loss+of+balance

  • 121drop attack — sudden loss of balance without loss of consciousness, usually seen in elderly women; various causes are hypothesized …

    Medical dictionary

  • 122upset — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. overthrow, overturn, capsize; disturb, bother, discompose, disconcert; spoil; perturb; disarrange, unbalance; demoralize. n. reversal, overturn, disorder. See destruction, inversion, change,… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 123impact — n Impact, impingement, collision, clash, shock, concussion, percussion, jar, jolt mean a forcible or enforced contact between two or more things, especially a contact so violent as to affect seriously one or the other or all of the persons or… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 124barbiturism — n. addiction to drugs of the barbiturate group. Signs of intoxication include confusion, slurring of speech, yawning, sleepiness, loss of memory, loss of balance, and reduction in muscular reflexes. Withdrawal of the drugs must be undertaken… …

    The new mediacal dictionary

  • 125otitis — n. inflammation of the ear. Otitis externa is inflammation of the canal between the eardrum and the external opening of the ear (the external auditory meatus). Myringitis is inflammation of the eardrum, often due to viral infection. Acute otitis… …

    The new mediacal dictionary

  • 126vertigo — [n] dizziness disequilibrium, giddiness, lightheadedness, loss of balance, loss of equilibrium, shakiness, spinning head, unsteadiness, wobbliness, wooziness; concepts 314,480 …

    New thesaurus

  • 127Faux pas — A faux pas (pronEng|ˌfoʊˈpɑː, plural: faux pas IPA|/ˌfoʊˈpɑː(z)/) is a violation of accepted social rules (for example, standard customs or etiquette rules). Faux pas vary widely from culture to culture, and what is considered good manners in one …

    Wikipedia

  • 128Atropine — Systematic (IUPAC) name …

    Wikipedia