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338 Sentences With "maladies"

How to use maladies in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "maladies" and check conjugation/comparative form for "maladies". Mastering all the usages of "maladies" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Best about cancer: "Cancer: The Emperor of All Maladies" In his book "The Emperor of All Maladies," Siddhartha Mukherjee introduces the reader to cancer.
You can alleviate these medical maladies by taking precautionary measures.
United States, for a wide range of adult psychiatric maladies.
Djokovic and Murray slogged through their maladies until Wednesday afternoon.
As it is, maladies aside, they are doing just fine.
The pipes had burst, resulting in mold, among other maladies.
Ditto sick or disabled adults with all sorts of maladies.
But remember that many symptoms of other treatable maladies mimic dementia.
Take, for example, Jhumpa Lahiri's short-story collection Interpreter of Maladies.
Pevzner says she expects to continue thriving despite her many maladies.
Though Frinj isn't worried about local Southern California maladies affecting its plants.
A growing body of research links economic maladies to more oligopolistic economies.
Other maladies are also projected to get worse as the climate changes.
Read last week's newsletter about pinworm, the Human Centipede of childhood maladies.
Sunlight doesn't kill germs and physical maladies aren't cured by carbonated water.
Most colonists get better over time, of course, because most maladies are minor.
Could these tricorder wannabes accurately diagnose maladies these subjects already knew they had?
You could call it a casualty of the very existential maladies it investigates.
Many maladies, such as anxiety and depression, are aggravated or triggered by stress.
Even so, rescue and recovery workers have confronted an alarming spread of maladies.
She wrote about non-medical maladies as well, and Eloesser was her confidant.
With specialization in medicine, patients with the most maladies often have the most doctors.
Regarding "apitherapy" specifically, there is scant evidence that bee stings help treat any maladies.
Brain damage, seizures, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease The list of purported maladies goes on.
And what was the best book you read for "The Emperor of All Maladies"?
Scientists are of two minds about why these new maladies have come into view.
Kelly from X-Men, Fringe routinely turned out creative maladies and supremely creepy visuals.
Automotive writers are much like doctors who are asked to diagnose maladies at parties.
And if Cleveland can continue free of maladies, that might be all they need.
Still, it's not certain that any of the maladies described were actually cancer, David said.
In an ideal world politicians would be able to direct money to target specific maladies.
IN THE PAST year the British body politic has endured an astonishing list of maladies.
The latest ban "suffers from precisely the same maladies as its predecessor," Judge Watson wrote.
The greatest honor we can pay to a nation is to take its maladies seriously.
The mosquito is known to carry other tropical maladies, including yellow fever, dengue and chikungunya.
Many of the symptoms of Ebola resemble those of more common maladies, such as malaria.
At the service, she said she wanted to recount her daughter's maladies for two reasons.
But yet astrologers take it to mean there's an increased chance of miscommunication, among other maladies.
He's best known for his 2010 book The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer.
Sitting there in your fridge, it suffers a cascading trifecta of maladies: For one, it dehydrates.
But the original wasn't just another 1990s sim game with wacky maladies such as slack-tongue.
Andrew has been reading The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer by Siddhartha Mukherjee.
I've been dealing with clinical anxiety, the most millennial of maladies, since I was a teenager.
In this small story, we see something of the maladies that shape our brutal cultural moment.
With that said, he may have also had additional maladies that may have contributed to his symptoms.
Now it is learning that "we're not immune at all" to the political maladies of the age.
Each of these serious maladies was spurred by rat lungworm disease, contracted during his stay in Hana.
Scores of people who lived on the island have banded together on Facebook complaining of mysterious maladies.
And some — though not all — of those maladies are about to be inflicted on the US economy.
Luis Severino and Michael Pineda have been largely productive, and other pitching maladies have been fairly predictable.
In "Pain and Glory," he plays Salvador Mallo, an aging director tormented by physical and psychological maladies.
For farmworkers, delivery personnel, and construction crews, high temperatures can also mean heat exhaustion and related maladies.
An emerging body of research links it to increasingly common maladies like obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease.
Now he's healthy and carrying the load while several other Denver Nuggets deal with maladies of their own.
Baby boomers are getting older and will be facing many maladies of age, such as Alzheimer's or osteoporosis.
Although the David's maladies were mostly patched up over the centuries, you could still see all the scars.
Participants experience swelling, vomiting, hallucinations, diarrhea and a litany of other maladies as bodies shut down, often unpredictably.
This is a crucial text on modern social alienation and uniquely late capitalist maladies, both real and imagined.
Mr. Bulger was nearly 90 years old, used a wheelchair, and suffered from heart problems, among other maladies.
Chronic illness — maladies such as arthritis, diabetes and heart disease — is the biggest single driver of medical costs.
Many of those attending were ailing with AIDS, cancer and other maladies, drawn by promises of being healed.
A frequent solution is over-the-counter (OTC) drugs, which are heavily advertised to treat many maladies, including colds.
Consider Humira, a biotech drug made by America's AbbVie that treats rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, Crohn's disease and other maladies.
Such emotionally manipulative tales of childhood maladies can race up Amazon bestseller lists, while spreading mistrust of medical science.
Teething through the years Throughout history, parents, as well as practitioners, have attributed a number of maladies to teething.
Silica has been linked to silicosis, an incurable lung disease, as well as lung cancer, tuberculosis and other maladies.
"The Emperor of All Maladies" is, as Mukherjee notes, the story of the genetic code corrupted, tipping into malignancy.
She has studied their cholesterol levels and the prevalence of diabetes and other maladies from which the portly suffer.
It's also developing a pipeline of drugs for other maladies including gastroesophageal reflux disease (or GERD) and diabetic nephropathy.
My physical body is healthy, which is why its occasional maladies have become phenomena that I get to relish.
This emerging cancer treatment holds great promise in the efforts to fight the so-called Emperor of All Maladies.
The injury continued to linger, and other maladies soon cropped up, including problems with his shoulder and left ankle.
" Unscear's publications were cover-ups, and radiation-related maladies are "a dark horseman riding wild across the Chernobyl territories.
In fact, those clerics seem far more preoccupied with what they regard as the terrible maladies of the present day.
Some evil spell had settled on the community: mysterious maladies swept the flocks of chickens; the cattle sickened and died.
