The characteristic barking cough of croup is uncommon in epiglottitis and, in cases of croup, the epiglottis is not as inflamed and edematous. |
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She wrote about the inflamed irises in her eyes and the vision problems that have resulted, including floaters. |
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The most common sign of food allergy is inflamed, itchy skin, usually around a pet's feet, face, ears, armpits, and groin. |
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Sucking of lozenges and pastilles produces saliva which lubricates and soothes inflamed tissues and washes infecting organisms off them. |
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Local hospitals treated dozens of inflamed tendons and burst blood vessels. |
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Each of these long tendons has a lubricated synovial sheath, which can become inflamed and painful in the condition of tenosynovitis. |
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They masterfully inflamed the crowd's anger by suggesting that city officials were willfully withholding information about the shooting. |
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As for athletic shoes, opt for a pair with a wider toe box, since taking pressure off the inflamed area typically alleviates the discomfort. |
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Dramatic decreases are believed to occur when tissues under the tongues of green frogs become inflamed and are sloughed. |
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These greyish, shallow erosions in the surface of the tongue and cheeks are inflamed and painful, especially when you eat hot, spicy food. |
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The animals became ill and lost weight as multiple regions of their digestive tracts became inflamed. |
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Yet passions will be inflamed in this instance, and complete transparency of the process is required. |
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The use of sialogogues in an obstructed or acutely inflamed gland may actually temporarily increase the amount of pain. |
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This folk remedy has not been well studied, but it appears to work because it contains mucilage, sugar molecules that soothe inflamed membranes. |
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In addition, cool mist moistens secretions, soothes inflamed mucosa, and decreases the viscosity of mucous secretions. |
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Colonic mucosal biopsies of tissue from CD patients found abnormally low levels of zinc from uninflamed but not from inflamed tissue. |
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This type of acne is more common in males and is characterised by multiple inflamed and uninflamed nodules and scars. |
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Treatment or lack of treatment had no influence on whether the cyst was inflamed or uninflamed. |
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He said those who snorted the drug often suffered nosebleeds because blood vessels in the nostrils were inflamed by the powder. |
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A severely inflamed pulp will eventually necrose, causing apical periodontitis, which is inflammation around the apex of the tooth. |
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Hot showers, a humidifier, and gargling with warm saltwater aid drainage, shrink inflamed membranes and soothe sore-throat pain. |
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So, the member is sick in the sense that the bronchia are becoming inflamed due to no medication stopping the mucous production. |
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When a young child's airway becomes inflamed, it may swell around the vocal cords, making it harder to breathe. |
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If you overuse your voice when the vocal cords are inflamed, it may make the inflammation worse and take longer for your normal voice to return. |
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Lateral to the inferior medial border of the scapula is a bursa that can become inflamed. |
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Topical agents such as petrolatum provide an occlusive film over inflamed skin, decrease fissuring, and reduce evaporation. |
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A sty is a small, inflamed swelling of a sebaceous gland on the rim of an eyelid. |
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The inflamed joint lining, the synovium, can invade and damage bone and cartilage. |
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The salve can also be applied to all inflamed joints and painful parts of the body. |
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As the rectal suppositories melt, the medication soothes the inflamed area, providing symptomatic relief and promoting healing. |
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Other parts of the body such as the pancreas and thyroid may also be inflamed, which can be painful. |
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Occasionally, an inflamed pancreas or duodenum can cause pain in this area as well. |
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They can become injured and pathologically enlarged and inflamed, either acutely or as a result of chronic repetitive micro-trauma. |
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Pain in degenerative bone and joint disease is usually said to be due to inflamed periarticular soft tissues. |
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C Difficile is an infection in the intestine which causes diarrhoea and colitis, an inflamed colon. |
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This obstruction leads to the formation of comedones, which can become inflamed because of overgrowth of Propionibacterium acnes. |
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As inflamed Guatemalans see it, foreign investors will fatten up on tourist dollars while locals will be stuck cleaning hotel rooms. |
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If lice infest the eyebrows or eyelashes, the eyes may also become inflamed. |
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The fall of New Orleans in April 1862, combined with the Federal threat against Mobile, inflamed public passions. |
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The casual way in which Monica was dropped to the ground inflamed Michael's anger once more. |
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On the particular issue of the islands, feelings are inflamed on both sides. |
