Ian can barely breathe, his lungs are so heavy and his stomach painfully tight. |
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All victims are suffering varying degrees of burns to their skin, lungs and windpipes, caused by inhaling hot gases. |
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We cannot replace a pair of lungs, or a windpipe as we would material things in our homes. |
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In primates the larynx is located high up in the windpipe and prevents solids and liquids from entering the lungs. |
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They each had their own head, arms, legs, brain, heart, lungs, kidneys and liver. |
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Treatment must be rapid to protect organs such as the kidneys, lungs, and liver from damage. |
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In addition, waste materials cannot be transported properly to the lungs and kidneys for excretion. |
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Bronchial asthma is a respiratory system condition in which the air tubes to the lungs become especially vulnerable to constriction. |
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We won't choke to death when we open our mouths to suck air into our lungs. |
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The pounding of the feet thunders so loud in the boy's ears that he can't even hear the desperate panting of his own lungs. |
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He was burned down his right arm and hand, on the back of his head and his back, but he escaped without smoke damage to his lungs. |
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Over the ensuing 2-year period, the tumor recurred in the neck and metastasized to the lungs, skin, and bone. |
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But I still have that feeling of suffocation, that my lungs are clawing at the air for a breath. |
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The red blood cells circulate in the blood and carry the oxygen from the lungs to the various cells in the body. |
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She screamed at the top of her lungs and bashed her head into the pillar as hard as she could. |
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The major role of red cells is to transfer oxygen from the lungs to the tissues. |
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Scientists also suspect that air pollutants might dampen the growth of alveoli, tiny air sacs in the lungs. |
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As we spray and sprinkle, acrid smoke fills our eyes and heat sears our lungs. |
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He found a major cause of bronchial asthma and many other chronic diseases to be a deficiency of carbon dioxide in the alveolus of our lungs. |
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Note that it is the amount of carbon dioxide in alveolar air in the lungs that has to be measured in evaluating the state of health. |
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Pneumocystis carinii is a parasitic, sometimes pathogenic, yeast-like fungus found in the lungs of laboratory rats. |
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Rounding the corner behind it raced Emily, flapping her arms and screeching at the top of her lungs. |
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Even more important, why can't we regenerate tissue to repair damaged organs like our heart or lungs? |
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If allergens in the air are an asthma trigger, pollutants can make the lungs even more sensitive to them. |
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He jumps two feet in the air, screeching at the top of his lungs, arms flailing. |
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But before they could make any other moves, someone screamed at the top of their lungs. |
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Sea turtles are marine reptile living in salt water but have lungs and they come to the surface to breathe air. |
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Essential oils contain many terpenes, which are rapidly absorbed through the lungs and cross the blood-brain barrier. |
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The heat scorched at her hair and the smoke burned her lungs after every breath. |
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What this does is save your virgin lungs for the long haul, because you can't bail out of a hotbox without getting the aforementioned teasing. |
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Imagine having air forced into your lungs when you have a bad chest infection? |
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In that moment he could scarcely breathe, and yet the air was filling his lungs like an inflated balloon, stretching them painfully. |
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These babies develop fluid in the lungs, scarring and lung damage, which can be seen on an X-ray. |
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Sometimes called chronic lung disease or CLD, it's a disease in infants characterized by inflammation and scarring in the lungs. |
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My lungs are so badly scarred that the smallest irritant can cause me to have trouble breathing. |
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An isotope of the rare element technetium, denoted Tc, is widely used to form images of the heart, brain, lungs, spleen, and other organs. |
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Health because they are recking their body, through destroying their lungs, taste buds and depriving their brain of oxygen. |
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My lungs, dry like sandpaper from all the smoke, craved the saturated Washington air. |
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Cannabis deposited four times as much tar on lungs as tobacco and could, if used regularly, cause cancer. |
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The lungs are involved in more than 90 percent of patients, with sarcoid usually presenting as interstitial disease. |
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Everyone was sleeping soundly until they awoke with me yelling at the top of my lungs in pain. |
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These organisms can produce localized disease in the lungs, lymph glands, skin, wounds or bone. |
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Tuberculosis is caused by one of three bacteria, and most commonly affects the lungs and the lymph glands. |
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As the tadpoles become frogs, the gills initially used to breathe are replaced with lungs. |
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There's nothing like 600 Baptists standing up singing at the top of their lungs. |