Vestre Prison even has its own infirmary meal program, which provides special diets to patients with cancer and other maladies.
Nearly twice as many Americans die each year of these two maladies as were killed in the entire Vietnam War.
It is sprayed in the vineyard to combat a range of maladies, while it is ubiquitous in modern, conventional winemaking.
If you're concerned that your child has one of these maladies (or any unexplained rash), give your pediatrician a call.
It can save taxpayers billions of dollars and help address serious social maladies such as alcoholism, crime, and teenage pregnancy.
Asthma, mental health issues and ADHD top the list of maladies that keep the recruiters at bay, says Mission: Readiness.
Those antibodies are now used in medicines approved to treat such maladies as asthma, high cholesterol, rheumatoid arthritis and cancer.
The apology arrived as part of a settlement the company reached with victims of maladies that reportedly included cancer and miscarriages.
The effect of the best medical memoirs, like those of Sacks, is to make idiosyncratic cases seem emblematic of wider maladies.
Though not revealed until years, often decades, after his assassination in 1963, the President suffered from a series of physical maladies.
Now attention will focus squarely on how they are able to negotiate through their maladies, at least in the early rounds.
But it has shown promise as a treatment for epilepsy seizures, chronic pain, cancer tumors, and a host of other maladies.
Some politicians and pundits lament the instability and, even without medical degrees, feel no compunction about publicly diagnosing various mental maladies.
As bacteria develop resistance to antibiotics, many may soon be rendered powerless even against maladies like pneumonia or urinary tract infections.
Yet given all of the capital's urban maladies, the temptation to start with a clean slate is hard for planners to resist.
Loneliness may be the handmaiden to depression and other psychological maladies, but here, it is the price one pays for being unique.
The new justice minister, Sérgio Moro, is supposed to deal with the two other maladies Mr Bolsonaro has identified: corruption and crime.
Nearly 62% of the children did not have any allergic conditions, but the remaining children had one or more maladies or symptoms.
A cancer physician at Columbia University, Dr. Siddhartha Mukherjee dazzled readers with his Pulitzer-winning "The Emperor of All Maladies" in 2010.
Working sometimes 12 hours a day, she simply assumed that her stomach maladies were the result of being a busy single mother.
In a perfect world, we'd all have easy, affordable access to mental healthcare professionals and be able to properly treat these maladies.
This could be eye-opening for those who remain uninformed about the catastrophic maladies caused by smoking; the truth certainly bears repeating.
All of these maladies were taken from Almodóvar's own life, and that candor caught Banderas off guard when he read the script.
In his twilight years, Mallo is suffering from a thousand minor maladies, including frequent headaches, back pain and the occasional coughing fit.
In this setting, among children with cancer and other maladies, it is the doctor who learns from his patients how to heal.
Kadmon, which is developing drugs for cancer, autoimmune diseases and other maladies, is pursuing an IPO at a tough time in the market.
Williams was not on court long enough to suffer any maladies, but she said she was taking precautions against the cold, damp weather.
This past week, the maladies I treated in my patients amounted to a run in with the "most wanted" list of infectious disease.
Mais ce rêve a mal vieilli suite aux maladies sanglantes des régimes autoritaires et les échecs politiques des gauches dans le monde arabe.
I buy 100 Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez, Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri, and Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk by David Sedaris.
Other maladies like E. coli would manifest within a few days, but so far it seems Steve and his cohort have been lucky.
She tells me masks are flying off treatment floors, putting caregivers and patients at increased risk for any number of other contagious maladies.
Ultimately, Taubes's indictment of sugar as the leading culprit in virtually all modern Western maladies doesn't provide enough evidence for us to convict.
The statement represented the U.N. health agency's strongest language to date on the connection between the mosquito-borne virus and the two maladies.
Many of the worst-off small and midsize cities on the index are synonymous with poverty, deindustrialization and other maladies affecting older urban areas.
In each house, he was struck by how these people—suffering from very different maladies—shared the stress and difficulty of managing their drugs.
It "suffers from precisely the same maladies as its predecessor", he wrote, despite its window-dressing addition of a pair of non-Muslim countries.
Upon his admission to St. Elizabeth's, doctors diagnosed Hinckley with depression and psychosis - two maladies they now say have been in remission for years.
Combine these issues with the persistent maladies that we humans are prone to and the keyboard can become a source of pain, not pleasure.
The death penalty continues to suffer from the same maladies that have caused declines in both executions and the seeking of the death penalty.
I love my hometown, but widespread political disengagement may be the only way to remedy its endemic cultural maladies and the country's civic health.
But Jhumpa Lahiri, whose 1999 debut short story collection Interpreter of Maladies won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, has gone even further than Beckett.
A witches' brew of maladies — including overharvest, habitat degradation and climate change — has caused a precipitous 30-year decline in worldwide Atlantic salmon populations.
He shared the prize with Rita Levi-Montalcini for research that opened the door to a clearer understanding of dementia, cancer and other maladies.
The long-haul flight (five hours or more) offers up a special brand of hell, a smorgasbord of meltdowns, impromptu maladies and indiscriminate peevishness.
There's the 2016 defeat that still lingers, one that so devastated so many of us that clinical depression and physical maladies blossomed among us.
On his intake forms, the nurse noted he was bipolar and on antipsychotic medications, and suffered maladies including diabetes, heart pain and rheumatoid arthritis.
Great swaths of white America now suffer from maladies that are all too familiar to black America: broken homes, drug addiction, listlessness, early death.
A company must file a supplemental drug application if it wants to expand the list of maladies a drug or device is approved to treat.
Then began a long process to create vines that were free of viruses and other maladies, to plant them and eventually turn them into wine.
New rules limit how long a patient with acute mental illness should wait, just like the four-hour limits for physical maladies in A&E.
According to Pickel's team, this type of burial is associated with a fear of reanimated corpses escaping their graves to spread maladies to the living.
The World Health Organization added "gaming disorder" to its dictionary of maladies, the International Classification of Diseases (ICD), which published its 11th edition last month.
Following extensive study of the body's bacterial occupants, researchers are turning to how our fungal residents may contribute to inflammatory bowel diseases and other maladies.
The indirect harms from heat may in fact be far larger than maladies caused directly from heat, but they are much more difficult to track.
We have a horrible weakness for triumphalist sentimentality and EDM power ballads that diagnose our perceived generational maladies ("Last Day Alive," also the whole record).
