Foreign-bodies Sentence Examples

foreign-bodies
  • The most constantly occurring changes that beset a plant are connected with illumination, temperature, moisture, and contact with foreign bodies.

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  • Within the cytoplasm are found manifestations of functional activity, in the form of digestive vacuoles, granules, fat, glycogen, pigment, and foreign bodies.

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  • Thus the dimensions of the largest glass tanks greatly exceed those of the largest steel furnaces; glass furnaces containing up to 250 tons of molten sible to work glass-tanks continuously for many months together; on the other hand, glass is not readily freed from foreign bodies that may become admixed with it, so that the absence of detachable particles is much more essential in glass than in steel melting.

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  • In the same way, the reflex act of coughing is useful in removing either foreign bodies or excessive secretion from the air passages; but when the mucous membrane of the respiratory tract is irritated and inflamed, it produces a feeling of tickling and a desire to cough sometimes very violently; yet the coughing simply tends to exhaust the patient, because there is really little or nothing to bring up. The same is the case in inflammation of the lung substance itself.

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  • Similarly, the ' other ' procedures i.e. removal of foreign bodies and nasal cautery.

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  • Special deposits of the nacreous matter around foreign bodies form pearls, the foreign nucleus being usually of parasitic origin (see Pearl).

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  • It also draws increased blood flow to the area it is applied, causing infection, foreign bodies and toxins to rise to the surface.

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  • The eyelids are everted (turned out) to check for any foreign bodies.

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  • Other testing, such as x rays, must be done to rule out foreign bodies inside the eye.

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  • They are a painless, non-invasive way to help diagnose problems such as broken bones, tumors, dental decay, and the presence of foreign bodies.

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  • The doctor will usually have the patient sit upright or lie on one side and will remove blood clots, broken teeth, vomitus, or other foreign bodies from the nose or throat.

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  • One Japanese study of children brought to the emergency room for removal of foreign bodies from the respiratory and digestive tracts found that the nose was the most common location (39.4% of patients) of these objects.

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  • The doctor will usually have the child sit upright or lie on one side, and will remove blood clots, broken teeth, or other foreign bodies from the nose or throat.

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  • X rays may be required either to assess alignment of fingertip phalanx fractures or to detect presence of foreign bodies.

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  • Mechanical obstruction can also result from hernias, fecal impaction, abnormal tissue growth, the presence of foreign bodies in the intestines, or inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's disease).

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  • This happens when the bowel twists on itself (volvulus) or as the result of hernias, impacted feces, abnormal tissue growth, or the presence of foreign bodies in the intestines.

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  • In addition, foreign bodies may be driven into the face or other parts of the body by the force of a collision or explosion.

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  • Swallowing of foreign bodies is a fairly common pediatric emergency; about 80,000 cases involving persons 19 years old or younger are reported each year to the 67 poison control centers in the United States.

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  • The highest incidence of swallowed foreign bodies is in children between the ages of six months and four years.

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  • Among teenagers, however, males are at a much higher risk than females of swallowing foreign bodies or inserting them into the rectum.

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  • Adolescents, however, are more likely to swallow or insert foreign bodies intentionally as a risk-taking behavior, a bid for attention, or under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

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  • A small minority of teenagers who harm themselves by swallowing or inserting foreign bodies suffer from schizophrenia or another psychotic disorder.

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  • Pain, hearing loss, and a feeling of fullness in the ear are symptoms of foreign bodies in the ears.

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  • A smelly or bloody discharge from one nostril is a symptom of foreign bodies in the nose.

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  • Most foreign bodies swallowed by small children are radiopaque, which means that they show up on a standard x ray.

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  • With regard to foreign bodies in the digestive tract, between 80 percent and 90 percent pass through without incident; 10-20 percent can be removed with an endoscope; and fewer than 1 percent require surgical removal.

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  • Parental concerns in younger children should be directed toward the prevention of accidental swallowing or ingestion of foreign bodies.

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  • Appendicitis can also be caused by foreign bodies (e.g., intrauterine device or something swallowed), traumatic abdominal injury, or tumors.

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  • Sensitization means that the mother's body becomes aware of foreign bodies in her system and starts producing antibodies against this 'foreign' intruder (the baby).

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