Event class: suffered, death, died, stroke, health, life, began, left, suffering, disease
normalize
de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
Benode Behari Mukherjee | Mukherjee was born with severe eye problem, being myopic on one eye and blind in the other, he continued to paint and do murals even after he lost his eyesight completely following an eye operation in 1956. |
Allyn King | In 1927, King almost died after putting herself on a near starvation diet compounded with diet pills in an attempt to maintain the boyish figure in vogue at the time. |
Larry Kelley | His health was visibly failing by then after having suffered a minor stroke and having open-heart surgery, and on June 27, 2000, Kelley died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound at his home in Hightstown, ruled a suicide by the police. |
Adrian Borland | Although it is unclear as to when Borland was diagnosed with his condition, from 1985 onwards the symptoms of his depression became more and more apparent. |
Wiremu Te Awhitu | In 1958 he suffered a severe stroke which left him unable to speak. |
Yasutake Funakoshi | In 1987 he suffered a stroke, which forced him to switch to his left hand for his future art work. |
Aleksandr Vinogradov (writer) | In December 2001 Aleksandr Vinogradov suffered a stroke which had little immediate consequences, with his eyesight and balance only slightly affected. |
Hillel Slovak | He attempted to quit the drug many times, but ultimately succumbed to his addiction, dying of an overdose on June 25, 1988 at age 26. |
Marietta Alboni | In 1863 she had to retire the first time on account of her husband's serious mental illness. |
Charles Ponzi | His eyesight began failing, and by 1948, he was almost completely blind. |
Bayless W. Hanna | Various sources list his affliction as apoplexy and he continued to suffer from its effects until his death August 5, 1891. |
Erik Chopin | In late 2010, Chopin became a life coach and has kept the weight loss he was able to lose. |
Jack Nicholson | On September 4, 2013, reports spread around the internet from various sources claiming that Nicholson was retiring from acting due to memory loss, unable to remember the lines for his scripts. |
Muhammad Ali | Ali's bout with Parkinson's led to a gradual decline in Ali's health though he was still active into the early years of the millennium, even promoting his own biopic, Ali, in 2001. |
Sully Prudhomme | At the end of his life, his poor health (which had troubled him ever since 1870) forced him to live almost as a recluse at Châtenay-Malabry, suffering attacks of paralysis while continuing to work on essays. |
Marylou Whitney | Whitney suffered a stroke in early 2006, which seriously curtailed her activities in Saratoga during the 2006 meet (late July through early September) when traditionally she is a crucial social figure. |
Mary Hay (actress) | Hay divorced again around 1952, about the time she began to suffer from heart disease. |
Frank Elliott (police officer) | By 1931, Elliott's health had begun to fail (he was especially experiencing heart problems) and he retired early. |
V?in? Linna | In 1984, Väinö Linna had a stroke, which caused him to lose the ability to speak. |
Mark Harvey | In 2001 Harvey admitted that he suffered from bulimia for 3 to 4 years of his playing career, after he gained weight following a broken leg. |
Mariah Carey | Before the release of her first feature film Glitter (2001), she suffered a physical and emotional breakdown and was hospitalized for severe exhaustion. |
Robert Ridgway | In early June, 1913, Robert Ridgway and his wife Julia ('' Evvie'') moved to Olney, Illinois, to reduce physical and mental stress so that he might complete The Birds of North and Middle America, of which five of eight parts had already appeared. |
Basil Ede | Following a severe stroke in 1989, Ede was left with his right arm paralysed and taught himself to paint with his left hand instead.'' |
Kate Smith | In January 1986, both of her legs were amputated due to poor circulation caused by diabetes. |
Nicolai Ivanovich Andrusov | In 1919 he learned about the death of his elder son, and suffered a stroke which resulted in paralysis of a leg and an arm. |
Alice Mahon | In 1999, she said : Mahon suffers from age-related macular degeneration (AMD), an eye disease which destroys the central part of the vision in the eye, making the sufferer ultimately blind. |
Dagfinn Enerly | In January 2006 it was reported that Enerly had regained some movement in his arms, but that his legs are still paralyzed, and in December 2006 it was reported that he has regained movement and strength in his left arm, and some in his right arm (able to lift up to 4 kg). |