Cilic also benefited from an opponent's maladies when the top-seeded Nadal retired two games into the fifth set of their quarterfinal match on Tuesday.
But around 2009 or 2010, she started to deal with an array of health maladies, just being bone-tired, experiencing different infections that wouldn't go away.
Childhood obesity raises the risk of all sorts of maladies later in life—particularly diabetes, which now causes more deaths than AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined.
Atop the former list is end J.J. Watt, a three-time Defensive Player of the Year whose last two campaigns have been aborted by catastrophic maladies.
He was taking a prescribed dosage of clonazepam, a psychotropic medication used to treat anxiety disorders and other maladies, when he was booked into the jail.
His self-named field of 'orthomolecular medicine' emphasized vitamin C, a substance that Pauling asserted could stave off maladies ranging from the common cold to cancer.
What is clear is that it is barely a scratch compared with the maladies endured by previous candidates and presidents, beginning with George Washington's excruciating toothaches.
In other words, it was basically the series' "Tricorder," an all-purpose futuristic device Dr. McCoy would use to diagnose all kinds of space maladies. 15.
In Plato's "Phaedrus," Socrates extols divinely inspired madness in mystics, lovers, poets and prophets; he describes these disturbances as gifts of the gods, rather than maladies.
That way, unlike before, the decision makers have centralized and up-to-date information on a sluggish player or who has maladies like a sore shoulder.
But after reaching a career-high No. 7 in 2016, Bencic suffered myriad maladies, including a debilitating lower-back injury, that caused her ranking to plummet.
Stool samples would contain viruses also from a person's digestive tract, which could, in theory, point toward a cure for drug-resistant TB and other maladies.
Paramedics who once transported people with even the most mild medical maladies to hospitals are now encouraging anyone who is not critically ill to stay home.
Paramedics who once transported people with even the most mild medical maladies to hospitals are now encouraging anyone who is not critically ill to stay home.
Manager Terry Collins sprinted from the dugout to check on Conforto, who has been one of the few bright spots in this season of Mets maladies.
He's gravely depressed, and his body seems to have permanently surrendered to his maladies, to his bad back, migraines, asthma and fits of terrifying, mysterious choking.
He was transported in the ambulance from the courthouse after suffering chest pains, heart palpitations and other maladies Monday afternoon, defense attorney Donna Rotunno told CNN.
The ensemble numbers, including one ("Medley of Maladies") in which we meet several hopeful if zombielike patients, grow repetitive, and the solos are too often muddy.
Understanding how time of day matters might allow for better treatment of disease, and for prevention of maladies like obesity, metabolic syndrome and perhaps other serious conditions.
Conspiracy theories alleging that vaccines cause autism or other dire maladies have, in the real world, led to the resurgence of diseases once nearly eradicated by vaccination.
But Bertozzi had now linked NGLY21 deficiency to cancer and maladies such as Parkinson's disease, through the proteasome—and cancer drugs are among the most profitable medicines.
Through its agreements with insurers, Doctor On Demand stipulates what kinds of conditions its video consultations can cover, and which ailments and maladies require immediate medical attention.
But the economy suffers from plenty of maladies, including high public debt, an unaffordable pension system that funnels money to the relatively well off, and low productivity.
My grandmother has spent the better part of the last year in and out of the hospital for a number of maladies, some more serious than others.
He joked about his age — and the common maladies that afflict men over 50 — suggesting that he felt far older than he did when he became president.
In "The Emperor of All Maladies", his earlier Pulitzer-winning history of cancer, it was his work as an oncologist that illuminated the science of the disease.
The First Aid Only All-Purpose First Aid Kit comes with all the basic medical supplies you need for quick diagnostics and the treatments of many maladies.
One underexplored question is how Dee Dee Blanchard could have convinced what seems to be a string of medical professionals that Gypsy suffered from so many maladies.
We must look upon our brothers and sisters stricken with maladies like nationalism as loved ones who need help, rather than monsters who cannot be spoken to.
"Homestead has the same maladies that Tornillo suffered from," said Holly Cooper, a co-director of the immigration law clinic at the University of California at Davis.
One reason why is that we still don't understand enough about the human genome and how it interacts with our environment to tailor treatments for many maladies.
Its disgraced founder has now moved on to guzzling "raw water" that comes straight from the ground and carries the risk of such pleasant maladies as diarrhea.
Medications to treat or cure inflammation, rheumatism, diabetes, muscle tension, surgical complications, malaria, heart conditions, skin diseases, arthritis, glaucoma, and hundreds of other maladies, come from forest plants.
And it's an opportunity that has been embraced by the World Community Grid, which has been used previously to research malaria, Ebola and tuberculosis, among other medical maladies.
It uses a form of artificial intelligence to analyse the sound that bees are making in order to deduce whether they are suffering from a number of maladies.
Within the past 15 months, men's wellness startups Roman, Hims, and Keeps have emerged to offer virtual care for maladies like erectile dysfunction, premature ejaculation, and hair loss.
Why it matters: According to Perez, the last couple of centuries have been cycles of such maladies, each time leading to a decades-long period of broad prosperity.
Many are gleaming white, high-priced temples to hypochondria, peddling cures for maladies not found in other lands (the French are obsessed with "heavy leg syndrome", for instance).
Yet there's still one thing that tends to get left out of the narrative, and it's one of the most beauty maladies, from which no one is immune.
This, we were told by the labor and delivery nurses, was the secret ingredient in many creams meant to fight wrinkles and other age-related maladies afflicting women.
Trained as a medical doctor, but with a background in science and engineering, Peng and his team built a system that has modules for each of the 13 maladies.
He restored America's morale, which was no small feat considering what the country had been through with the Vietnam War, Watergate, the Iran hostage crisis and many other maladies.
" When presidents and candidates kept their medical maladies secret Doocy added, "You mean, Donald Trump isn't going to eyeball it first, like oh my goodness, look at my cholesterol?
But the documents released this week go deeper and also delve into his childhood, which was marked by normal maladies such as colds, fevers, sore throats and the like.
The seven families are suing close to 20 defendants, saying that their children have been victims of maladies ranging from neurological disorders, like seizures, to language and learning disabilities.
