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epileptic

/ep-uh-lep-tik/US // ˌɛp əˈlɛp tɪk //UK // (ˌɛpɪˈlɛptɪk) //

癫痫患者,癫痫病人,癫痫,癫痫性

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : pertaining to or symptomatic of epilepsy.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a person affected by epilepsy.

Examples

  • Further investigation found that Caleb and Patrick carried a different rare genetic variant that, in studies with mice, has been connected to epileptic deaths at a young age, the Associated Press reported.

  • Such electrode implants are helping reduce Parkinson’s tremors, epileptic seizures and uncontrollable movements caused by Tourette’s syndrome.

  • A day later, the most problematic scenes, called “brain dance” sequences in the game, were adjusted via a software patch to be safe for epileptic and photosensitive players.

  • “This is a pattern of lights designed to trigger an epileptic episode and it very much did that in my own personal playthrough,” she wrote.

  • One man was having an epileptic seizure; one had a nosebleed; one had full-blown African Malaria; one had the flu.

  • After starting a new drug, an epileptic woman started writing 10 to 15 poems each day.

  • She then suffered an epileptic seizure and was treated with an appropriate medication.

  • The 21-year-old, who studied at the Stephen M. Ross School of Business in Ann Arbor, Michigan, had suffered an epileptic seizure.

  • Her first starring role came in the 2009 lo-fi indie Exploding Girl, about a young epileptic woman on a summer break from college.

  • Thus, in the majority of cases, marriage seems to have no influence on the epileptic attacks of women, although in 27.2 per cent.

  • To ascertain the exciting causes of epileptic seizures with exactitude is usually a matter of very great difficulty.

  • Bromide of potassium is generally recognised as the most effective anti-epileptic remedy we at present possess.

  • On the other hand, no class of patients is apt to exhibit the low cunning of the insane in so marked a degree as the epileptic.

  • He gave way utterly to the species of epileptic motion, full of passion, which was common with him.