| Beneath the mucosa, there is a loose connective tissue layer called the submucosa. |
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| Between the mucosa and muscle layers lies the submucosa, which is rich in blood vessels and connective tissue. |
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| Osteoid osteoma is a benign tumor containing osteoid in a stroma of loose vascular connective tissue. |
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| The prostate gland is enclosed in a prostatic capsule and surrounded by extraperitoneal connective tissue. |
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| The excised nodule consisted of fibrocartilaginous tissue surrounded by dense connective tissue of the nuchal ligament. |
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| The endoneurium is continuous with the more abundant connective tissue perineurium, which envelops bundles of nerve fibers. |
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| The hemorrhoidectomy specimens showed a stroma of connective tissue containing many blood vessels, and interwoven bundles of smooth muscle. |
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| The median nerve and the tendon of palmaris profundus are ensheathed in a common sheath of connective tissue. |
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| Other structures, such as connective tissue fibers and neuroglia, may be impregnated. |
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| Tissue Regeneration Inc., a bioengineering company in Medford, Massachusetts, has developed the ability to grow new human connective tissue. |
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| Finally, each nerve fiber and its neurilemmal sheath are enclosed by a connective tissue sheath termed endoneurium. |
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| A septum of connective tissue separates the circular muscle layers of the pylorus and duodenum. |
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| Pelvic organ prolapse results from a weakening of connective tissue or loss of muscular support. |
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| Central necrobiotic area contains abundant connective tissue mucins which is lightly basophilic in appearance. |
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| The skin consists of an epidermis, dermis, adipose tissue layer and subcutaneous connective tissue. |
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| Then follow with some easy stretching to warm the joints, muscles and connective tissue. |
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| And it's also the connective tissue is in your ligaments, and that's why these people have double-jointedness. |
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| Term infants have well-formed skull bones separated by strips of connective tissue. |
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| Hepatic adenomas are benign tumors composed entirely of hepatocytes and the appropriate supporting connective tissue framework. |
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| The adventitia contains the cartilaginous rings interconnected by connective tissue. |
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| The researchers also added connective tissue cells called fibroblasts to the mix as a crucial third ingredient. |
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| Loose connective tissue consists of fibers running in all directions through a semifluid matrix. |
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| Its fibers are found in connective tissue, including skin, bone, ligaments, and cartilage. |
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| Glucosamine is the foundational structure of many compounds associated with repair and regeneration of connective tissue. |
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| Muscle biopsies were freed of connective tissue and muscle fibers were isolated. |
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| Heat alters the fibres of connective tissue, initially by making them shorter and thicker, and then by altering the structure. |
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| Collagen, the most abundant connective tissue protein, contains several dibasic amino acids and has slow turnover rate. |
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| However, the wall of the pseudocyst, by definition, should be composed of connective tissue devoid of epithelial lining. |
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| Because of connective tissue laxity, care should be taken in the degree of stretching. |
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| In regular dense connective tissue, collagen bundles are arranged in a definite pattern, making the tissue greatly resistant to stress. |
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| Dupuytren disease is a connective tissue disorder characterized by contracture involving the palmar aponeurosis. |
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| Other examples of dense regular connective tissue include most ligaments, aponeuroses, and the cornea of the eye. |
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| The somatic layer of the lateral plate gives rise to the appendicular skeleton and the connective tissue of the limbs and body wall. |
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| Synovial membrane is composed of a form of connective tissue, and secretes a glairy fluid resembling the white of egg, named synovia. |
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| Most cuts are suitable for roasting, although those from the forequarters contain much fat and some connective tissue. |
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| The extension of the outer connective tissue capsule that encloses the infundibulum is thinner than the portion covering the acetabulum. |
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| The protein collagen is responsible for the tough qualities of connective tissue. |
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| Part of one flipper remained articulated, perhaps still bound in connective tissue prior to burial. |
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| The orbital septum, a connective tissue reflection of the periosteum, inserts into the eyelids and separates them from the orbits. |
