Kawasaki Sentence Examples

kawasaki
  • To partly compensate we seconded a Japanese research fellow from Kawasaki within our research team meetings.

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  • Next up comes a big fanks to Paul from Kawasaki who sorted me out with a smart seat cowl.

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  • From youth motocross to British Enduro, Kawasaki has been showing the world just what the KX range is capable of.

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  • Ryan Farquhar on the MSS Discovery Kawasaki was the early leader, but retired as the bike was proving unstable at high speeds.

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  • Jett Travolta was reportedly suffering from Kawasaki disease, a disease that affects the lymph nodes, skin and mouth.

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  • Though there is no one test to determine whether a person has Kawasaki disease, doctors generally make the diagnosis by evaluating the patient and ruling out other diseases such as the measles and Scarlet fever.

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  • Left untreated, Kawasaki disease leads to further complications of the heart and cardiovascular system.

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  • Sarah Palin eyewear is made by famed designer Kazuo Kawasaki.

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  • If you want to know why those glasses look so good, it's because Kawasaki, an award winning industrial designer, creates looks that are artistic, but precise.

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  • Sarah Palin's eyewear is from Kazuo Kawasaki's 704 series in 34 gray.

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  • The Kawasaki look that Palin wears starts at a base price of around $250.00, but it can go up as high as $700.00.

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  • The most common childhood vasculitides are Kawasaki syndrome (sometimes called Kawasaki disease) and Henoch-Schönlein purpura.

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  • This category includes infantile polyarteritis nodosa (IPAN) and Kawasaki disease.

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  • In addition, Kawasaki disease sometimes occurs in epidemics, such as those reported in Japan in 1979, 1982, and 1985.

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  • Kawasaki disease affects between one and three children per 10,000 in the United States each year.

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  • In the United States, Kawasaki disease is more common among children of Japanese descent than among children from other racial or ethnic backgrounds.

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  • Kawasaki disease is primarily a disease of younger children; the average age at onset is 18 months, with 80 percent of cases found in children younger than five years.

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  • Like Kawasaki disease, IPAN is more common in children of Asian descent.

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  • It is thought that an infectious organism of some kind is the cause of Kawasaki disease, although no specific virus or bacterium has been identified as of 2004.

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  • As with Kawasaki disease, various infectious organisms have been proposed as the cause of IPAN, including hepatitis B virus, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), various retroviruses, streptococci, and even a virus usually found in cats.

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  • As of the early 2000s, Kawasaki disease is the leading cause of acquired heart problems for children in the developed countries.

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  • Kawasaki syndrome-A syndrome of unknown origin that affects the skin, mucous membranes, and the immune system of infants and young children.

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  • Kawasaki syndrome is a potentially fatal inflammatory disease that affects several organ systems in the body, including the heart, circulatory system, mucous membranes, skin, and immune system.

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  • In the 1960s, Tomisaku Kawasaki noted a characteristic cluster of symptoms in Japanese schoolchildren.

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  • Ultimately named for Kawasaki, the disorder was subsequently found worldwide.

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  • Kawasaki syndrome, also called mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome (MLNS), is an inflammatory disorder with potentially fatal complications affecting the heart and its larger arteries.

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  • Kawasaki syndrome occurs primarily in infants and children; about 80 percent of diagnosed patients are under the age of five.

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  • The specific cause of Kawasaki syndrome was as of 2004 unknown, although the disease resembles an infectious illness in many ways.

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  • It has been suggested that Kawasaki syndrome represents an allergic reaction or other unusual response to certain types of infections.

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  • About 20 percent of patients with Kawasaki syndrome develop complications of the cardiovascular system.

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  • Because Kawasaki syndrome is primarily a disease of infants and young children, the disease is most likely to be diagnosed by a pediatrician.

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  • Kawasaki syndrome is usually treated with a combination of aspirin, to control the patient's fever and skin inflammation, and high doses of intravenous immune globulin to reduce the possibility of coronary artery complications.

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  • Most patients with Kawasaki syndrome will recover completely, but about 1-2 percent die as a result of blood clots forming in the coronary arteries or as a result of a heart attack.

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  • It is important that parents of children diagnosed with Kawasaki syndrome follow recommended treatments and follow-up care for the disease, because of the risk of potentially serious complications.

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  • Exanthem-A skin eruption associated with a disease, usually one accompanied by fever as in Kawasaki syndrome.

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  • A good challenge will be to learn how to make origami roses, especially the well-known Kawasaki design.

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  • In the 1990s, Toshikazu Kawasaki used the twist technique to create his own "Kawasaki Rose," a model that makes a major impression when done right.

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  • For example, the "New Kawasaki Rose" is an angled rose that looks truly realistic, with soft petals curled at their edges.

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  • The Kawasaki rose is perhaps one of the most famous and difficult versions available.

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  • While the Kawasaki rose may be one of the most famous, it is possible to find plenty of other origami rose instructions if you don't want to master the advanced design.

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  • Japanese origami theorist and mathematics professor Toshikazu Kawasaki is credited with designing several folded paper roses.

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  • Kawasaki's rose was diagramed in 1994 and is now one of the most popular origami shapes.

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  • From easy tissue paper flowers to the complicated Kawasaki rose, learning to fold flowers is a rite of passage for origami folders.

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  • The young man questions the validity of this, even of the "twitterlebrities" (caricatures of Warren Ellis and Guy Kawasaki are featured) and suggests that none of the twitterers actually have any friends.

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  • This scarcity, according to business expert Guy Kawasaki, is part of what makes each LinkedIn connection so valuable.

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