"Racial discrimination and misanthropy are serious maladies inherent to the social system of the U.S., and they have been aggravated since Trump took office," the North Korean paper said.
Getting rid of the essential health benefits would almost certainly lower premium costs, though it could also leave many consumers holding health insurance that might not cover various maladies.
The measures have been advanced by economists and public health experts looking for methods that might combat obesity, diabetes and tooth decay — maladies all linked to soft drink consumption.
Swallowing or breathing the substance can cause death, while nonlethal exposure can cause eye, nose, throat and skin irritation, among other maladies, according to the National Library of Medicine.
Insurance experts say the resulting zombie market — not dead, but not alive either — would suffer from many of the maladies of the existing system, and quite a few more.
In practice, however, people have little knowledge of the treatment options for the various maladies they might suffer, and policy language describing insurance coverage is notoriously complex and technical.
There are thematic sections, like on the process of creating wax votive objects, and a whole case of heads, suggesting a deep human history of aches and mental maladies.
And then there are issues around housing: compounding effects of discriminatory housing practices or the social engineering that occurred in urban areas that spawned all sorts of cultural maladies.
Benjamin Button may have been born with the physical maladies of an elderly man, but there's a far less curious reason your Facebook friends suddenly look like they aged overnight.
But Cynthia Cox, Kaiser's associate director, notes that the above list is a conservative sampling of all of the issues and maladies that insurers could count as pre-existing conditions.
About ten years ago, British veterinarians discovered an unlucky family of King Charles Spaniels whose male pups sometimes came down with a mysterious set of maladies before their first birthday.
The second reason is that the country has a good surveillance system, which was quickly directed to look for cases of Zika and the maladies that it may be causing.
The company funded research and paid doctors to make the case that concerns about opioid addiction were overblown, and that OxyContin could safely treat an ever-wider range of maladies.
For "Emperor of All Maladies," the one book that I particularly scoured for inspiration was Richard Rhodes's "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" — an epic account of the Manhattan Project.
All were designed to treat other maladies and then repurposed for migraines after patients taking them for hypertension or seizures or bipolar disorder reported a coincidental improvement in their headaches.
Over the course of her work, she has found that acupuncture treatment helps with animals' neurological disease (seizures, disc disease), gastrointestinal issues (anorexia, diarrhea, vomiting), skin diseases, and others maladies.
So far, 26 Americans have been affected with similar maladies, according to the State Department, and doctors who examined some of the Americans said they had suffered inner-ear damage.
The team found air pollution contributes to heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and other maladies "on the same level" as leading killers like smoking, high blood pressure, and poor diet.
In the years since making her "discovery," Wigmore claimed to have successfully used wheatgrass juice to treat maladies including but not limited to: MS, cancer, diabetes, depression, emphysema, arthritis, and leprosy.
For the tests, XPRIZE recruited people whom they knew had these maladies and then let them spend anywhere from 90 minutes to a full day with the two remaining competitor devices.
Related: When presidents and candidates kept their medical maladies secret 'Show us the money' Another odd quirk of US presidential campaigns is the expectation that candidates should release their tax returns.
D'autre part, on trouve des analyses dignes du Ku Klux Klan sur la menace posée par les noirs, avec leur incivisme, et les crimes et maladies qu'ils nous apportent, soi-disant.
At least 21 US diplomats and family members have been affected by the incidents that began in November, causing a baffling array of maladies from hearing loss to dizziness to concussions.
But despite investigators from the FBI, the State Department, and U.S. intelligence agencies looking into these reports, there's still no clear explanation as to what, or who, is causing the maladies.
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Top Zika investigators now believe that the birth defect microcephaly and the paralyzing Guillain-Barre syndrome may be just the most obvious maladies caused by the mosquito-borne virus.
THE SANATORIUMS OF Europe are now closed, and the spa towns where acute and imagined maladies alike were elevated to a glamorous lifestyle are today visited almost exclusively by the elderly.
American technology companies are bringing automation and robotics to the age-old task of battling mosquitoes in a bid to halt the spread of Zika and other mosquito-borne maladies worldwide.
Still, Novartis research chief Jay Bradner is optimistic treatments like his company's Kymriah will evolve from being last-ditch options for desperate patients to more affordable weapons suited for mass maladies.
Williams' lawyers say he has sickle cell trait, lupus and brain damage, and that the combined maladies could subject him to an exceptionally painful execution in violation of the U.S. Constitution.
Somatic gene editing, on the other hand, in which a living person's DNA is altered to treat various maladies, from cancer through to hemophilia, results in genetic changes that are not heritable.
The "Presidential Alternative Treatment Program" — which also offered homemade cures for a long list of maladies ranging from obesity to erectile dysfunction — ran until 20043, when Jammeh lost his final reelection bid.
The cause of her strange maladies is too shocking to spoil, but suffice to say that the detached perspective Swanberg creates for the big reveal makes the whole situation even more horrifying.
Higher income is a predictor of who is most likely to pay for pharmaceuticals for certain serious health conditions and mental health maladies, as well as lifestyle problems (The New York Times).
Such so-called health underwriting is an obstacle for those who may need long-term care insurance the most, particularly those with a family history of dementia, debilitating maladies or Alzheimer's disease.
While human excrement was carried away from cities, it still found its way to farms as a fertilizer, providing another opportunity for common maladies to find their way back to the city.
Maladies of the back are as numberless and varied as the stars, and notoriously hard to cure: herniated discs, muscle strains, arthritis, dislocations, compression fractures, sciatica, scoliosis, kyphosis, spinal stenosis, ankylosing spondylitis.
Greg Piefer, Shine's founder, at the Wisconsin cornfield where the company has gotten approval to build a manufacturing plant for a radioactive isotope used in detecting cancer and other potentially fatal maladies.
Nonetheless, the sheer number of people that need treatment could overwhelm any country's health care system, leading to a shortage of hospital beds or medical equipment for those suffering from other maladies.
She learned English while young (she was raised in Rhode Island) and in it has written four authoritative works of fiction, including "Interpreter of Maladies" (1999), for which she won a Pulitzer Prize.
Considerable diplomatic pressure has been exerted on Iran concerning the older Mr. Namazi, a former Unicef diplomat who is about to turn 82 and suffers from a number of maladies, including heart disease.
The more dramatic instances could only have come from skulls with bone-damaging maladies like syphilitic necrosis, so the medical specimen aspect of the Mütter's collection had a major impact on the project.