Angela Bofill | Unfortunately, Bofill suffered another massive stroke in July 2007, which required a long period of therapy and left both her speech and mobility impaired. |
Vladimir Lenin | Upon returning to Saint Petersburg in May 1922, Lenin suffered the first of three strokes, which left him unable to speak for weeks, and severely hampered motion in his right side ; by June, he had substantially recovered. |
Tony Bland | Although Bland survived the initial crush when still only 18 years old, he had suffered severe brain damage and eventually became the disaster's 96th victim on 3 March 1993, aged 22, after being in a coma for nearly four years. |
Chief Yellow Horse | By 1923, news of Yellow Horse's drinking problems reached the Pawnee tribal members in Oklahoma. |
Sheila Chandra | In 2010, Chandra developed Burning Mouth Syndrome which has rendered her unable to sing or even speak, laugh or cry without suffering intense pain, rendering her'' effectively mute''. |
Alfredo Kraus | The loss of his wife in 1997 affected Kraus so deeply that he stopped performing for eight months. |
Roger Edward Kuntz | In 1975, at 49 years of age, he died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, ending a painful period of depression and physical deterioration that had led to paralysis. |
Ronald Melzack | After studying for his Ph. D. in 1954 with D. O. Hebb at McGill University in Montreal, he began to work with patients who suffered from'' phantom limb'' pain -- people who feel pain in an arm or leg that has been removed. |
Felix von Hartmann | In mid-September 1919 Hartmann became ill with shingles on the left side of his head, which led rapidly to the paralysis of the left half of his face. |
Jim Guy Tucker | Tucker had liver problems which seriously debilitated him and threatened his life (he had nearly died from gastro - intestinal bleeding in 1994, and had steadily worsened since). |
Chris Farley | By early 1997, a visible decline in Farley's health was frequently noted in the press. |
Robert Graves | At the age of seven, double pneumonia following measles almost took Graves's life, the first of three occasions when he was given up by his doctors as a result of afflictions of the lungs ; the second being the result of a war-wound (see below), and the third when he contracted Spanish influenza in late 1918 immediately before demobilisation. |
Vidar Theisen | In 2002, Theisen was diagnosed with Parkinsons disease, and thus reduced his workload, devoting his time to faith and family. |
Edward Henry Embley | In 1902 he was able to show'' that heart muscle is very sensitive to chloroform poisoning, that this drug raises the excitability of the vagus, that deaths in the induction stage of anaesthesia are syncopal and unconcerned with respiration, that failure of respiration is mainly due to fall of blood pressure, and that in the post-indication stages of anaesthesia there is a general depression of all activities and no longer syncope through excited vagus action''. |
Alexander Alekhine | About 1933 Reuben Fine noticed that Alekhine was drinking increasing amounts of alcohol. |
Jefferson Davis | Davis' renewed service in the Senate was interrupted in early 1858 by an illness that began as a severe cold and which threatened him with the loss of his left eye. |
Basil King | King began writing in 1900 after he was forced to retire from the clergy due to loss of eyesight and thyroid disease. |
Arthur Balfour | In the past he had suffered from occasional bouts of phlebitis and by late 1929 he was immobilised by it. |
Ch?gyam Trungpa | In 2006 His wife, Diana Mukpo, wrote,'' Although he had many of the classic health problems that develop from heavy drinking, it was in fact more likely the diabetes and high blood pressure that led to abnormal blood sugar levels and then the cardiac arrest''. |
Konstancja G?adkowska | In 1845, Konstancja lost her sight, and despite attempts to treat it was never regained. |
Cassandre (1901?1968) | In his later years, Cassandre suffered from bouts of depression prior to his suicide in Paris in 1968. |
Jennifer Grey | Prior to her 2010 appearances on Dancing with the Stars, Grey had a physical examination to ensure that she was fit enough to compete and saw a doctor to address chronic neck problems caused by the car accident years before. |
Gustave Gilbert | In 1948, as Head Psychologist at the Veterans Hospital at Lyons, Gilbert treated veterans of World Wars I and II who had suffered nervous breakdown s. |
Robert Anton Wilson | Polio's effects remained with Wilson throughout his life, usually manifesting as minor muscle spasms causing him to use a cane occasionally until 2000, when he experienced a major bout with post-polio syndrome that would continue until his death. |
