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Ken·ne·dy's disease

also  Ken*ne*dy disease  n :  a progressive muscular and neurological disorder that is characterized esp. by muscular weakness and atrophy and by neural degeneration, that is inherited as an X-linked recessive trait, and that chiefly affects adult males - called also spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy 
 
Kennedy, William Robert (b 1927),
American neurologist. Kennedy enjoyed a long association with the University of Minnesota's medical center in Minneapolis, rising to rank of professor of neurology. His major area of research was neuromuscular disorders. The neuromuscular disorder that bears his name was described in an article published in 1980 that he coauthored with M. Alter and J. H. Sung.
 
 
 
Similar sounding terms:  can·di·di·a·sis 

 
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