced league-wide convulsions.
Sure, Ms. Barry's story takes place against the backdrop of a host of larger issues: the Trump administration's trade war with China, the political tides of rural America, the convulsions of a postindustrial economy, all of which she nods at in the telling of her tale.
Days after the chlorine attack on Dr. Darwish's hospital, several areas in Hama Province were hit by barrel bombs containing chlorine and other chemical agents similar to sarin gas based on the symptoms seen in patients: pinpoint pupils, convulsions, irritability, nausea, vomiting and shortness of breath.
There were 23,744 security incidents — armed clashes, IED explosions, targeted killings, and the like — reported in Afghanistan in 2017, which was the most ever recorded, according to the UN. These are not the last convulsions of a dying insurgency; they're the slow and steady gains of a resurgent Taliban.
"I guess I'm having something of a moment," Skolnick said modestly during a recent interview at his studio in Hudson, the riverside town north of Manhattan that in recent years has enjoyed an economic recovery and established some hipster bona fides after decades of boom-and-bust convulsions.
It all suggested a recipe for further convulsions in the messy divorce instigated by Britain that began with the first referendum in June 2016, in which voters chose to leave the European Union, polarizing British politics and testing the resolve of the bloc's 27 other members to stay unified.
Owuor added that multidrug-resistant TB treatment is a lot more lethal and has many more side effects than treatment for regular TB. Kanamycin is a painful daily injection that can cause hearing problems, while some of the pills can have psychological effects, such as convulsions, hearing problems and numbness.
At a time when German leadership is needed more than ever to calm political convulsions tearing at the fabric of European unity, Germany is dealing with its own political disputes on issues like immigration, climate, tax policy and welfare subsidies, leaving it with diminished capacity to fight anti-Europe sentiments.
It's hard to avoid the reflection that this demoralizing state of exile was what prompted Jonah Goldberg to name his podcast The Remnant, after Albert Jay Nock's idea of an elite that would keep the flame of wisdom alive within the destabilizing, ignorant convulsions of political life in mass society.
He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected, whereby the Legislative powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the mean time exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.
It dates back at least as far as the political and musical convulsions of the 1960s, and was renewed in the late '70s and early '0003s, when pioneering punk bands like the Clash, the Jam and the Minutemen were viewed as an antidote to the conservative politics of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher.
In the midst of social convulsions and divisions unseen in modern America, Johnson offered a vision of American freedom born of our bedrock values -- tolerance, pluralism and the rule of law -- and he challenged Americans to extend the benefits and responsibilities of those values to everyone, expanding our notion of American citizenship.
One vital consequence of this set of regional convulsions is sure to play a pivotal role in the 2020 cycle: America's suburbs were once a reliable bulwark for the GOP in much of the country, but are now realigning toward the Democrats, as college-educated whites grow disenchanted with the Republican Party.
Those attributes were on display Tuesday, when after going 0 for 3 at the plate in his first game and crashing face-first into the left-field wall while chasing a fly ball, Tebow comforted a fan who had collapsed in convulsions and stayed with him until his seizures subsided and the paramedics arrived.
For all their internal feuding, Democrats still remain a more obedient and orderly party than their counterparts on the right: They have not experienced convulsions on a scale of the Republican revolution of 2010, which saw multiple sitting senators crumble in primary elections and a host of far-right lawmakers elected to the House.
That didn't work, but the toads breed quickly and are highly adaptable, and every stage of their life cycle from eggs to adulthood are brimming with a potent venom that "can cause rapid heartbeat, excessive salivation, convulsions and paralysis and can result in death for many native animals," according to the Australian government's Department of the Environment and Energy.
"He really is pulling off the brakes of austerity and seeking to inject money into the public services that we haven't seen recently from the Conservatives," said Sophia Gaston, a research fellow at the London School of Economics, who argued that the election campaign had added a new and surreal dimension to the country's Brexit convulsions.
In "Donald Trump Is Elected President in Stunning Repudiation of the Establishment," Matt Flegenheimer and Michael Barbaro write: The surprise outcome, defying late polls that showed Hillary Clinton with a modest but persistent edge, threatened convulsions throughout the country and the world, where skeptics had watched with alarm as Mr. Trump's unvarnished overtures to disillusioned voters took hold.
He grasps the gritty issues surrounding his own very real trauma and often horrific experiences — from enduring frequent convulsions and losses of consciousness to the threat of being thrown out of college to losing jobs — with so little self-pity and so much regard for the compensations the world has to offer even to those afflicted as he is.
The earlier vaccine carried a high risk of alarming but temporary side effects like pain, swelling at the site of the injection and fever, as well as more serious complications like febrile convulsions or loss of consciousness, said Dr. James D. Cherry, professor of pediatrics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at U.C.L.A., who has written extensively about pertussis.
Charles II of Spain was a mass of genetic problems: his head was too big for his body and his tongue was too big for his mouth, so that he had difficulty speaking, and constantly drooled; his first wife complained that he suffered from premature ejaculation and his second wife that he was impotent; as if that wasn't enough, he also suffered from convulsions.
We continued on to the end of the Hinthamerstraat, where we stopped before the chapel of St. Anthony and what was once an asylum for the insane, which Mr. Schwartz told me was established in the Middle Ages to treat those suffering from St. Anthony's Fire, today known as ergotism or erysipelas, which causes fever, chills, convulsions, loss of limbs, hallucinations and, ultimately, death.
That politics came under pressure via the reemergence of a black mass politics during the three decades encompassing the New Deal and the Great Society—until, as I will show in a follow-up column, the black elite's rule as mediators of "race relations" was restored in the wake of the victories of the civil rights movement by the convulsions of socioeconomic change in the 1970s.
Convulsions in the currency market have been at the heart of investors' concerns in recent sessions and have tested the resolve of Chinese policymakers, just months after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) announced plans to include the currency in its Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket.. For one, the weakness in the yuan has fanned speculation that China is trying to use the currency to goose its economy, which is currently growing at its slowest pace since the global financial crisis.

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