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You might as well stand on your desk in the newsroom and announce your burglary at the top of your lungs. |
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And we all have the right to hate the president, challenge his ideology or scream at the top of our lungs that his policies are unfair. |
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He made a beeline for James, swearing at the top of his lungs, his face a color purple that made me genuinely fear for James's life. |
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Take a mental escape by turning up the radio and singing at the top of your lungs. |
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For the girls' final screen test, Zhang filmed them as they stood in a crowded street screaming whatever came to mind at the top of their lungs. |
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The evening ended with him gesticulating and yelling at me at the top of his lungs. |
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The spotty leaves of Pulmonaria officinalis, or lungwort, indicated it could cure tuberculosis and other afflictions of the lungs. |
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This was how, he believed, lungs originally arose in a lungless world, and feathers in a featherless one. |
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The lungfish use lungs as accessory breathing organs, and during droughts modern forms can survive for several years in burrows. |
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Today lungs are found not only in land vertebrates but also in a few obscure fish lineages, such as gar, bichir, and lungfish. |
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In the case of the lung arteries, this can block off much of the circulation through the lungs. |
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All these triggers can irritate the airways in your lungs, making an asthma attack more likely. |
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Too soon, however, he was out of breath, lungs and muscles burning from exertion. |
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The left atrium of the heart receives oxygenated blood from the lungs and then empties into the left ventricle through the mitral valve. |
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Mary has pulmonary atresia, a condition that means the heart and the main blood vessel to the lungs have failed to develop properly. |
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For example, the tiny air sacs in lungs expand more than seven times when you inhale. |
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This edema leads to hyperinflation and atelectasis of the lungs, and wheezing. |
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Her lungs had been crushed, her left clavicle and ribs were fractured, vital organs had ruptured. |
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Then I didn't have the strength to do anything but hook my arm through a rung and hold on while I sucked air and my lungs ached. |
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The force of the child's inhaled breath delivers the aerosolized powder into the lungs. |
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For when I read the first few sentences, I was sure that the breath caught in my lungs and I almost dropped it. |
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Holding your breath after inhaling helps your heart and lungs show up more clearly on the image. |
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Zander gasped for breath, his lungs burning for it, as Charlie landed another punch in his stomach. |
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I fell to the hard forest floor, the impact knocking the breath from my lungs. |
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I could feel the goosebumps upon my skin, the breath caught in my lungs in the presence of the devil before me. |
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I winced as I saw his chest connect with the ground, knowing myself how it knocked the breath out of your lungs. |
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She burst through the top of the water and gasped loudly for breath, her lungs and face stinging from the cold. |
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This knocked the breath from her lungs so violently she felt as though she would pass out. |
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The sight she had just seen caused her to literally knock the breath out of her lungs. |
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The crashing walls of the sea had knocked the breath from their lungs, and they struggled to reach the surface once more. |
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Hitting the hard ground, her breath rushed from her lungs and she was quickly surrounded by five angry faces. |
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But his lungs lost the battle for health years ago when he worked with blue asbestos fibres, insulating for the telephone company. |
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Since the advent of antibiotics, however, most infections associated with cerebral abscesses are localized to the lungs and endocardium. |
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Human herpesvirus 6, the cause of childhood roseola, has been detected in the lungs of some patients with idiopathic pneumonia. |
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Lung transplantations may involve two lungs, a single lung, or a lobe of a lung. |
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In autopsies of these patients the organism has been found in the brain, lungs, heart, liver, and gastrointestinal tract. |
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To cope with the organ shortage, living donors are sometimes used to provide kidneys, livers, lungs and intestines for transplantation. |
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Nicotine is absorbed through the skin and mucosal lining of the mouth and nose or by inhalation in the lungs. |
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The cells line an area of human lungs that helps our bodies absorb oxygen and shed carbon dioxide. |
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The only movement coming from his body was a slow trickle of blood from his left temple and the rapid rise and fall of his lungs. |
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While his death is blamed on an inflammation of the lungs and heart, doctors say sleep apnea was also a factor. |
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The blood rhythmically alternates from red to blue, moving away from the lungs then back again. |
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He opened his mouth and breathed deeply, gathering oxygen into his lungs with which to sound the retreat. |
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Vincent coughed, trying to catch the breath that his lungs were being denied. |
