Because of the risk of
cumulative damage from repeated seizures, anti-seizure medication may be necessary.
And although his mental acuity isn't quite what it was before years of
cumulative damage from his sleep disorder, he's not complaining.
But scientists have worried that
cumulative damage from heading's repeated subconcussive impacts might be clinically significant.
Not exact matches
Another chart
from NOAA shows the that number of billion - dollar disasters in a given year is on the rise (bars), and 2017 reached an unprecedented peak in the
cumulative total in
damage (gray line):
Damage from blue light is
cumulative, so we are not seeing an acute rise in problems like AMD.
There are so many ways their little bodies can come into contact with potentially
damaging chemicals,
from their toothpastes, shampoos, food, frying pans, shower curtains — there has to be some looking at the
cumulative effects versus thinking of each chemical in a vacuum.
The combined data taken
from 8 eligible studies suggested a significant association between smoking and
cumulative spinal structural
damage (Odds Ratio 2.02).
They have also pulled some patients away
from older systemic (as opposed to topical) drugs often used for moderate - to - severe cases, such as methotrexate and cyclosporine, which patients sometimes need to take in rotation to minimize the risk of
cumulative damage to their organs.
«The
damage from the sun's rays is
cumulative,» explains Doris Day, MD, a dermatologist in New York City.
The
cumulative damage of these 16 U.S. events during 2017 is $ 309.5 billion (CPI - adjusted to present), which shattered the previous U.S. annual record cost of $ 219.2 billion (also CPI - adjusted) that occurred in 2005
from the impacts of Hurricanes Dennis, Katrina, Rita and Wilma.
It highlights the potential
damage certain working environments can cause to a person's health — in this video
cumulative back strain — and is carefully layered with expert information
from one of the firm's solicitors.
In addition, CBC has reported, «The Blueberry River First Nation argues [in a civil case launched in 2015 that] the
cumulative damage [
from industrial development, including the Site C dam] is robbing them of their treaty rights to hunt and fish, as moose, marten, beaver, lynx and caribou disappear.
This has created a cycle of trauma, where the impact is passed
from one generation to the next, creating a snowball effect of
cumulative damage.