One pictures lazy afternoons engorged on and sticky with pulpy, overripe South Pacific fruits. |
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If not engorged, prolapses can reduce spontaneously or be rolled back using a cold pack. |
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Feeding by the chigger creates scabby, reddish lesions that require two to three weeks to heal after the engorged mites leave the bird. |
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The entire upper arm becomes engorged with oxygen-rich blood, creating a positive growth environment for both muscle groups. |
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Or perhaps water reminded them of floods, torrential rain, or raging engorged rivers. |
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If you have your patient strain, you can often recognize an external hemorrhoid as it is engorged with blood and everted. |
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If your biceps are getting engorged with blood, you're not fully working your back. |
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Except when engorged by spring meltwater and ice, the Severn River empties serenely into Hudson Bay. |
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Once feeding is complete the tick is engorged with blood and will fall off. |
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The bandages substitute for the elasticity lost by tissues engorged with edema. |
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Cal slipped easily through traffic that sat idly waiting to be engorged from one slow moving lane into another. |
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Veins which are not designed to handle so much blood so become engorged and dilated, and occasionally burst. |
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Following blood feeding, fully engorged mosquitoes were separated and thereafter continuously supplied with sucrose-saturated pads. |
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If the pressure is not equalized by a larger volume of gas, the space will be filled by tissue engorged with fluid and blood. |
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The corpus spongiosum is a chamber that surrounds the urethra and becomes engorged with blood during an erection. |
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The organ is composed chiefly of cavernous or erectile tissue that becomes engorged with blood to produce considerable enlargement and erection. |
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A swelling at the base of a plant formed by a stem shortened into a plate and formed by leaves or scales, engorged with storage food substances. |
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The vein wall is then distended and vessels are engorged, culminating in the appearance of varicose veins. |
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So far as I can tell, the engorged, well-financed art world of today offers few parallels. |
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The tumor that you see here is my own blood vessels, my own veins, all swollen and tangled, engorged, and mixed together that bulge out like this. |
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Some mothers feel engorged with milk for a few days after the last breastfeeding. |
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Still, many rivers such as the Bow, Oldman and Red Deer were engorged, flowing 10 to 30 times their usual volume. |
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Hardly able to hobble into the room on his bruised and engorged feet, he sported black eyes. |
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Varicose veins are dilated, tortuous veins engorged with blood that results from improper venous valve function. |
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The typical engorged sensation usually disappears after 18 hours. |
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These fatty streaks result from the abnormal accumulation of macrophages, a class of white blood cell, that has made their way into the vessel wall and has become engorged in lipid. |
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Once they become engorged with blood, they simply fall to the ground. |
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Since water passes through them very slowly and they have a considerable capacity, wetlands remain engorged with water when the rivers which supply them have run out. |
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However, if you should get engorged to the point of severe discomfort or if the baby is not able to take the breast, cabbage leaves seem to help decrease the engorgement more rapidly than ice packs or other treatments. |
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Sometimes only the corpora cavernosa are engorged. |
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Ticks may attach to your cat and feed on blood until they are engorged. |
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The teeth of the comb in this instance represent engorged small arteries, the vasa recta, perfusing the small bowel. |
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One typical Grecian kiln engorged one thousand muleloads of juniper wood in a single burn. Fifty such kilns would devour six thousand metric tons of trees and brush annually. |
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