Damage is greatest in arterial bifurcations, deviations, and constrictions where turbulence is intense. |
|
Over time the neural tube expands at one end to form an embryonic brain with constrictions marking the forebrain, midbrain and hindbrain. |
|
In the varicose pattern, the extent of bronchial dilatation is greater, and constrictions and sacculations are present. |
|
It is conceivable that the channel is not a rigid conduit but is subject to motions that form pockets separated by labile constrictions. |
|
Arrows indicate the primary constrictions of the labeled pair of chromosomes. |
|
And it's a difficult time to be a comic writer because of the constrictions of correctness, there's less and less to joke about. |
|
The diagnosis is emended to include the new observation of basal constrictions at dichotomies. |
|
Climb the sandy slope away from the hole, and wriggle through a couple of constrictions into a higher level of the chamber, which may, or may not, be Cotton Chamber. |
|
The constrictions were noted toward the fetal end in 4 of the 5 cases. |
|
We do not assume any constrictions on the membrane shape far from the bud. |
|
They seem to represent a bursting out, possibly in impatience, from both the complexity and the constrictions of the current American poetical idiolect. |
|
When placing nuts, always look for constrictions within the crack, behind which the nut can be wedged. |
|
A start would be to abandon the constrictions of academic fields. |
|
Land constrictions such as straits or inlets can create high velocities at specific sites, which can be captured with the use of turbines. |
|
If you're a traditionalist, here's a handy table of constrictions to remember so that you can converse with the new cognoscente. |
|