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Groggy farmers and their families awoke with throats, eyes and lungs seared and burning, pain shooting into their chests. |
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The receptor soaks up angiogenic growth factors, depriving blood vessels in the brain, lungs, and kidneys of essential maintenance tools. |
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At first doctors there thought he had croup and treated him with steroids but a CT scan revealed tumours on his lungs. |
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Tar clogs your lungs like thick treacle, and a 20-a-day smoker inhales a full cup of tar in a year. |
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Each bronchus further bifurcates into a series of subdivisions within the lungs. |
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It strengthens the lungs to resist the effects of sudden changes in the air, and it healthfully braces and invigorates the chest. |
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He was later discharged with two scarred lungs which led to heart problems and a stroke. |
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Mesothelioma is a rare form of carcinoma that occurs in the mesothelium lining lungs, abdomens and hearts. |
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Diseases of the kidneys, heart, gastrointestinal tract, lungs, bones, or other body systems may affect growth. |
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Or does a large surface area per unit mass make those particles robust vehicles for ferrying toxicants such as metal atoms deep into the lungs? |
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The lungs also contribute to this process by eliminating carbon dioxide which is the waste byproduct of glucose and lactic acid metabolism. |
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The steroid in the cocktail had the side effect of the shakes along with keeping his lungs alive. |
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That she has a great pair of lungs on her is beyond question, but perhaps you have had to live a little first to really mean what you sing about. |
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Wood fires can also release benzopyrene, a carcinogen that can irritate your eyes, nose, throat, and lungs. |
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He fires again, and then, shotgun in hand, charges the mob, bellowing at the top of his lungs. |
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The wearable device allows people to monitor smoke and project the damage passive smoking can do to their heart, lungs and life expectancy. |
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Fish with torn gills die as inevitably as you would if your lungs were shredded. |
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This action pushes on the Adam's apple and compresses the windpipe which prevents air from moving down to the lungs. |
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In advanced disease, hyperinflation and increased radiolucency of the lungs, particularly in the lower lung segments, are evident. |
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As their former host gets digested, the tongue worm larvae break out of their cysts and burrow over to their new host's lungs to mature. |
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The doctors took her into theatre to drain fluid off her lungs, and her kidneys are failing as well. |
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Following copulation, the female tongue worm releases her eggs into the host's lungs. |
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He had a raised jugular venous pressure and heard crackles at the base of both lungs. |
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The physician should check the chest and lungs for signs of consolidation, wheezing, rales, and trauma. |
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Two and a half months later, a computed tomographic scan showed multifocal nodules with ill-defined margins in both lungs. |
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Examination of the lungs may initially reveal focal rales that will eventually become diffuse. |
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The liver, spleen, lungs, kidneys, thymus, adrenals, and stomach were examined histopathologically and were all found to be normal. |
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Such asbestos-related diseases include mesothelioma, a terminal cancer of the lining of the lungs. |
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The reason for that is that adrenalin will smooth or relax the muscles in the lungs. |
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In this work it is hard to identify specific organs, aside from the pair of yellow mounds at one end that appear to represent lungs. |
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Radical as ever, Brinkmann listens to the rasping of his lungs, from which his voice rises, wheezes, belches, whispers and shouts. |
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Patients with severe asthma may not have any wheezing as there is very little air moving in and out of the lungs. |
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No fungal elements were identified by histopathology or tissue cultures of both lungs after extensive sampling. |
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His breath rasps in his lungs and iron chains that weights him down binds his arms. |
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A group of beautiful red-haired mermaids were all screeching at the top of their lungs. |
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My boots thumped against cobbles and breath rasped in my lungs as the guard tried one door, then another. |
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Her lungs felt constricted and there was a slight tingly burning behind her eyes. |
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Belle flip-flops zigzaggedly toward her father, squealing at the top of her lungs. |
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He began to rave again, bellowing incoherencies and profanities at the top of his lungs. |
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We did the lungs, the heart, the thymus gland, the larynx, and the mouth today. |
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Around him the crowd was going crazy, whooping and cheering at the top of their lungs. |
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In seven of the measurements no amianthus fibres capable of reaching the lungs were detected. |
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Smells of earth and sweet air filled my lungs and gave me a rebirth of myself, or better yet, of my inner child. |
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He gave out an involuntary sigh as the wind rushed from his lungs and he dropped to his knees. |
