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Examples

  • Paresis was by no means the only chronic disease with a somatic etiology.

    The Mad Among Us Gerald N. Grob 1994

  • Paresis was by no means the only chronic disease with a somatic etiology.

    The Mad Among Us Gerald N. Grob 1994

  • Pollock, “Trends in the Outcome of General Paresis,” Psychiatric Quarterly, 9 (1935): 194-211; Henry D. Sheldon, “Certain Trends Reflected in Census Statistics on Patients in Hospitals for Mental Disease 1933 to 1942,” in American Psychopathological Association, Trends of Mental Disease (New York, 1945), pp. 34ff.

    The Mad Among Us Gerald N. Grob 1994

  • Pollock, “Trends in the Outcome of General Paresis,” Psychiatric Quarterly, 9 (1935): 194-211; Henry D. Sheldon, “Certain Trends Reflected in Census Statistics on Patients in Hospitals for Mental Disease 1933 to 1942,” in American Psychopathological Association, Trends of Mental Disease (New York, 1945), pp. 34ff.

    The Mad Among Us Gerald N. Grob 1994

  • Take the case of the disease known as General Paresis, officially called Dementia Paralytica.

    The Foundations of Personality 1921

  • Paresis, as everyone knows, is considered incurable and victims of it seldom live more than three or four years.

    A Mind That Found Itself An Autobiography Clifford Whittingham Beers 1909

  • Paresis, as everyone knows, is considered incurable and victims of it seldom live more than three or four years.

    A Mind That Found Itself Beers, Clifford W. 1908

  • And he, Homistogetes, was born of Hermogenes and Ophthalmia and was at home in Syncope beside the fast flowing Paresis.

    Behind the Beyond and Other Contributions to Human Knowledge Stephen Leacock 1906

  • Berkley, of Baltimore, who has written on Paresis in the Negro, thinks paresis as common to the negro as to the white man, conditions of life being the same.

    The Effects of Emancipation upon the Mental and Physical Health of the Negro of the South John Fulenwider 1896

  • Paresis being a metropolitan disease, this statement is probably

    The Effects of Emancipation upon the Mental and Physical Health of the Negro of the South John Fulenwider 1896

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