Citations:dysæsthesiæ

Noun: plural of

 * 1886, Ch. Féré, Nerve Troubles as Foreshadowed in the Child, in Brain: A Journal of Neurology, Macmillan and Co.; Volume VIII, page #234:
 * Certain individuals have peculiar dysæsthesiæ, which may involve every sense ; some cannot bear to be in the dark without being seized with an invincible terror.
 * 1888, Joseph Coats and Alexander Napier, The Glasgow Medical Journal, Alex Macdougall and H. K. Lewis; Volume XXIX, №. V, page #449:
 * She had numerous dysæsthesiæ, as, for instance, in the scalp and neck ; and she had myalgic pains in the back, the groins, and legs.
 * 1896, William Richard Gowers, A Manual of Diseases of the Nervous System, P. Blakiston, Son & Co.; Volume I, second edition, page #159:
 * This depends on the fact that even when all the nerves, including those of the fingers, are diseased, all the fibres may not be destroyed in any one nerve, so that some sensibility exists in each nerve area. Various perversions of sensibility, spontaneous “ dysæsthesiæ,”  tingling, formication, and the like, may precede the loss.
 * 1897, Norman Bridge, Reflex Neuroses Connected with the Abdomen, in Transactions of the Association of American Physicians; Volume XII, page #363:
 * In the cases related above the pain and dysæsthesiæ would seem to have been caused by different influences.
 * 1902, George M. Edebohls, in Annals of Surgery, J. B. Lippincott Company; Volume XXXV, page #152:
 * The writer observed pains and dysæsthesiæ of various degree along the distribution of the iliohypogastric nerve after several of his earlier nephropexies.