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They have inflamed the feelings of Chinese victims by seeking to deny their responsibility for outrages such as the Rape of Nanking. |
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I am rarely inflamed to such an extent as I was this morning reading this news report. |
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But he was so inflamed when he spoke of it, like he is about everything in fact. |
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Political leaders on all sides had inflamed the situation, creating a momentum that they could no longer control let alone quell. |
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You should take plenty of rest periods when your joints are inflamed and you are in pain. |
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Some children also inhale these contents into the lungs, where they can make inflamed airways even more swollen. |
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Rubbing against the joint sometimes causes this sac to become inflamed, swollen and sore. |
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If many of your joints are inflamed, your doctor may prescribe oral corticosteroids, such as prednisone. |
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If you have arthritis, inflamed joints can turn these minor inconveniences into painful struggles. |
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It is possible that when BAL is performed in an infected or inflamed area in infants, more pyrogenic cytokines are released. |
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The doctor diagnosed my knee as having minor cartilage damage, yet the arthroscopic surgery only inflamed the joint. |
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This is caused by infected and inflamed diverticula perforating or rupturing. |
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Biopsy of the wall of the mucocoele taken at the time of surgery showed chronically inflamed respiratory mucosa. |
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During pregnancy, your gums are more likely to become inflamed or infected. |
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Plus there's the ingrown hair and stuff like inflamed follicles that may come if it's left without maintenance. |
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This feature prevents the conflagrant friction that is known to produce inflamed areas of the foot. |
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Psoriasis usually appears as red or inflamed patches of skin which are covered in a silver or white scale. |
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An elbow pad may be used to avoid direct pressure on an inflamed, irritable nerve. |
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Without the protection of the eyelid, the inside of the eyelid and the surface of your eye may become dry, irritated and inflamed. |
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This constant backwash of acid can irritate the lining of your esophagus, causing it to be irritated and inflamed. |
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The hawking is very irritating to the inflamed throat and is often the reason the symptoms persist. |
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There was a strange, inflamed, flurried, flighty recklessness of activity about him. |
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Commonly the skin around the ankles is affected, becoming speckled, itchy and inflamed. |
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In children with croup, viral infection causes this area to become inflamed and edematous, which can lead to obstruction. |
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They are experienced enough to know how timing and careful selection of language can add fuel to inflamed prejudices. |
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His words inflamed, and helped fuel the violent unrest of the days to come, an ugly venting of accumulated African rage. |
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People like to be inflamed, get their dander up, and the problem is, it's too easy. |
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It was the brilliant flow of ideas exhibited by a mind in the inflamed state of activity which is often prelusive of actual delirium. |
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Pregnant women should be evaluated for cavities, poor oral hygiene, inflamed gingiva, and loose teeth, as well as frequency of sugar consumption. |
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The skin can crack, becoming red and inflamed and leaving it prone to infection. |
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If the pupil is not dilated, the inflamed iris will stick to the lens, which can lead to scarring. |
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A biopsy specimen of the inflamed area showed nonspecific ulcer and granulation tissue. |
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Sunlight seems to stop growth of the yeast organism that causes affected areas to become inflamed. |
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These drugs reduce the production of stomach acid to allow the inflamed gullet to heal. |
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These powerful immune-suppressing salves have become popular for hard-to-treat eczema, a condition characterized by red, itchy, inflamed skin. |
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The lining of the mouth can become inflamed and ulcers might form during chemotherapy and radiation therapy. |
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Treatment may vary from rest and splints for acutely inflamed joints, to medications that can reduce inflammation. |
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Cortisone remarkably relieved inflamed, swollen joints after just a few days of use. |
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She was diagnosed with a rare condition that inflamed her liver at just six weeks old. |
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The classic pathways of complement and kinins are activated and attract the inflamed cells. |
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A form of arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis causes the joints and ligaments in the spine to become inflamed. |
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My mouth and tongue are severely inflamed and a biopsy has diagnosed lichen planus. |
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Appendicitis is treated by removing the inflamed appendix through an appendectomy. |