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You may get winded easily as your uterus expands beneath your diaphragm, the muscle just below your lungs. |
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My lungs feel like they have suddenly compressed and aren't big enough to hold an adequate amount of oxygen. |
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Opposites attract, even when they come from different ethnic backgrounds, Rob seems to shrilly scream at the top of its lungs. |
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It is a mega-leap from the agar and test-tube finding to real patients and their delicate lungs. |
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He became delirious, his heartbeat grew ragged, his blood teemed with the virus, and his lungs, liver and kidneys began to fail. |
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Last year he cut short a vacation to Italy because of an upper respiratory infection and a blood clot in his lungs. |
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Infections can strike joints, airways, the lungs, the brain and the tissues lining the spinal cord, or the bloodstream. |
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By this means we are told that waists can be reduced, flat chests inflated, hips broadened and lungs strengthened, to say nothing of reducing weight. |
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Elderly patients who die post-operatively usually have pre-existing lung trouble, pneumonia, heart attack, heart failure or lungs damaged by wandering clots. |
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The particulates are dangerous as they are so tiny they are breathed in and go straight into the lungs and blood stream, accumulating in the body. |
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She screamed at the top of her lungs, the waterworks in flood mode. |
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The medical evidence was that pneumoconiosis is caused by a gradual accumulation in the lungs of minute particles of silica inhaled over a period of years. |
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Right after chest wall closure, the lungs underwent radioscopic examination in an attempt to identify the presence of pneumothorax or any other undesirable alteration. |
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Sarah's lungs and immune system still have not developed properly and she is not allowed outside while it is raining, in case she catches pneumonia. |
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Physical examination of the lungs may reveal rales and pleural effusions. |
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The lungs, bones, liver, and adrenals are the most common of metastasis. |
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The morning air filled with the stenorous rasps of half decayed lungs. |
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My breath rasped in my throat and deeper, right in my lungs. |
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Mr Robinson passed out because of the smoke, has severely impaired lungs and a voice box so badly damaged he can barely raise his voice above a whisper. |
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People were literally getting serious, serious beating or kickings when they were plasticuffed you're talking broken ribs, punctured lungs sort of thing. |
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Asthma results from the constriction of airways in the lungs. |
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And a rib belt is tightened to simulate the constriction on the lungs. |
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Then stab her to death and bring me back her lungs and liver as proof of your deed. |
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Since a tight feeling in your lungs is so common during panic attacks, deep breathing can interrupt that cycle. |
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There's something magical about the marriage of the incredible mountain scenery, the West Coast ocean air, and the burn of some reefer in your lungs and mind. |
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Her voice chilled him farther than her hands did, hissing like dried ice and dying smoke as it wreathed over his head and sucked into his mouth and clung damp to his lungs. |
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Norman survived a six-hour operation in early October 2007 to remove the scar tissue on his lungs. |
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You can bike, swim, or run your way to a stronger heart and lungs, but since climbing demands more than just cardio fitness, trail running works best for alpinists. |
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Holes in the lungs occur as the alveoli air sacs break down. |
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Before birth, the lungs of the fetus are filled with amniotic fluid. |
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Ultrafine particles are highly toxic to the lungs, even when they are formed from materials that are nontoxic, and when they are components of larger, respirable particles. |
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A lifeguard, followed by Adair, came running to help laying Azara's limp body on the soft white sand and started the pouring oxygen back into her lungs and resuscitating her. |
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He held the cigarette in his right hand, he twirled it, he flicked it, he put it to his lips and took long drags, inhaling the smoke, holding it in his lungs forever. |
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Be very passive as the air leaves your lungs and leaves your mouth, mimicking the sounds of ocean waves ebbing and flowing. |
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Approximately 88,000 people are on the national organ transplant waiting list, waiting for kidneys, livers, pancreases, intestines, hearts and lungs. |
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Organs such as kidneys, lungs and livers can be transplanted. |
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Mixner almost died in February, after his lower intestine got twisted, leaving him with gangrene in his heart and lungs. |
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They lodged in the lungs of victims and began to grow into greenish moss. |
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Oulson can be heard gurgling, gasping, his lungs crackling, the sounds of someone drowning in his own blood. |
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Most are caused by a blood clot that forms in the veins, before passing through the heart and entering the arteries that carry blood to the lungs. |
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Spoken language makes use of sound carried on out-breathed air from the lungs, which is modulated by articulators to produce the vocal repertoire of a natural language. |
