Amputees Psychology -- See Also the narrower term Phantom limb
Here are entered works on the sensation that an amputated limb is still present as well as works specifically on pain or discomfort experienced in the phantom limb
ʻAmr, Sāmī, 1924-1998 -- Diaries : A young Palestinian's diary, 1941-1945 : the life of Sāmī ʻAmr / translated, annotated, and with an introduction by Kimberly Katz ; foreword by Salim Tamari
Indiens -- Am̌rique du Nord -- Traiťs, 1701. : The Great Peace of Montreal of 1701 : French-native diplomacy in the seventeenth century / Gilles Havard ; translated by Phyllis Aronoff and Howard Scott
A syndrome characterized by growth retardation, severe MENTAL RETARDATION, short stature, a low-pitched growling cry, brachycephaly, low-set ears, webbed neck, carp mouth, depressed nasal bridge, bushy eyebrows meeting at the midline, hirsutism, and malformations of the hands. The condition may occur sporadically or be associated with an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance or duplication of the long arm of chromosome 3. (Menkes, Textbook of Child Neurology, 5th ed, p231)