It's in keeping with a character who may have a best dude on speed dial (the amusing O'Shea Jackson Jr.) yet doesn't suffer from the usual movie male maladies, including fear of women.
More informative are the sections of "Sex and Cancer" in which the authors explain what people can do to ensure that "the emperor of all maladies" will not rule and wreck their relationships.
"Oncologists are in a very particular predicament right now," says Dr. Siddhartha Mukherjee, a hematologist and oncologist at Columbia University Medical Center and Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Emperor of All Maladies.
For Mitsuha and Taki, there are other, more immediate concerns, like being profoundly alienated from the body each is actually inhabiting, which, of course, is another way to describe adolescence (and other maladies).
We were also warned by our superiors to avoid drinking water from the wells and eating local food at all costs, as dysentery and other intestinal maladies were a real threat to us.
The film is narrated by several of Jarman's favorite actors as well as Jarman himself, each relating fragments from the director's life, including his experiences with AIDS — its maladies, hospital wards, and so on.
The GI tract is teeming with bacteria and research suggests the wrong kind may play a role in diabetes, multiple sclerosis, cancer, liver disease, obesity, irritable bowel syndrome and a number of other maladies.
Pressman Toys has created a card game version of the dysentery-plagued classic The Oregon Trail that includes all the terrible diseases, maladies, and calamities that wiped out your pioneer family time after time.
That's a big change from the pre-social media age, when presidents and White House hopefuls were able to keep their maladies under wraps -- or at least muted -- for considerably longer stretches of time.
It was believed by some that a high-protein diet contributed to lust and sloth and that constipation and other maladies of the gastrointestinal tract were God's punishment for too much pork and beef.
Lesser maladies that plague festival-goers include dehydration — though sometimes more exotic accidents befall them too, especially at events held in nature: "A cute little pig could charge you and bite you," Pollak says.
She edited the first textbook on psycho-oncology in 1989 and was featured on the 2015 PBS documentary "Cancer: The Emperor of All Maladies," based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning book by Siddhartha Mukherjee.
The impact of coronavirus on Europe's future has the potential to be even more significant than the migrant crisis, particularly as it unfolds in almost biblical fashion atop a plague of other European maladies.
"To imagine that we will find a simple solution to this doesn't do service to the true complexity of the problem," explains Siddhartha Mukherjee, author of the cancer history The Emperor of All Maladies.
He is the author of The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer , winner of the 2011 Pulitzer Prize in general nonfiction, as well as 2016's The Gene, and The Laws of Medicine.
The electric currents were supposed to be a form of exercise, making people thin as they slept (the device was eventually banned by the FDA, being linked to miscarriages, paralysis, and hernias, amongst other maladies).
But more help and care than is available in Cairo was needed for Ollie to recover from the wound, find treatment for other maladies and make the best of the remaining lives he has left.
Most cases emphasize the youngest victims of the man-made environmental calamity: the scores of children whose lead exposure could lead to maladies ranging from neurological disorders, such as seizures, to language and learning disabilities.
However, hypnosis as hypnotherapy began to emerge in Victorian times, and by the late 20th century had become a widely-accepted treatment for a number of maladies, spawning healthcare programs, bestselling books, and celebrity endorsements.
Before you increase your protein intake significantly, you should check with your health-care professional since people with certain maladies, such as calcium deficiencies or low blood pressure, could experience adverse effects from whey protein.
He is the author of The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer, winner of the 2011 Pulitzer Prize in general nonfiction, as well as 2016's The Gene, and The Laws of Medicine.
Skeptics who assume CBD is just 21st-century snake oil, however, may be surprised to learn that the substance is being studied as a potential treatment for maladies as diverse as schizophrenia, insomnia and cancer.
Exercise can lower blood pressure and reduce visceral body fat at least as effectively as many common prescription drugs, according to two important new reviews of relevant research about the effects of exercise on maladies.
"Racial discrimination and misanthropy are serious maladies inherent to the social system of the U.S., and they have been aggravated since Trump took office," the document, issued by the country's Institute of International Studies, reads.
Most cases focus on the youngest victims of the man-made environmental calamity: the scores of children whose lead exposure could lead to maladies ranging from neurological disorders, such as seizures, to language and learning disabilities.
This was the first use of genetically modified phages for treatment, and the first time phages have been used against an infection of the genus Mycobacterium, which includes tuberculosis, one of the deadliest maladies on earth.
The judge said the new order—which removes Sudan but adds Chad, North Korea and Venezuelan government officials to the forbidden list, and makes the ban permanent—"suffers from precisely the same maladies as its predecessor".
Why it matters: This is the first project of its kind, and gives new insight into the seasonality of the public's health concerns, as searches related to maladies make up about 5% of all Google searches.
I've used Kindle Unlimited to finally read the books I've been meaning to for years, like "The Handmaid's Tale" and "Interpreter of Maladies," and I've been able to revisit childhood classics like the "Harry Potter" series.
"Cancer's life is a recapitulation of the body's life, its existence a pathological mirror of our own," wrote scientist Siddhartha Mukherjee in his Pulitzer prize winning book, The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer.
A good reminder of this is Hoffmann's fairy tale, Der Struwwelpeter, which was intended to warn boys against the maladies of poor grooming, but was also allegedly based on cruel observations of children with ectodermal dysplasia.
It is only recently that pot has been widely imagined as an almost holy vessel of redemption, a cure-all for a full range of 21st century maladies — social division, chronic pain, chronic distraction, chronic boredom.
Countries with lots of overweight children can expect lower levels of productivity, higher mortality and higher health-care spending on treating the maladies that come with excessive weight, such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
But not all parents and teachers are convinced: They blame PCBs for an array of maladies, including migraines, thyroid cancer and common colds, and they have sued to compel the district to remove all contaminated caulking.
Phillies 6, Mets 4 A confluence of maladies led to Jay Bruce's start at first base for the Mets on Thursday, just the fifth time he had started at the position in his 10-year career.
"There's a lot more focus" on the ugly underbelly right now, Peretti said, partly thanks to reporters — including those at BuzzFeed — who have raised awareness about hoaxes, scams, privacy invasions and other maladies of the internet.
Its maladies have piled up -- the lingering euro crisis, the indebted economies of the south, hapless foreign policies and a yawning democracy deficit -- making it an ever-easier target for those who want to destroy it.