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Invasive aspergillosis is confined to the lungs in the majority of cases, but sinusitis and central nervous system involvement also occur with some frequency. |
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The remote fell out of my hand and breath rushed from my lungs. |
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Arms flailing, he crashed to the floor, his breath blasted from his lungs. |
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I tried to force my injured lungs to take breath, but they refused. |
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This type of testing may show asthmatic changes in the lungs. |
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The lungs were clear and there was no asymmetry in expansion. |
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The disease usually attacks the lungs but can affect almost any part of the body and is usually curable with an intensive six-month course of antibiotics. |
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Yes but you didn't have to scream it at the top of your lungs! |
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All I want to do is yell at the top of my lungs and throttle people. |
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She began to scream loudly, crying out at the top of her lungs. |
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It's like my throat is constricting or my lungs aren't working. |
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In animals with lungs, heat is also lost by warming and humidifying the inspired air during breathing, with the greater proportion being through humidification. |
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Less common causes of breathing problems are lung cancer, a blood clot in the lungs, air leakage around the lungs, and scarring of the lung tissue. |
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The shot damaged his liver, lungs, pancreas and spleen and has left him paralyzed from the waist down. |
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I was practically screaming at the top of my lungs by the end. |
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We had to stop at the street light near her house and sit down, clutching at our sides in an attempt to stop the loud screeches of laughter emanating from our lungs. |
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The lungs are contained within the paired pleural cavities in the thorax. |
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Hesitantly, I sucked in the smoke drawn through the pipe, holding it in my lungs and feeling the warmth inside of me, before slowly letting it out. |
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Although he's done a good deal of work over a coal forge, today Ridge uses a gas furnace to reduce the damage to his lungs regular exposure to burning coke and coal can cause. |
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It was only after wasting a year's worth of boarding school education that I made the semiconscious decision to start painting my lungs with powder and devouring my academics. |
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But, because the liver is missing and there's a hole in the toad's body, the blood vessels and lungs burst and the other organs ooze out, he said. |
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It messes up your health, screws up your lungs and eats you away inside. |
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Caldecott says that if you swish oil for too long, you could accidentally breathe some into your lungs. |
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The inflammatory events can be related to the presence or absence of airflow obstruction and to the presence of emphysema in computed tomograms of the lungs. |
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Smoking, tonsillitis, diseases of the lungs and air passages, kidney dysfunctions, and leukemia also are among possible medical causes of undesirable mouth odors. |
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He held his breath and swung his arms out, but a fist buried itself in his belly, emptying his lungs, and when he sucked in air, he knew he was in terrible trouble. |
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He tried to form a mighty bellow but only a shriek escaped his lungs. |
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We somehow knew all of the words to all of the songs, and we belted them out at the top of our lungs until Jessica yelled at us to save our voices. |
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The trouble was that a mere microgram can kill, if lodged in the lungs. |
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If symptoms aren't improving in that time, see your doctor to make sure you don't have a bacterial infection in your lungs, larynx, trachea, sinuses or ears. |
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The air sacs leading into and out of the lungs hold a large volume of fresh air, so in general, the respiratory costs of tracheal elongation are probably not high. |
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He took out the lungs and liver and brought them to the queen as proof that the child was dead. |
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Bad News for Your lungs E-cigs may not contain real smoke, but they can still do a number on your lungs. |
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In animals with normal plasma protein concentrations fluid began to transude into the lungs when the left atrial pressure rose above an average of 24 mm. |
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The gay liberationists of the 70's shouted their lungs out to announce that they were ready for change. |
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The plague is also known to spread to the lungs and become the disease known as the pneumonic plague. |
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With a single explosive exhalation and rapid inhalation, sea turtles can quickly replace the air in their lungs. |
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Module eviscerators have devices which remove the crop, the viscera package, and lungs in one step. |
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Miliary tuberculosis not affecting the lungs but complicated by acute respiratory distress syndrome. |
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I have a patient now living, at an advanced age, who discharged blood from his lungs thirty years ago. |
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Twenty-three of the lungs were selected to undergo the new technique, which is known technically as normothermic ex vivo lung perfusion. |
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Inhaling smoke into the lungs, no matter the substance, has adverse effects on one's health. |
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Breathing involves expelling stale air from the blowhole, forming an upward, steamy spout, followed by inhaling fresh air into the lungs. |
