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- Mar 25, 2015
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What? No, Dyskinesia in tarantulas isn't "better compared to coughing and sneezing" in humans... If you have to make a comparison to humans, then Dyskinesia is tarantulas is better compared to dyskinesia in humans.
Which, by the way, also presents very similarly, has similar symptoms, and also has a number of possible causes. It's a much more accurate comparison.
I... yeahno.
It is a medically recognized syndrome. See the link I posted above, the one where veterinarians, professors, doctors, arachnid-oriented lab scientists, vet techs, veterinary pathologists and others got together and basically said 'this is DKS, this is its name, and it's a syndrome'. Or see the direct quote below.
It doesn't need to be thoroughly researched and understood entirely to be a thing, and the causes don't need to be understood to be a thing. Like, Horner's Syndrome in dogs is most often idiopathic (i.e. no discernible cause) but it's still Horner's Syndrome when it has the right symptoms, identifiable cause or not.
Cushing's is a syndrome not because it "defines a set of physiological and pathological changes" or qualifies as a syndrome because we understand how it works; That has nothing to do with the medical definition of a syndrome. A syndrome is nothing more than a set of however many symptoms which often coincide and together can (but don't have to) indicate one or more possible underlying causes which is recognized as such by the majority of the medical community.
But really, when it comes down to it, our opinions don't matter. Veterinarians, techs, professors, veterinary pathologists, arachnid-oriented lab scientists and others who have pertinent education and work professionally with inverts say it's a thing. Did you look at the short bios of the people involved in that decision? They are plenty qualified to call it a syndrome. You have no ground to argue with them.
Of course I don't have you blocked. Why would I do that?
I crazy checked myself and looked up the words I used in the ol' Merriam-Webster MEDICAL Dictionary, just to be sure.
Syndrome: "a group of signs and symptoms that occur together and characterize a particular abnormality"
Condition: "(2a) a usually defective state of health"
Disorder: "an abnormal physical or mental condition : ailment"
Secondary: "(1)not first in order of occurrence or development: (2) dependent or consequent on another disease or condition"
Primary: "1a(1) first in order of time or development: b(1) arising spontaneously : idiopathic"
I think part of the problem is that you're confusing disorder and disease, and they are entirely different (but sometimes overlapping) things. As I've said, as far as we know DKS is not a disease.
So yes, I'm very familiar with the correct usage of the words, and I used the words correctly according to a MEDICAL dictionary.
...
And again, the Veterinary Invertebrate Society and the British & Irish Association of Zoos & Aquaiums' Terrestrial Invertebrate Working Group got together and said:
"In October 2014 a meeting of the VIS and BIAZA TIWG confirmed the use of Dyskinesis Syndrome (shortened to DKS) as the official description for such ataxic movements. The use of the word syndrome signifies the lack of knowledge as all we know about the condition is a collection of clinical signs."
... which is the definition of the word "syndrome", and they outright say it is a syndrome. Read it again. And then maybe reread the definitions above, if needed.
And they continue:
".. . causes of such dysfunction are diverse and include, dehydration, infection, intoxication and neuronal injury. Many of these could indeed be causative agents for DKS and it is very likely that further investigation will reveal slightly different pathologies arising from different causes."
which is saying that the syndrome is a secondary condition and the primary cause(s) is(are) as of yet undetermined.
QUOTE="boina, post: 3015245, member: 108127"]@The Grym Reaper Don't fall for the "it has been proven by science" stuff. Feral severely over-interprets the available data.
I haven't read all of it and I won't. I already said I first used a wrong definition of syndrome.
All the rest is just you showing off your "superior" knowledge which is completely irrelevant to the topic at hand.
The point people were trying to make: DKS is not a recognised single disease but a collection of symptoms that can mean anything. You did your best to obscure that, so congratulations.
(Edit: It is generally a good idea to try to understand what people mean instead of hitting them with semantics that are completely irrelevant for the OP. Edit 2: and I'm not looking up the definition of every word I use, just for you, when it's clear to everyone else what I mean.)
Believe me, I've learned not to argue with you - I'm out, as usual you have the thread to yourself.
Don't go to the vet - I've yet to see, or hear of, a single vet that did anything useful to a spider. You are just stressing your spider out and in her current condition that can mean certain death.A little good news.
Another hour and a half has passed and now she is with a raised leg and with the others twitching a bit.
I don't know if is it good or not, but at least she seems more alive than before
Edit: To clarify: Animals with neurological symptoms (including humans) don't react well to further stress. In fact, that further stress may very well be the last straw for the neuronal system to completely overreact and that means the spider dies.
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