Credit, unfortunately, was rarely given to the artists who designed and rendered them, but it's clear these individuals had wonderful talent for branding cures for any gross or unpleasant maladies through the most pleasant of visuals.
Plusieurs milliers de Tchadiens — il n'existe pas d'estimation sérieuse de chercheurs — sont morts de malnutrition, maladies, tortures et exécutions dans les sept centres de détention secrets installés dans la capitale, N'Djamena, ou dans d'autres cachots en province.
The map could assist in the study of brain maladies such as autism, schizophrenia, dementia and epilepsy, and shed light on the differences between the brains of people with such conditions and healthy people, the researchers said.
The outbreak has caused the price of a 25 kilogram sack of maize to rise from $10 to $30, she added, and comes as Congo's other main staple crops, bananas and manioc, are ravaged by other maladies.
Scientists at the Institute for Ageing Research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, in New York, want to mount a trial of metformin in elderly subjects to see whether it delays various maladies (and also death).
No longer were hematologists dependent on simply surveying cells under the microscope; instead, we were able to analyze blood on a molecular level, in order to identify the underlying abnormalities that cause leukemia, lymphoma, and other maladies.
Royal jelly, the queen bee's food source, may be a remedy for maladies as diverse as glucose intolerance and mental health, while honey is historically credited with nourishing the body and protecting against inflammation, bacteria and infection.
Kanepi was on the verge of quitting the sport at the end of last year, plagued by various maladies, including plantar fasciitis in both feet and a bout with Epstein-Barr virus, an energy-zapping autoimmune illness.
"I don't know if it's causal or symptomatic of long-running economic maladies that have affected these communities and particularly affected workers who have seen their job opportunities decline," Yellen said in response to questioning from Sen.
After a chest x-ray at a downtown Manhattan lab revealed that there were no maladies at work, my doctor determined it was most likely the result of constant stress, which had begun to compound in my body.
Top News Asthma, rashes, lumps, children's hair loss and cancers: Scores of people who have lived on California's Treasure Island have reported mysterious maladies amid allegations that the Navy exposed residents to radioactive and toxic materials for decades.
Conversely, the May-December entanglement at the heart of Jhumpa Lahiri's "Sexy" (found in her Pulitzer Prize-winning collection, "Interpreter of Maladies"), a study in the allure of surfaces that begins over a cosmetics counter, burns up fast.
A group of people complaining of maladies like fatigue, numbness, paralysis and chronic pain would gather in his office, take seats around an oak cask filled with water and grab on to metal rods immersed in the water.
The details are still suspiciously hazy, but a particular ingredient derived from algae, which is commonly used to replace dairy fats and egg yolk, was blamed for the outbreak of maladies by Soylent's co-founder and CEO, Rob Rhinehart.
Delee – A blood test for circulating tumor cells Cancer is one of the biggest killers in the U.S. and Delee aims to take on the "emperor of all maladies" with a blood test device able to isolate tumor cells.
But it's clear that campuses and Capitol Hill are suffering from the same national maladies — and that colleges, as training grounds for future leaders, bear a particular responsibility when it comes to cultivating and strengthening the nation's civic spine.
Dieleman also said people are often struck by the sorts of conditions included in the list, as many people tend to guess that much-discussed maladies, such as cancer and cardiovascular disease, are the vacuuming up the greatest sums.
In residency, I listened to the 22-hour audiobook of his work "The Emperor of All Maladies," a great example of the way a physician can contribute to the popular understanding of medicine and write for a lay audience.
In his Pulitzer Prize-winning "The Emperor of All Maladies," Mukherjee explored the ramifications of a corrupted genetic code, cancer; this work elegantly grapples with the moral consequences of learning to program heredity ourselves and control our own fate.
He said the latest travel ban suffered from the same maladies as the previous 90-day ban on nationals from six majority-Muslim countries: Iran, Syria, Libya, Sudan, Somalia and Yemen, which the Supreme Court largely reinstated in June.
The 285 works in this exhibition, installed on the museum's third and fourth floors, span the career of an American painter whose art has, for more than half a century, both diagnosed national maladies and been shaped by them.
One Scientist's Quest to Bring DNA Sequencing to Every Sick KidFor thousands of children who suffer from mystery maladies, the practice of systematically scouring the entirety of their genetic code for the culpable mutation has yet to become routine.
Public behavior offers clues for a psychiatrist or psychologist — indeed, medical maladies such as diabetes or cancer have outward signs as well — but every time a clinician diagnoses from afar, he detracts from the scientific credibility of his field.
The policy "suffers from precisely the same maladies as its predecessor: it lacks sufficient findings that the entry of more than 150 million nationals from six specified countries would be 'detrimental to the interests of the United States,'" Watson wrote.
The events reminded investors that for whatever other maladies are around — rising interest rates, a stronger dollar and geopolitical tensions among them — they're all happening against a healthy background of surging corporate profits and a healthy base of economic strength.
Goran Dragic had 22 of his 24 points in the first half for the Heat (10-26), who dressed the league minimum of eight players thanks to an assortment of maladies ranging from injuries to food poisoning to a migraine headache.
On April 16, a bipartisan group of lawmakers in the House introduced the VA Medicinal Cannabis Research Act which, if passed, would require the federal government to deeply explore the potential benefits of medicinal marijuana for all manner of maladies.
But the trial also represents a new frontier in testing a proposition for improving human health: Rather than only seeking treatments for the individual maladies that come with age, we might do better to target the biology that underlies aging itself.
His colleagues, Anne (Sherri Shepherd) and Dwayne (Steven Boyer), are also determinedly odd; Anne suffers from a laundry list of bizarre maladies, including "random dog-level hearing," and Dwayne, while well-intentioned, just isn't the sharpest pencil in the pack.
Life sciences startups need a whole lot more cash than most and that's certainly true for GRAIL, a cancer detection startup trying to figure out a way to find the "emperor of all maladies" much earlier through blood testing technology.
Then apologize to her, to all of the people who suffer from actual sexual dysfunctions (whose maladies you've made a mockery of), and to anyone whom you might have used sexually and perhaps emotionally misled to fulfill your own needs.
The ability to buy lean, ground meat at an affordable price is especially important in poorer communities that tend to suffer from higher rates of obesity and heart disease — two maladies that can be addressed in part by eating leaner proteins.