Gerd von Rundstedt | In January 1952 Bila suffered a stroke which left her partially paralyzed, and Rundstedt himself could hardly walk. |
Jock Mahoney | In 1973, he suffered a stroke while filming an episode of Kung Fu, but recovered, though he sometimes had to use a wheelchair thereafter. |
Imogen Bailey | In September 2008 Bailey revealed her traumatic ordeal over her battle with anorexia nervosa in an interview with'' Now'' magazine :'' I went through a minor, but still not very good, anorexic stage and actually got down to less than 40 kg'' Bailey later went for therapy and took up meditation after her family and friends expressed concerns about her health. |
Edwards Pierrepont | According to the New York Times, in late 1889, Pierrepont had suffered a nervous disease that'' deprived him of the use of his limbs''. |
Kim Jong-il | In November 2008, Japan's TBS TV network reported that Kim had suffered a second stroke in October, which'' affected the movement of his left arm and leg and also his ability to speak.'' |
Clara Swain | Accommodating the constant influx of patients, outpatient visits, and the rapidly increasing work eventually took a toll on Swain's physical and mental health, causing her to return to America in March 1876. |
Pavlos Sidiropoulos | In the summer of 1990 and after his mother's death, his left hand started getting paralyzed, as a result of his long term drug use that he was trying to overcome for many years. |
Hideo Yoshino | Suffering from ill health all of his life, Yoshino added diabetes and rheumatism to his ailments before his death in 1967. |
Adam Osborne | In 1992, Osborne returned to India in declining health, suffering from a brain disorder that triggered frequent minor strokes. |
Shayne Corson | During the later stages of his career, Corson began to suffer from panic attacks, a condition that he has not attributed to any single event, but which may have been precipitated by his battles with colitis and the premature death of his father, Paul Corson, from throat cancer in 1993. |
Leon Douglass | In fall 1906, a few months after the birth of his son Eldridge, Douglass had a nervous breakdown followed by other health problems and became unable to work. |
June Hartley | He had previously been left paralyzed and lost his speech and hearing after a series of strokes in 2006. |
Andy Hug | Having divorced his wife Ilona the month before, Andy Hug was in Switzerland in early August 2000 when he suffered more than thirty-nine attacks of high fever and heavy nosebleed ing. |
Josef Hassid | Although originally shy and introverted, Hassid was described as a carefree, likeable young man when he first came to London, but by February 1941 it became apparent that he was suffering from a severe mental disorder characterised by violent mood swings, often becoming sullen and withdrawn, and turning against his violin, his father and his religion. |
Lionel Sackville-West, 6th Baron Sackville | Jacobine died of cancer in 1971, marking the beginning of Sackville-West's self-confessed `` black dog'' of depression from which he would suffer at intervals for the rest of his life. |
Death of Valeriu Boboc | Foreign and national experts determined the death was as a result of injuries caused to Valeriu Boboc and not caused by an unknown, poisoning gas, as was said immediately after the tragedy,'' said the new Prosecutor General Valeriu Zubco in January 2010.'' |
Ethel Snowden | Snowden suffered a severe stroke in 1947 which left her disabled and permanently resident in the Warleigh Nursing Home in Wimbledon, although her mind remained active. |
Herb Aach | In 1979 he was diagnosed with cancer and due to illness he became unable to paint, taking up drawing as his main format. |
William Sargant | But a woman who had been admitted to St Thomas' in 1970 with post-natal depression, and was left with memory loss after treatment with narcosis and electroconvulsive therapy, recalled her experience with anger. |
Aarne Arvonen | He recovered from the inflammation, and his health was good still in 2008, but he had lost his sight and needed a hearing aid. |
Johnny Cash | Cash curtailed his use of drugs for several years in 1968, after a spiritual epiphany in the Nickajack Cave, when he attempted to commit suicide while under the heavy influence of drugs. |
Giuseppe Fiorini | Unfortunately starting from 1925 his sight became weaker and weaker up to become almost blind. |
Stanley Miller | Miller suffered a series of strokes since November 1999 that increasingly inhibited his physical activity. |
Luo Ruiqing | He was hospitalized many times in the following years, and he was forced to have his left leg amputated in 1969. |
Henri Mineur | Following the war he developed bad health around 1950, and suffered heart and liver problems up until his death. |
