-plegia, -pleg, -plegic, -plegy, plego-, pleg-

(Greek: stroke, blow, strike; paralysis)

glossoplegia
Paralysis of the tongue; usually, unilateral, which may result from cerebral hemorrhage, disease, or injury that involves the hypoglossal nerve.
glossoplegic
A reference to paralysis of the tongue.
hemiplegia
hemiplegic
hysterical paralysis, paraplegia
Muscle weakness, or paralysis, without loss of reflex activity, in which no organic lesion can be demonstrated.
internal ophthalmoplegia, ophthalmoplegia interna
Paralysis affecting only the sphincter muscle (ringlike band of muscle fibers) of the eye pupil and the ciliary muscle (smooth muscle).
isthmoplegia, isthmoparalysis
Facial paralysis or paralysis of the velum pendulum palati (soft palate at the roof of the mouth) and the muscles forming the anterior pillars of the fauces (narrow passage from the mouth to the pharynx, situated between the soft palate and the base of the tongue).
laloplegia
The inability to speak because of paralysis of speech muscles other than the tongue muscles.
laloplegic
laryngoplegia
Paralysis of the laryngeal muscles.
logoplegia
Any paralysis of the speech organs.
monoplegia
1. The inability to move a single limb or a single group of muscles.
2. Paralysis of a limb.
monoplegic
A reference to or characterized by monoplegia.
ophthalmoplegia
1. Paralysis of the motor nerves of the eye.
2. Paralysis of the ocular muscles, innervated by the oculomotor nerves.
palatoplegia
Paralysis of muscles of the soft palate.