Lancet Sentence Examples

lancet
  • A tall, narrow lancet toward the east end is of a similar age.

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  • The great glory of the chancel is the triple lancet Holy Trinity window by Dunstan Powell.

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  • The Lancet study was released in the run-up to the November 2004 presidential election.

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  • Below is a copy of a message which I sent to The Lancet in response to the published articles.

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  • Above the door is a double lancet window with quatrefoil tracery.

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  • The king used a small lancet made of stingray spine through the foreskin just behind the head of the penis on the left side.

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  • Puncture is performed quickly with a lancet, avoiding the center of an infant's heel to prevent inflammation of the bone.

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  • A small needle or lancet is used to prick the finger or an alternate site and a small drop of blood is collected on a test strip that is inserted into the monitor.

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  • The heel is then punctured with a lancet, avoiding the center of the heel, in order to prevent inflammation of the bone.

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  • Autism communities all over the world took notice when Dr. Andrew Wakefield, published a study of children afflicted with both autism and gastrointestinal problems in The Lancet, a British medical journal.

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  • In the 1998 Lancet study, Dr. Wakefield studied a group of autistic children who also suffered from a gastrointestinal condition.

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  • The 1998 Lancet study findings were widely publicized and, along with earlier studies that suggested a possible connection between autism and vaccinations, created a worldwide panic.

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  • The Lancet also fully retracted the study from their publication in a February 2, 2010 statement.

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  • There is a significant segment of the autism community that argues that vaccinations are still a possible cause of autism despite the 2009 vaccine court ruling and the discredited 1998 Lancet study, and demand more research into the matter.

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  • Yet, when Dr. Andrew Wakefield published a 1998 study in the British medical journal The Lancet that suggested a link between MMR vaccines and autism, parents around the world began to question the safety of the MMR vaccine.

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  • The GMC ruling in January 28, 2010 discredited the Wakefield study results and The Lancet fully retracted the study from the journal in a February 2, 2010 statement.

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  • The discredit of the 1998 Wakefield Lancet study has now become a popular example in the argument against a connection between autism and vaccines, especially the MMR vaccine.

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  • Dr. Andrew Wakefield's high profile autism vaccine study retracted by The Lancet in 2010 remains a controversial issue in the autism vaccine debate.

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  • The study was published in The Lancet, an internationally renowned British medical journal.

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  • After the GMC discredited Wakefield's study, The Lancet fully retracted the study.

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  • Despite the GMC rulings and The Lancet's retraction, Wakefield stands by his study.

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  • The Lancet has retracted the study, and 10 authors listed on the publication withdrew their support.

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  • After Wakefield's study was published in the Lancet in 1998, a campaign reeling against vaccines began, and many parents continue to deliberately avoid getting their children vaccinated against preventable diseases.

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  • In the remarkable salamander Autodax, the teeth in the jaws are compressed, sharp-edged, lancet shaped.

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  • Decorated headstone, simple lancet curved top, with carved border, central carved crucifix with flowers and leaves at the base.

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  • To view these or follow the links here requires registration with The Lancet, which can be done by following the link above.

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  • Journals We are very pleased that the Lancet has joined the growing number of journals which support the use of approved nomenclature.

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  • An editorial in the Lancet, linked to a review of asthma phenotypes, calls for the abolition of the term asthma.

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  • In England, by the boldness of the Lancet (founded in 182 3), the tyranny of prescription, inveterate custom, and privilege abused was defied and broken down; freedom of learning was regained, and promotion thrown open to the competent, independently of family, gild and professional status.

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  • Their findings, published in the June, 2003 issue of The Lancet journal, do not support the continued use of vitamin E supplementation nor the inclusion of vitamin E in further studies.

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  • The foot is then sterilized with an alcohol swab and a lancet is used to puncture the baby's heel on one side, avoiding the center of the heel to prevent inflammation of the bone.

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  • A small needle or lancet is used to prick the finger or alternate site and a drop of blood is collected on a test strip that is inserted into a monitor.

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  • Nave (north wall) of 3 bays with buttresses, bracketed eaves, coupled lancet windows; there is a basement entrance below.

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  • The rebuilt church incorporates some features of the earlier structures, including the 17th century belfry and a 13th century lancet window.

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  • The Stromateidae, or pomfrets, resemble the dory, a Mediterranean form, and extend to China and the Pacific. The sword fishes, Xiphiidae, the lancet fishes, Acanthuridae, and the scabbard fishes, Trichuridae, are distributed through the seas of south Asia.

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  • The Early English style is on the whole less well exemplified in the county, but Ashbourne church, with its central tower and lofty spire, contains beautiful details of this period, notably the lancet windows in the Cockayne chapel.

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  • The old church of Mortlach, though restored and almost renewed, still contains some lancet windows and a round-headed doorway, besides monuments dating from 1417.

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  • He was also the author of many papers on general statistics and on life-tables for insurance, some read before the Royal Statistical Society, of which he was president in 1871 and 1872, some contributed to the Lancet and other periodicals.

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