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The appendix in man is medically important because of its propensity to become inflamed in the condition known as acute appendicitis. |
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Allergies and colds can cause the membrane that lines your middle ear to become inflamed and overproduce mucus. |
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But will adding the real military defuse a situation many say has been inflamed by aggressive police? |
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The Brawley case inflamed racial tensions in America and left victims like the falsely accused Pagones in its wake. |
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An earache in a child with a perfectly normal exam is more difficult to figure out than one with a bulging and inflamed eardrum. |
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In some cases, inflamed lymph nodes may be a sign of more serious diseases, such as tuberculosis, rabbit fever, cat scratch disease and sexually transmitted diseases. |
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We ritualize this process to make sure we don't allow the grief of great tragedies to blind us with mob fury, inflamed judgments and uninformed reasoning. |
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With her racy magazine cover, Pakistani actress veena Malik has inflamed her homeland. |
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Patients should be referred promptly, as the medical treatment of thyroid eye disease is more likely to be effective when given while the eye tissue is acutely inflamed. |
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You may need to use a topical corticosteroid to treat inflamed areas. |
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The use of high-resolution transducers and graded compression make it possible to visualize directly an acutely inflamed appendix in patients of any age. |
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I don't find, as I go around Australia, that people are inflamed. |
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Noticing her fast stride with his calm footsteps inflamed her. |
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It is a language which invites the mind to rebel against itself causing inflamed ideas grotesque postures and a theoretical approach to common body functions. |
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A leaky gut is a condition in which the small intestine wall becomes inflamed and breached with tiny pinholes that leak putrid food particles into the blood stream. |
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Other reports of Dinka being dumped in a mass grave in the rebel-controlled oil town of Bentiu have further inflamed tensions. |
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The last conflict between Britain and the USA began when the British blockade of Napoleonic Europe and naval impressment of American sailors inflamed relations. |
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In children who develop asthma, the airways become irritated and inflamed. |
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That suspicion has been inflamed by infuriating inconsistency. |
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As a bunion progresses the joint of the toe that it is impacted can become inflamed and enlarged causing pain and ultimately causing the foot to become deformed. |
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Instead, the minister's comments seem to have inflamed the situation. |
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If they do, steer clear of foods like crispbreads, muesli and nuts which scrape over inflamed areas, and avoid hot spices, chillies and any strong flavours. |
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Arthritis can cause your joints to become inflamed and painful. |
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Prior to this Claudius Amyand, physician to Queen Anne, in 1736 successfully removed an acutely inflamed appendix from inside the hernial sac of a young boy. |
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Perhaps the best-known nerve is the sciatic nerve, which when inflamed or under pressure causes pain, tenderness, and weakness in the back of the leg. |
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Tennis elbow happens when one or more of these tendons become inflamed. |
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When part of your body is inflamed, it is red, hot and sore. |
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We saw how such provocative actions only inflamed passions and escalated the unrest. |
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It can be made into a salve or the tincture can be painted on boils, felons, carbuncles, abscesses, inflamed acne, cellulitis and other local inflammations. |
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There is no heat and fire in the characteristics of Saturn, no burning passion or inflamed desire, its movement is deliberate, steady and predictable. |
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The initiation of the neoplastic process could be caused by some biochemical substances produced during metabolism in chronically inflamed tissues. |
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The shadow engulfed figure's face illuminated as he inflamed a lighter. |
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Meningitis is caused when the membranes covering the brain and spinal cord become infected and inflamed, which can be a consequence of blood poisoning. |
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She knew that she would present for him if only he asked, and the knowledge humiliated her but further inflamed her, and yet he just kept looking in her eyes. |
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So that just inflamed me even further because first of all Pol will never do something like that and secondly it was definitely not anybody I knew. |
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The airways also become inflamed with swelling of the bronchial mucous membrane and secretion of excessive thick mucus that is difficult to expel. |
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This means the bile ducts, which collect bile from the liver and transport it to the bowel, become inflamed, scarred and narrow. |
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Skin over the breast appears acutely inflamed and swollen because skin lymph vessels are blocked by cancer. |
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The situation was further inflamed by the publication of a memorandum on future prospects in the war by Lord Lansdowne. |
