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  1. Feb 3, 2024 · Some attributed Wilson’s fatal stubbornness to a stroke he suffered in the fall of 1919 that left the left side of his body permanently paralyzed. But others thought his behavior had psychological roots, including French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau and British Prime Minister David Lloyd George.

  2. Nearly three years later, Woodrow Wilson died in his Washington, D.C., home, at 2340 S Street, NW, at 11:15 AM on Sunday, Feb. 3, 1924. According to the Feb. 4 issue of The New York Times, the ...

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  4. Sep 6, 2023 · In patients with Wilson’s disease, neurologic movement disorders involve either increased movement, with tremor or dystonia, or decreased movement, resembling parkinsonian rigidity. Tremors ...

  5. The unpreparedness of the United States Army for war on the Western Front was directly linked to the national strategy that Woodrow Wilson charted during his presidency. The high losses of American Soldiers in the Meuse Argonne, for negligible gains, was the harvest of an incoherent and unrealistic pursued by President Wilson. Presidential leadership matters in the United States, and shapes ...

  6. Mar 7, 2018 · Wilson disease is a rare genetic disorder characterized by excess copper stored in various body tissues, particularly the liver, brain, and corneas of the eyes. The disease is progressive and, if left untreated, it may cause liver (hepatic) disease, central nervous system dysfunction, and death.

  7. Wilson's disease is an inherited disorder of copper metabolism caused by a mutation in the copper-transporting gene ATP7B, and it results in excessive copper accumulation in the liver and brain.

  8. Aug 7, 2023 · The majority of patients with Wilson disease present within the first decade of life with liver dysfunction. The neuropsychiatric features are seen in the third/fourth decade of life. Wilson disease is rare but if not recognized and treated, it is fatal.

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