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These are reduced in adulthood, their function taken over by the gills proper in fishes and by lungs in most amphibians. |
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These sacs are connected to the lungs and are filled with air when the bird breathes in. |
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Full lungs at the release also can help the rower to maintain a straighter back, a style encouraged by many coaches. |
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With these technical advances, Farmer and her colleagues reported in 2013 that air flows unidirectionally through lungs of a monitor lizard. |
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Winehouse began precautionary testing on her lungs and chest on 25 October 2008 at the London Clinic for what was reported as a chest infection. |
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Mitch Winehouse had also stated that his daughter's lungs were operating at 70 percent capacity and that she had an irregular heartbeat. |
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Most inhaled uranium that reaches the lungs is eliminated via mucociliary clearance. |
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From the beginning, the story of vertebrate lungs is full of twists, says functional morphologist Elizabeth Brainerd of Brown University. |
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Asbestos is ubiquitous, and some is always likely to be found in the lungs of the general, nonindustrially exposed population. |
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She had been attempting to walk to the bathroom and, as her lungs filled with liquid, collapsed and suffocated. |
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The bones in their fins eventually evolved into legs and they became the first tetrapods, 390 million years ago, and began to develop lungs. |
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A different strain of the disease is pneumonic plague, where the bacteria become airborne and enter directly into the patient's lungs. |
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With the baby's lungs filling with fluid, vets had to step in and perform several minutes of mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on the newborn. |
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Then, some time afterward, macrophages revive and additional macrophages are summoned to the lungs by chemoattractants to clean up the debris. |
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Metastases were present in the liver, bone marrow, adrenal glands, thyroid gland, sphenoid sinus, brain, dura, and lungs. |
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After three or four days the bacteria enter the bloodstream, and infect organs such as the spleen and the lungs. |
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The body contains the antennae, eyes, head sac, brain, lungs, roe, tomalley, and gills. |
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In the first people suffer an infection of the lungs, which leads to breathing difficulties. |
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Autopsy showed enlargement of lungs, liver, and spleen with many abscessed areas of suppurative necrosis. |
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Using calcilytics, nebulized directly into the lungs, we show it's possible to deactivate CaSR and prevent symptoms. |
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Bilateral rales and rhonchi were noted throughout the lungs, with decreased air movement, more prominent in the right lung than left lung. |
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And bats die when their lungs are ruptured by barotrauma caused by air pressure changes from the turbine blades. |
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He had discovered that the gases emitted from burning sugarcane bagasse produce bagassosis, an illness that damages the lungs. |
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Moreover, there was no indication of leukocytic infiltration in gestationally SS-exposed lungs. |
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Myer ordered Lasix to reduce the fluid in the lungs and thereby ease breathing. |
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As the chest wall and lungs hyperinflate, they progressively resist further inflation by virtue of their elastic recoil characteristics. |
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As terminal bronchioles penetrate more deeply into the lungs, they divide into microscopic respiratory bronchioles. |
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The dry climate of the city made Jauja a common place for tuberculosis sufferers to move to since the dry air was good for the kidneys and lungs. |
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Invasive aspergillosis usually affects the lungs, and osteomyelitis due to Aspergillus spp. |
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Microscopically, the lungs revealed arteriolar thickening consisting of medial hypertrophy and intimal fibroplasia. |
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First, the team obtained data on the thickness of airway walls by studying tissue removed at autopsy from the lungs of people with severe asthma. |
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The furnace protested long and hackingly like the lungs of an old smoker at an early morning cigarette. |
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It also emits alpha and beta radiation, which can damage lungs, kidneys and other soft tissues, especially the digestive tract. |
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Bevacizumab can help patients with advanced bowel cancer which has spread to other organs, usually the liver and lungs. |
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A Cor pulmonale is actually high blood pressure in the lungs due to damage caused by smoking. |
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At least those stupids got their money's worth out of this country before they burnt their lungs out. |
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In the procedure, tiny, one-way valves are placed in the lungs to block airflow to hyperinflated regions to achieve lung volume reduction. |
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A biopsy later revealed benign sarcoidosis which had caused patches of red and swollen tissue, called granulomas, to develop on his lungs. |
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But now he says she has a lump in her abdomen that is due to lymphosarcoma, a form of cancer, that has now spread to her lungs. |
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She suffers cystic fibrosis, which needs daily massage to keep her lungs clear, and Lyn says the fresh air and bumpy ride do her good. |