But Ms. Warren often casts the net far too wide, placing the blame for a host of maladies from climate change to gun violence at the feet of the business community when the onus is on society as a whole.
The deal would reinstate the so-called "essential benefits" provision—which requires insurers to cover a range of maladies and services—and allow states to obtain waivers to eliminate the provision that blocks insurers from raising premiums on people with pre-existing conditions.
While some Americans do live in areas directly impacted by sea level rise and other climate-related maladies, "most people go through their whole lives never having any interaction with the Environmental Protection Agency," said John Coequyt, director of Sierra Club's climate campaign.
Nietzsche believed that if only a Dostoyevsky had been among the apostles who followed Jesus, someone who understood the environment in which "the scum of society, nervous maladies and 'childish' idiocy keep a tryst," we might have been spared centuries of ovine idiocy.
Elad Walach, CEO of a startup called Aidoc, tells Axios that he has trained an AI system to detect the most ordinary but urgent and pernicious maladies — ones that, if missed by a radiologist, could lead to "a nightmare" for the patient.
We're sure you will be relieved to know that it remains the case that you are not a carrier of any of the maladies we screened for that could be passed on to your children, such as travelling bunions and side thorns.
Mais pour Jeremy Hunt, le secrétaire d'état à la santé, le N.H.S. est sous pression non pas à cause d'un manque de financement, mais en partie à cause de patients qui se rendent aux urgences pour des gros rhumes ou d'autres maladies mineures.
Fowler's gruesome, season-ending knee injury, which came in the first inning of his major league debut, was the latest and most severe of their recent run of maladies, a list seemingly outpaced only by the losses — 12 in their past 16 games.
To the Editor: The maladies linked to vaping that have recently sent hundreds to hospitals and even killed some are prompting calls to make vaping illegal, or at least to ban those cartridges with flavors designed to lure young people into nicotine addiction.
If you ask Robyn Wishart—a defence lawyer from British Columbia who has represented former CFL players on a number of concussion-related issues—she will tell you bluntly the horde of maladies her clients have suffered from: aggression, paranoia, depression, anxiety, and suicidal thoughts.
With Simmons and Embiid, Philadelphia may already have its most important boxes checked, but that by itself isn't enough to actually win at the highest level, especially if Simmons never develops a reliable jumper and Embiid's continuous physical maladies are a test throughout his career.
One peer-reviewed paper by University of California, San Diego medical professor Beatrice A. Golomb that will be published in Neural Computation in September argues that the reported symptoms are similar to those reported in other little-understood maladies related to RF/MW exposure.
Unlike many other U.S. states that have medical marijuana laws that allow smokable and edible forms of cannabis to be used by people who have a wide range of conditions, Georgia only allows cannabis oil and even then, for a limited number of maladies.
The president is working to fight off campaign-season attacks from Democrats on everything from the GOP's ObamaCare repeal votes to charges his party wants to slash Medicare and will back insurance companies that want to avoid covering long-running patient maladies (The Hill).
It's unclear what the effects of HaloSan might have been on the almost 215,000 people who live in this rural, tight-knit community, but a group of about 40 residents believe the water is to blame for illnesses and maladies they say they're suffering from.
Luckily for May, she had a guardian angel for an aunt: a self-styled Northern California prophet and faith healer who called herself Madam Preston and who catered to the maladies of the wealthy through a combination of caustic chemicals, wine cordials and marijuana.
"When somebody sneezes -- I mean, I try and bail out as much as possible when they're sneezing," Trump said last week during a briefing on the coronavirus, using his own aversion to potential maladies as an example for Americans trying to avoid getting sick.
Stanley Cohen, a Brooklyn-born biochemist who shared the 1986 Nobel Prize in medicine for the discovery of chemicals that promote and help regulate the growth of cells — research that greatly advanced science's understanding of cancer, dementia and other maladies — died on Wednesday in Nashville.
Celeste must have figured out about the death apple at some point—she is a tenacious researcher of symptoms and maladies online—but we never spoke about it, and I never threw up myself, so, in some sense, the apple is still inside me.
For those unfamiliar, Dee Dee kept Gypsy in a perpetual child-like state, while convincing the girl that she suffered from an array of maladies with which she wasn't actually afflicted, a form of abuse by a caregiver known as Munchausen syndrome by proxy.
Since 2014, the number of Veterans waiting a month or longer for health care from the VA has increased by 85033 percent, which means more burdensome red tape for our Veterans, more suffering, and more opportunities for small maladies to become major health crises.
Given Silicon Valley's quest to change the world and its immense problem-solving skills, having the Valley turn its technology and skills to target these diseases perhaps can help speed up the search for treatments and, ultimately, cures for cancer, diabetes and other major health maladies.
The Anthropocene deserves to become part of our lexicon -- a way we understand who we are, what we're doing and what our responsibilities are as a species -- so long as we remember that not all humans are equal contributors to our planetary maladies, with many being victims.
Judge Derrick Watson wrote that the latest incarnation of the ban—which challengers trace to the "total and complete shutdown on Muslims entering the United States" Mr Trump called for two years ago on the campaign trail—"suffers from precisely the same maladies as its predecessor".
With 6-lead ECG readers, the AliveCor device could also pick up about 100 different diseases, according to CEO Vic Gundotra, who rattled off a bunch of long-worded maladies I can't even begin to pronounce but he's hoping his reader will soon be able to detect.
Looking back on frank discussions about various family members or downtown maladies, I realize it was Winnipeg attitudes that taught me to look at seemingly perfect families and institutions with suspicion or even pity, wondering what awful secrets might defrost in their yards in the springtime.
The more she mastered English, the further it took her from her ethnic origins — and yet she fell in love with English as she would Italian, eventually becoming a writer vaulted into instant celebrity when her first collection of stories, "Interpreter of Maladies" (1999), won the Pulitzer.
Apple Stores and authorized service centers also can't do micro soldering, which many third party shops can do and is necessary to fix common iPhone 6 "touch disease" defects or to fix an iPad's backlight, among many other potential maladies that can affect a phone or iPad.
A "brain-performance" business backed by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has agreed to stop advertising success rates for children and adults suffering from maladies such as attention deficit disorder, depression and autism after a review found the company could not support the outcomes it was promoting.