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| The bundle of fibers with its endomysium is surrounded by a more fibrous connective tissue sheath known as the perimysium. |
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| Inside the skull and vertebral column, the brain and spinal cord are loosely suspended and protected by several connective tissue sheaths. |
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| Stromal retraction between tumor islands and dermal connective tissue was observed in 12 cases. |
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| They represent the rupture of subepidermal connective tissue as a result of abdominal distension, either recent or remote. |
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| A complete muscle consists of numerous fasciculi surrounded by a thick outer layer of connective tissue known as the perimysial septa. |
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| The prostatic pedicles are groupings of connective tissue found on either side of the vas deferens and seminal vesicle. |
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| It leads to left ventricular hypertrophy and increased connective tissue content, both of which decrease cardiac compliance. |
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| Cellulite develops when excess weight, poor circulation, or water retention weakens the connective tissue beneath your skin. |
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| The body axis of vertebrates is an integrated cylinder of bones, connective tissue, and muscle. |
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| The systemic features of both entities can mimic occult infection, malignancy, multiple myeloma and connective tissue disease. |
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| The fix includes snipping underneath the skin to sever the connective tissue, causing the scar to spring up. |
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| Various systemic connective tissue diseases may also manifest in the eye as retinopathy. |
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| Muscles are attached to bones by tough bands of connective tissue called tendons. |
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| Fibrosis is the replacement of functional hepatic tissue with nonfunctional connective tissue. |
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| They are arranged in bundles, separated by sheets of connective tissue containing collagen. |
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| An association between connective tissue diseases, particularly systemic sclerosis, and gastric antral vascular ectasia has been noted. |
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| Nonhomogenized connective tissue was removed from the test tube and discarded. |
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| No patients exhibited atypical mitotic figures in the cells of the epidermis, hair follicles, sweat glands or surrounding connective tissue. |
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| The ACL is a short band of ropy connective tissue that extends from the back of the thigh bone to the front of the shin bone. |
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| Oesophageal motor function can be secondarily impaired in patients with various connective tissue diseases. |
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| Term infants have well-formed skull bones separated by strips of connective tissue, sutures, and fontanelles. |
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| Solitary lymph nodules may be present in the mucosa and in the connective tissue around the cartilage. |
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| The left main bronchus was exposed at the posterior mediastinum and separated from connective tissue. |
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| The lung parenchyma is a connective tissue network that is distorted by surface tension. |
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| Another purported fat melter is collagenase, an enzyme that breaks down connective tissue. |
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| The framework is basically a hollow cylinder of collagenous connective tissue, the skin. |
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| In our case, the senile degeneration of connective tissue is suspected to be the occasion of comedo formation. |
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| Derived from embryonic mesoderm, mesenchyme is the first connective tissue formed. |
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| The pleurectomy specimen was characterized by fragments of fibrous connective tissue lined by mesothelial cells with focal papillary area. |
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| Ascites with low SAAG may be seen in patients with connective tissue diseases due to serositis in the absence of portal hypertension. |
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| The proportion of connective tissue varies according to the position of the meat in the animal's body. |
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| The shagreen patch, a thickened orange-peel-textured area of connective tissue hamartoma, is most often found on the mid to lower back. |
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| For example, concomitant complaints of limb weakness suggest the presence of neurologic or connective tissue disease. |
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| The only real connective tissue is the nonsense refrain of the title, which seems to slur through a dozen pair of wet, loose lips during this roundelay of partying. |
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| Lifting weights strengthens the muscles, bones and connective tissue. |
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| The liver cells fulfill about 3,000 biochemical functions but they are massively reduced by tough connective tissue. |
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| The airway wall is composed of many interrelated structural components such as epithelium, connective tissue, vessels, muscle, and mucus-secreting gland acini. |
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| The annulus fibrosus is made of lamelliform connective tissue bands. |