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This opened the blood vessels in his lungs to increase the oxygen being captured in the bloodstream and be distributed to the rest of his body. |
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Laduma rolls himself a skyf. It's cheap Swazi and rakes the lungs, but it's skyf nonetheless. |
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Ssali has formulated successful treatments for many ailments, including a bacterial infection of the throat and lungs called scleroma. |
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Before the plague of London, inflammations of the lungs were rife and mortal. |
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The lungs were in a bad condition, hard in places, and lumpy and badly graped. |
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It is very small and can lodge itself within the lungs and enter the bloodstream. |
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Some spiders have a tracheal system to deliver oxygen to their tissues, some have both tracheae and book lungs, and some have only book lungs. |
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I inhaled a deep breath of 1993 air that hurt my futurey lungs, and headed toward her. |
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Asbestosis is a chronic inflammatory medical condition affecting the tissue of the lungs. |
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Additional changes that occur when water enters the lungs depend on whether the water is fresh or salt. |
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Tobacco use is a risk factor for many diseases, especially those affecting the heart, liver, and lungs, as well as many cancers. |
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Encouraging work has recently shown the feasibility of creating bioorgans for the reconstruction of heart, lungs, liver, and kidneys. |
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One of the wildly dancing horse's forehooves slammed into his shoulder, nearly dislocating it, and driving the breath out of his lungs. |
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I'm acutely aware that this lovely blond beast, if properly provoked, could rip my lungs out with a single swipe of clawsome paw. |
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Tremella fuciformis is also known in Chinese medicine for nourishing the lungs. |
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This instrument is called a bronchoscope and it usually passes through the nose or mouth into the lungs under general anaesthetic. |
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The patient is sedated and a bronchoscope is threaded through the nose or throat, and into the lungs. |
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A bronchoscopy is an internal examination of the air passages and the lungs using a very fine fibre optic cable with a camera in the end of it. |
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Bones protect internal organs, such as the skull protecting the brain or the ribs protecting the heart and lungs. |
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Transfer of oxygen from the lungs to the brain in the human body occurs by means of forced convection. |
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Histopathologically, fibrinopurulent bronchopneumonia with multifocal areas of necrosis and pleuritis was seen in the lungs of infected animals. |
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The larynx controls the pitch and volume of sound, but the strength the lungs exert to exhale also contributes to volume. |
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The lungs and surrounding musculature provide the air stream and pressure required to phonate. |
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Consequently, air is sucked into or expelled out of the lungs, always moving down its pressure gradient. |
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Relaxing the diaphragm has the opposite effect, decreasing the volume of the lung cavity, causing air to be pushed out of the lungs. |
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He punched his pillow and screamed at the top of his lungs about all the pent-up frustrations from the day. |
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These particulates can penetrate lungs and carry toxic chemicals into the human body. |
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Anatomy exhibits the lungs in a continual motion of inspiring and expiring air. |
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It was found that the liver, lungs, and kidneys of a centenarian turtle are virtually indistinguishable from those of its immature counterpart. |
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The most frequent sites were subdiaphragmatic nodes, lungs, liver, and local relapse or contralateral kidney. |
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First, they employ limb pumping, sucking air into their lungs and pushing it out by moving the limbs in and out relative to the shell. |
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Fish have gills instead of lungs, although some species of fish, such as the lungfish, have both. |
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Most other fluke species reside in the wolf's intestine, though Paragonimus westermani lives in the lungs. |
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Wolves typically commence feeding by consuming the larger internal organs of their prey, such as the heart, liver, lungs and stomach lining. |
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Herbs such as Slippery Elm and Comfrey leaf help to put back moisture into the lungs that smoking burns out. |
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The behaviour of Kogiids remains largely unknown, but, due to their small lungs, they are thought to hunt in the photic zone. |
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They can cause injuries such as hemorrhaging of the lungs, and contusion and ulceration of the gastrointestinal tract. |
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The larvae become encysted in various subperitoneal tissues such as the liver, spleen, mesentery and lungs. |
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When stale air, warmed from the lungs, is exhaled, it condenses as it meets colder external air. |
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And she has subpulmonary stenosis, a narrowing of the pulmonary artery, which pumps blood to the lungs. |
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When diving, they reduce their heart rate and maintain blood flow only to the heart, brain and lungs. |
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During an asthma attack, the airways in the lungs constrict, forcing sufferers to work harder to get oxygen in. |
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When the whale is submerged, it can close the blowhole, and air that passes through the phonic lips can circulate back to the lungs. |
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