Cerebellar Hypoplasia in Werdnig-Hoffmann Disease
- R. Norman
- MedicineArchives of Disease in Childhood
- 1 February 1961
Evidence will be adduced to support the view that in Werdnig-Hoffmann disease, as in certain other infantile encephalopathies, malformation may be malformation.
The Neuropathology of Status Epilepticus
- R. Norman
- Psychology, BiologyMedicine, Science and the Law
- 1 January 1964
The distribution of ischaemic nerve cell changes in cerebral cortex, hippocampus, basal ganglia, and cerebellum, conform to the pattern of post-ictal brain damage described by Scholz, and changes are found in brains showing oedema as in those without.
A CONGENITAL FORM OF AMAUROTIC FAMILY IDIOCY
The case recorded in this paper belongs to this theoretically important intermediate group which is characterized by the predominantly cerebral localization of the lipoid deposition, the reticulo-endothelial system being involved only in a minor degree.
PRIMARY DEGENERATION OF THE GRANULAR LAYER OF THE CEREBELLUM: AN UNUSUAL FORM OF FAMILIAL CEREBELLAR ATROPHY OCCURRING IN EARLY LIFE
- R. Norman
- Medicine
- 1 December 1940
Sex-linked Hydrocephalus
- J. Edwards, R. Norman, J. Roberts
- MedicineArchives of Disease in Childhood
- 1 October 1961
A further case of hereditary hydrocephalus pathologically similar to that described by Bickers and Adams is presented, showing, on far larger numbers, a pattern of inheritance entirely consistent with a sex-linked recessive mechanism.
THE RIGID FORM OF HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE
- A. Campbell, B. Corner, R. Norman, H. Urich
- Medicine, PsychologyJournal of Neurology Neurosurgery & Psychiatry
- 1 February 1961
Although the majority of cases of hereditary chorea correspond accurately to the classical pattern described by Huntington (1872), a number of atypical forms have been recorded in children and adults which are characterized by rigidity rather than by hyperkinesia, drawing attention to two atypicals juvenile cases occurring in an English family.
MICROPHTHALMIA AND THE VISUAL PATHWAYS
- S. E. Whitnall, R. Norman
- MedicineBritish Journal of Ophthalmology
- 1 May 1940
The surgeon-general Sir 'William Guyer Hunter, M.D., F.R.C.E., D.I.M.S. & S.E. Herbert, I.S., L.B.B., I. IKilkelly,M.M .S.
SPONGY DEGENERATION OF THE BRAIN IN INFANCY
- R. Norman
- Medicine
- 1 April 1968
The author may subsequent chapters review the patho-physiology of find that nervous control of the circulation in the brain is human muscular dystrophy, the clinical more widely accepted than he appears to expect, and it characteristics of myopathy in childhood.
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