The 2009 essay tells the story of a grandmother, "a brunette version of our fellow Texan Ann Richards, who always seemed poised with a staggering, stiletto quip," whose struggle with Alzheimer's ends up healing not just, as it would appear, her own health maladies, but also healing her family.
It is a modern-feeling film in the garb of the '50s, the suggestion being that there is a dismal, timeless universalism in the murk of the myriad struggles that come with being off the way everyone else is — because of depression, grief, anxiety, and the more extreme maladies.
Bures isn't a doctor or medical journalist; he's a travel writer who has been studying bizarre maladies that only happen in some cultures but not others, like "wind attacks" in Cambodia or magical penis theft in Nigeria, and who has bizarrely concluded that PMS may be a similar phenomenon.
" According to Ziermann, the afflicted would recite prayers in front of the altarpiece that would have been similar to the following: "Anthony, venerable Shepherd, who renders holy those who undergo horrible torments, who suffer the greatest maladies, who burn with hellfire: oh merciful Father, pray to God for us.
Despite his quirks and medical maladies – he can't eat grains, beef or chicken without scratching off his fur, he went blind because of a genetic disease about a year after I got him, and he's had to get many of his teeth removed – I quickly fell in love.
"The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer," his dazzling 2010 debut, won the Pulitzer and almost every other species of literary award; it became a three-part series on PBS; Time magazine deemed it one of the 100 most influential books written in the English language since 1923.
Similarly poignant moments punctuate "Old Love New Love," a new play by Laura Brienza that is receiving its world premiere at Luna Stage Company in West Orange, N.J. Contemporary works about people who grapple with Alzheimer's and other kinds of dementia are on the rise as writers explore these maladies.
Charles, alert to the maladies of the American right, was a fierce critic of Pat Buchanan in the early 1990s, when Mr. Buchanan was bringing conservative audiences to their feet with a nascent version of the ugliness and divisiveness that has come to characterize the Republican Party under President Trump.
"The parallelism between what the Trump campaign was doing and saying and what the Russians were doing and saying was remarkably parallel, particularly when it came to attacks on Hillary Clinton, all her alleged physical and mental maladies, and there was almost an echo chamber between the two," Clapper told CNN's Dana Bash.
While the public scrutiny of modern campaigns has made speculation about the health of presidential candidates more relentless, concerns about the fitness of candidates for office have long been a hallmark of American politics, with many hopefuls trying to conceal their maladies and opponents doing their best to exploit signs of weakness.
But in a season of oddities, inconsistencies and maladies, it was only fitting that the Mets lost, 123-212, to the Los Angeles Dodgers (2500-500) despite four combined home runs from Jose Reyes, Jay Bruce and Gavin Cecchini against Kershaw, the most he has allowed in a start in his illustrious career.
"He was the most hated surgeon in the history of mankind; his colleagues got to the Cancer Institute and vilified him," Dr. Vincent T. DeVita Jr., the former director of the National Cancer Institute, said in the PBS documentary series "Cancer: The Emperor of All Maladies," based on the book by Siddhartha Mukherjee.
She used to bag groceries but now, at 58, is on medical leave because of severe arthritis, chronic pancreatitis, lymphoma, diabetes and various other maladies—"It's easier to say what I don't have," she says with a grim laugh—which are a legacy of her years living rough and addicted to drugs.
In sum, growing labor market power may well be a significant explanation of the host of maladies that have beset wealthy countries, notably the United States, in the past few decades: declining growth rates, falling labor share of corporate earnings, rising inequality, falling employment of prime-age men, and persistent and growing government fiscal deficits.
Speaker Paul Ryan claimed that House Republicans were putting the "finishing touches" on a deal that would reinstate the so-called "essential benefits" provision—which requires insurers to cover a range of maladies and services—and allow states to obtain waivers to get around the provision that blocks insurers from raising premiums on people with pre-existing conditions.
But CBD has already made its way into a host of products, from oils and creams to teas and salves, often pitched to consumers as medicinal using little evidence—just last week, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warned multiple companies selling CBD to stop making unsupported claims that their products can treat cancer, Alzheimer's disease, and other maladies.
Igor Grant is a professor of psychiatry at UC San Diego and the director of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research, where he and his colleagues have done extensive amounts of research on how vaporized and smoked cannabis affect patients suffering from a variety of maladies, especially neuropathic pain (a burning, hypersensitivity often experienced by people with HIV/AIDS).
Although this effort is on behalf of patients with rare genetic diseases and their families, there's a growing awareness among researchers like Taft that by learning more about the mechanisms behind rare diseases, they'll get closer to uncovering the genetic underpinnings of other more common maladies, such as cancer, heart disease, Alzheimer's disease, and even autism.
The gruesome premise of the book I was reading, "The Donor" — of body parts excised from the living — made me wonder if medically engineered, artificial organs might create better solutions for various ostomies caused by a number of maladies: birth defects, injuries, inflammatory bowel disease, ulcerative colitis, diverticulitis, Crohn's disease and gynecological, bladder or colorectal cancers.
Despite the considerable advances made over the last two decades in the treatment of a variety of cancers, AIDS and other maladies once thought of as incurable, and the tantalizing appearance of clinical trials suggesting effective treatment for A.L.S. may be at hand, "the realization and the heartbreak is that there's nothing for you in this disease in 2019," Ms. Estess said.
But with reassuring words from his wife, Jepson somehow regained his footing on the run despite a multitude of maladies: a "golf-ball-sized" blood blister on his foot he eventually popped, a shin splint, ankle tendons so sore they needed to be stabilized by duct tape, and bruising and chafing on the bottoms of his feet that made every step searing.
Besides the VAT, Yang would finance the Freedom Dividend with savings from other welfare programs that beneficiaries opt out of; a projected decrease in spending on social maladies like crime, incarceration, and health conditions because of reduced poverty; and economic growth, citing a Roosevelt Institute estimate that a basic income, especially if not accompanied by tax increases, would substantially increase GDP by boosting consumption.
The hypothetical of A Totally Healthy Bulls Team Making A Run—already on its last, most febrile legs—died when center Joakim Noah went down for the season with a shoulder injury, a fall that was followed quickly by more Rose maladies and knee issues for new franchise centerpiece Jimmy Butler, who played just two games in February and was forced to miss his second All-Star game.

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