Auguste Forel | Forel suffered a stroke that paralyzed his right side in 1912, but he taught himself to write with his left hand and was able to continue his studies. |
Mike Pasker | By then, however, Pasker's health was failing, having suffered a stroke and heart problems, and a Circuit Court judge declared him legally incompetent in late 1980. |
Tom?s Carrasquilla | In 1934, surgery gave him back limited vision ; his blindness was not an obstacle to his writing, however, as he began to dictate his works. |
Oscar Peterson | Somewhat later, in 1993, Peterson suffered a serious stroke that weakened his left side and sidelined him for two years. |
Andrzej Ciechanowiecki | In 1995 Ciechanowiecki suffered a severe stroke, which deprived him of the use of his legs. |
Patrice O'Neal | On October 19, 2011, O'Neal reported being unable to move his legs, the first signs of a stroke. |
Carl Salser | He suffered a stroke in September 1991 and thereafter used a wheelchair. |
Al Bowlly | His career also began to suffer as a result of problems with his voice from around 1936, which affected the frequency of his recordings. |
Aleksander Werner | Werner suffered a disabling stroke in 1996 that left him with limited speech and paralyzed down his right side. |
Richard Lyons, 1st Viscount Lyons | While Lyons was on the path to conversion, in November 1887 a serious stroke rendered him both paralysed and incapacitated. |
Robert P. Casey | Despite the transplants, Casey continued to suffer long-term effects of his disease, to which he finally succumbed on May 30, 2000, at the age of 68. |
Joe Biden | In February 1988, after suffering from several episodes of increasingly severe neck pain, Biden was taken by long-distance ambulance to Walter Reed Army Medical Center and given lifesaving surgery to correct an intracranial berry aneurysm that had begun leaking ; the situation was serious enough that a priest had administered last rites at the hospital. |
Brian Wilson | One biographer reported that the actual problem was that Wilson, who had been prescribed massive amounts of psychotropic drugs by Landy's staff since 1983, had developed tardive dyskinesia, a neurological condition marked by involuntary, repetitive movements, that develops in about 20 % of patients treated with anti-psychotic drugs for a long period of time. |
Vladimir Lenin | In March 1923, he suffered the third stroke that rendered him mute and bed-ridden until his death. |
William Gillette | When his father's health began to fail in 1878, William forsook the stage for more than a year to care for his father in his final illness. |
Gary Kubiak | An NFL report on Monday, November 4, 2013 indicated that he had suffered a'' transient ischemic attack'' (a TIA), or relatively brief, non-permanent symptoms of disorientation, confusion, dizziness, forgetfulness, and/or vertigo (among many other possibilities), that occurs when a blood vessel or vessels in part (s) of the brain are temporarily but not permanently blocked, usually by a stationary clot (a thrombus) or one that has broken off and traveled to occlude another area (an embolus). |
Launcelot Fleming | Struck by a rare spinal disorder, which seriously affected both legs, he resigned the see in 1971. |
Camille-Marie Stamaty | png | Louis Moreau Gottschalk </gallery> Stamaty from the age of 19 on suffered from nervous exhaustion, overwork and frequent and severe bouts from what was then called rheumatism. |
Helmut Kohl | In late February 2008, Kohl suffered a stroke in combination with a fall which caused serious head injuries and required his hospitalization, since when he has been reported as bound to a wheelchair due to partial paralysis and with difficulty speaking. |
Evelyn Waugh | Other books published during this period included When The Going Was Good (1946), At 50, Waugh was old for his years,'' selectively deaf, rheumatic, irascible'', increasingly dependent on alcohol and on drugs to relieve his insomnia and depression. |
Bill Bixby | In early 1993, after rumors began circulating about his health, Bixby went public with his illness, discussing his disease and the energy needed to keep him alive. |
John C. Breckinridge | In May 1875, he consulted surgeons Lewis Sayre and Samuel D. Gross, who concluded that his ill health was caused by cirrhosis brought on by injuries to his liver suffered during the war. |
Stephen Furst | After almost needing to have his left foot amputated due to diabetes complications in 1996, Furst reduced his weight from 260 lbs to 175 lbs. |
Hank Johnson | In December 2009, Johnson revealed that he had been battling Hepatitis C (HCV) for over a decade, which resulted in slow speech and a tendency to regularly get'' lost in thought in the middle of a discussion''. |