Partial or complete paralysis on one side of the body.
Paralysis of the arm and leg (sometimes lower face as well) on one side of the body.
partial paralysis on one side hematomas: or pools of congealed blood, in the parenchyma, the subarachnoid space, or the subdural space, bleeding due to stroke, hemmorrhage or traumatic brain injury, tissue is irritated rather than infarcted
Paralysis affecting only one side of the body.
An incomplete weakness of one half of the body, the left or the right side (not the top or bottom), as differentiated from hemiplegia which is complete.
Greek hemi = half, paresis = paralysis, used usually to denote weakness rather than paralysis.
paralysis affecting only one side of the body.
muscular weakness of one half of the body.
Partial or incomplete paralysis on one side of the body.
Weakness of one side of the body.
Weakness that affects one side of the body.
Weakness of one-half of the body search for Hemiparesis
Muscle weakness down one side of the body.
Partial paralysis of loss of movement on one side of the body.
Weakness on one side of the body.
muscular weakness or partial paralysis restricted to one side of the body
A weakness of a limb (or limbs) so that useful function is lost or limited.
Loss of power/weakness in one side of the body.
difficulty in moving one side of the body.
Paralysis of one side of the body. Movements of the face and arms are often more severely affected than those of the legs.
Paralysis of only one side of the body.
Hemiparesis is the partial paralysis of one side of the body. It is generally caused by the lesions of the corticospinal tract, which runs down from the cortical neurons of the frontal lobe to the motor neurons of the spinal cord (see the second paragraph of Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) and is responsible for the movements of the muscles of the body and its limbs.