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| In addition, the increase in production of the hormone relaxin causes a loosening of the connective tissue around those joints and creates instability. |
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| It is covered by a sheath of areolar connective tissue from which thin fibrous septa extend into the gland and subdivide it into many distinct lobules. |
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| Arteries supplying the thymus follow the connective tissue septa and give off branches that enter the lobular cortex and break up into capillaries, which supply the cortex. |
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| Marfan's syndrome is a connective tissue disorder that increases the probability of a rupture or dissection occurring at smaller diameters than in a normal patient. |
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| It's easy, almost convenient, to forget that my cadaver is a man, not just a bag of bones and skin and connective tissue glued together with embalming fluid. |
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| She died on June 8, 2004, after a long and painful battle against scleroderma, a chronic disease of the immune system, connective tissue and blood vessels. |
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| The cells of stratum basale constitute a single layer of columnar or cuboidal cells in contact with the basement membrane and connective tissue of the dermis. |
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| High proportions of connective tissue increase the toughness of meat. |
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| The cistern is traversed by delicate connective tissue trabeculae, which bridge across the interval between the arachnoid mater and the pia mater. |
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| The connective tissue that enveloped each duct was uniformly arranged. |
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| Histologically, the lesion was made up of a fibrillar connective tissue stroma with oval and spindle-shaped mononuclear cells and small capillaries. |
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| It is formed by cartilaginous, bony and connective tissue structures. |
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| Loose connective tissue stroma predominated in the less cellular areas. |
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| He is the connective tissue between government and tribal authority, and the government has given him a ceremonial uniform appropriate to his status. |
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| A sheet or band of tough, inelastic, fibrous connective tissue. |
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| Prevention and treatment of endothelium-related arterial thrombosis Endothelial cells, connective tissue, and elastic tissue form the tunica intima of the arterial wall. |
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| Microscopically, in deciduosis, the sheets of decidual cells are present within the connective tissue and do not usually affect its surface, as in the case of mesothelioma. |
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| The middle layer, or dermis, contains connective tissue, small blood vessels, sweat and oil glands, nerves, and cells that produce collagen, called fibroblasts. |
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| The biopsy should include surrounding skin with underlying dermis and connective tissue so that the pathologist can evaluate the depth of stromal invasion. |
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| The primary purpose of connective tissue is to hold the body together and provide a framework for growth and development. |
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| In actuality, gelatin is a by-product derived from the skin, connective tissue, and bones of animals. |
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| Tympanosclerosis is the hyalinization and calcification of the connective tissue in the middle ear, including the tympanic membrane. |
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| This allows air to escape into the connective tissue of the peri-bronchovascular sheaths, interlobular septa and visceral pleura. |
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| The normally sparse intertubular connective tissue appears regionally increased in diabetic kidneys, but somewhat less in the protected group. |
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| This skin membrane consists of connective tissue, elastic fibers, nerves, muscles, and blood vessels. |
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| Cerebral edema is followed by fibrous granulation and collagenous connective tissue with necrosed areas becoming calcified. |
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| Below that, there's the dermis, This layer is a complicated matrix of connective tissue, collagen fibrils and microfibrils. |
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| The surface mesothelium of normal serosa is derived from multipotent subserosal cells in the underlying layer of connective tissue. |
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| Finally, the gut is surrounded by the tough connective tissue of the serosa and peritoneum. |
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| In particular, NSAIDs are associated with serious gastrointestinal, renovascular, cardiovascular, bone and connective tissue adverse effects. |
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| Only one epithelial fold, known as the typhlosole, is present, where an abundance of larval connective tissue is located. |
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| The splenic tissue was separated from the seminiferous tubules by a splenic capsule and vascular fibrous connective tissue. |
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| A connective tissue, basement membranes sit outside cells and are composed of ropes of collagen and other large molecules. |
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| Also called leiomyomas, fibroids are made up of muscle and connective tissue and may range in size from microscopic to larger than a grapefruit. |