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The inflamed appendical wall appears hypointense on T1W and hyperintense on T2W images. |
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Leaving plaque along the gumline leaves gums swollen and inflamed and apt to bleed. |
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In 1985, she was the unsung star of Live Aid, and on her first album in decades she is righteously inflamed and funkier than a ferret on heat. |
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The more inflamed, aggressive, and metabolically active the tissue, the more likely it will be seen on a thermogram, by a trained interpreter. |
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When the ears are infected the eustachian tubes become inflamed and swollen. |
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Kennel cough is currently rife but a tracheal pinch test fails to elicit the classic cough that an inflamed windpipe causes. |
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The copycatting simultaneously delighted and inflamed Townshend. |
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The nodules frequently are inflamed or necrotic but usually heal spontaneously within a few weeks, leaving a slightly raised, gray, furless scar. |
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The herbal compound also contains Corn silk, a soothing demulcent on inflamed tissue and Couch grass, a tissue healer. |
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On the CT, the cecum was found in the epigastric region, along with an inflamed appendix. |
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Laminitis happens when the laminae become inflamed and the hoof and pedal bone start to detach. |
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Bilateral thoracoscopy revealed empyema with loculations with beefy, inflamed, thick-walled visceral and parietal pleurae. |
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If an inflamed diverticulum bursts, an abscess may form next to the colon or peritonitis may develop. |
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This, in conjunction with the new slaves that were being imported from abroad, inflamed the unemployment situation further. |
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Clayton A Cats can develop red and inflamed gums, and ulcers on the tongue, with a condition called gingivostomatitis. |
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A Morton's neuroma is an inflamed nerve that causes pain in the sole of the foot, usually between the third and fourth toes. |
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Years of bad harvests leading up to the Revolution also inflamed popular resentment of the privileges enjoyed by the clergy and the aristocracy. |
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Neither of these territories were covered by Amiens, but they inflamed tensions significantly. |
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His tuberculosis infection caused other health problems including respiratory difficulties, high fevers, inflamed eyes, and abdominal pain. |
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Like Dionysus, who inflamed the maenads, Poseidon also caused certain forms of mental disturbance. |
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They implanted desires for need-nots and luxuries, and unscrupulously inflamed them. |
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An inflamed mob quickly destroyed the altars in the kirk, and attacked the Houses of the Greyfriars and Blackfriars, and the Carthusian Priory. |
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Pleurisy usually causes pain, which is made worse by deep breathing, since the two inflamed layers of the pleura rub against each other. |
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Bacteria from this reservoir of infection in the mouth readily enter the blood through the inflamed gingivae and may spread to other organs, commonly the heart and kidneys. |
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In the last 12 months Ryder has had surgery on his abdominal wall, and has suffered an inflamed shoulder, a calf strain, an injured elbow and a finger injury. |
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Kobe Bryant played through the injured shoulder and the inflamed elbow, the deformed pinkie, the achy knee and the two bad ankles, but his body finally gave out this weekend. |
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Osteochondral information will be provided by high-frequency US while OA imaging will allow the high-sensitivity imaging of microvasculature in inflamed tissue. |
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No one really knows what causes styes, but they may complicate seborrhoeic dermatitis, a condition in which the sebaceous glands in hair follicles are inflamed. |
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In September 2000 General Guei, who had inflamed the anti-northern atmosphere by attacking believers in democracy as xenophilous, escaped an assassination attempt. |
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Mindful of tensions afoot, driving through the heart of the country, he gets a crash course in Balkanized American politics and an irritated public inflamed by talk radio. |
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An attempt to reimplant the vertebral artery to the polytetrafluoroethylene graft was also unsuccessful, as the artery was very inflamed and friable. |
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In June 2014, an inflamed public argument arose between Home Office and Education Ministers about responsibility for alleged extremism in Birmingham schools. |
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She's a middle-aged, obese woman with genu varus malalignment, a swollen inflamed joint, and an elevated high-sensitivity C-reactive protein level. |
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First, your dentist and dental hygienist will look at your gums to see if they are red, swollen and inflamed and will check for tartar beneath the gum line. |
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If you have asthma, the bronchi will be inflamed and more sensitive. |
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The first sign is mild itchiness of the skin, just above the ankle, which then becomes speckled, scaly, inflamed and itchy and I lesions may develop. |
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During an attack, inflamed airways constrict, obstructing air flow. |
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