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polio

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.29 sec.
polio: see poliomyelitis poliomyelitis (pō'lēōmī'əlī`tĭs), polio, or infantile paralysis,
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poliomyelitis

 or polio or infantile paralysis

Acute infectious viral disease that can cause flaccid paralysis of muscles. Severe epidemics killed or paralyzed many people, mostly children and young adults, until the 1960s, when Jonas Salk's injectable killed vaccine and Albert B. Sabin's oral attenuated live vaccine controlled polio in the developed world. Flulike symptoms with diarrhea may progress to back and limb pain, muscle tenderness, and stiff neck. Destruction of spinal cord motor cells causes paralysis, ranging from transient weakness to complete, permanent paralysis, in fewer than 20% of patients. Patients may lose the ability to use their limbs, to breathe, or to swallow and speak. They may need physical medicine and rehabilitation, mechanical breathing assistance, or tracheal suction to remove secretions. A “postpolio syndrome” occurs decades later in some cases, with weakness of muscles that had recovered.



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The NINDS defined postpolio syndrome as "a condition that affects polio survivors years after recovery from an initial acute attack of the poliomyelitis virus.
A Broadway actress and singer, Bradley was just 28 when she died of polio in Milan during a 1955 European tour of ``Oklahoma
When polio strikes, her challenges grow into firsthand knowledge in this story of loss, friendship, and early battles during the polio epidemic of 1944.
 
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