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| Articular cartilage is a thin layer of soft connective tissue that provides cushioning between the bone-to-bone interfaces in a joint. |
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| Between muscles that move extensively, it takes the form of loose areolar connective tissue and provides a degree of mechanical isolation. |
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| They found small finger-like projections of connective tissue and nerves invading the gelatinous cavity between the whale's two lower jaw bones. |
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| Defective connective tissue leads to fragile capillaries, resulting in abnormal bleeding. |
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| It is not covered by connective tissue, which is characteristic of vertebrate heart anatomy. |
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| Exposure in the first trimester is related to a risk of connective tissue anomalies, primarily cutis laxa. |
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| The plantar fascia is a long, thin band of connective tissue that supports the arch like a bow string. |
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| Large vascular spaces were observed to be deep in the hemorrhoid, separated from the surface by connective tissue and the muscularis mucosae. |
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| Ehlers-Danlos syndrome is a connective tissue disorder resulting in joint hypermobility, skin extensibility, and tissue fragility. |
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| On the 7th day the predominant phenomenon was developing areolar connective tissue in hypoderm from deep parts of the wound into the empty space. |
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| Healthy connective tissue will impact on our structure, movement, organ health and cardiovascular efficiency. |
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| In older cases, it may be distinctly sclerosed, with much hyaline connective tissue, and many newly-formed but degenerate elastic fibres. |
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| When collagen is missing or defective, body parts where connective tissue is most important, such as skin, joints, and blood vessels, behave abnormally. |
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| Hyperextension exercises and abdominal core exercises have been recommended to strengthen the surrounding connective tissue, as well as increasing the mobility of the joints. |
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| Heritable connective tissue disorders such as type IV Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, Marfan syndrome, and type I osteogenesis imperfecta predispose patients to dissection. |
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| We report a case of idiopathic PCT in a patient with limited systemic scleroderma and serologic evidence of an overlap connective tissue disorder. |
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| Fascial Stretch Therapy, which targets connective tissue rather than isolating individual muscles, has been shown to improve flexibility by up to 200 percent. |
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| It is commonly accepted that synovial chondromatosis develops as a result of a metaplastic chondroid transformation of the connective tissue of the synovial membrane. |
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| Bone tissue is a hard tissue, a type of dense connective tissue. |
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| The plantar fascia is a thick fibrous band of connective tissue expanding along the sole of the foot to the toes and supports the arch of the foot. |
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| The structure of the small intestine consists of a layer of cells, a mucosal lining, a connective tissue support, and a fine submucosal smooth muscle layer. |
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| Healthy connective tissue constantly adapts to stress and remodels itself. |
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| In toothed whales, connective tissue exists in the melon as a head buckle. |
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| Studies on connective tissue have produced valuable data, which have stimulated the creation of treatments for preventive and rejuvenative healthcare. |
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| About Exagen Exagen Diagnostics is a rheumatology specialty company that focuses on the diagnosis, prognosis and monitoring of autoimmune connective tissue disease. |
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| In both cases from Chile, the authors reported disseminated neoplasias primarily affecting connective tissue associated with the digestive system, causing its destruction. |
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| Due to this the lack of connective tissue surrounding the parabronchi and adjacent parabronchial lumen, they exchange blood capillaries or avascular epithelial plates. |
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| The cords were enclosed by connective tissue containing myoid cells. |
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| The pathology report revealed normal bone spicules containing fibrous connective tissue and granulation tissue with lymphocytes and multinucleate giant cells. |
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| Systemic sclerosis is an autoimmune connective tissue disease characterised by fibrosis of the skin and internal organs, and pronounced alterations in the microvasculature. |
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| Interstitium of respiratory bronchiole Including respiratory bronchiolar wall, peribronchiolar and perivascular connective tissue, and associated vessel walls. |
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| The serosa is a serious membrane consisting of a layer of simple squamous epithelium, called the mesothelium, and a small amount of underlying connective tissue. |
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| Diaphysial shrinkage in skeletonised or mummified fetal bones is a direct result of loss of water and organic matrix, such as hyaline connective tissue through desiccation. |
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