A retinal prosthesis may provide artificial vision to people who have lost their sight due to diseases affecting the retina. |
|
But there are other threats, small pox, plague, other more contagious diseases, that we still could be subjected to. |
|
Recent research shows that only half the dogs and cats in the UK are fully protected against infectious diseases. |
|
In epidemiologic studies, whole grains, vegetables, and fruits are often more protective against diseases than fibre supplements. |
|
We have no protocol of behavior, and this is far more dangerous than these physical diseases. |
|
Rain pits can lead to spreading of diseases such as dengue fever and malaria. |
|
Their original application was in febrile diseases where symptoms of high fever, delirium and convulsions occurred. |
|
Health and education facilities are minimal and diseases such as malaria, dengue fever and tuberculosis are common. |
|
He urged the government to do more prevention work before a serious outbreak of diseases such as dengue fever and Japanese encephalitis occurs. |
|
The people who are most vociferous in this debate are simply not familiar with the epidemiology of diseases like malaria and dengue. |
|
If you do not go to the dentist, you may not know that you have these diseases until it's too late. |
|
Life expectancy has risen, and many diseases, including plague, smallpox, cholera, and typhus, have been eliminated. |
|
Live biological remedies like the bacteria pseudomonas have been shown to suppress a variety of turfgrass diseases. |
|
There are concerns about the possible risk of autoimmune diseases in psoralen plus ultraviolet A light treated patients. |
|
Allergic diseases are known to be on the increase in western populations, but the reason why is not clear. |
|
Hypnosis is now used in medical treatment as hypnotic psychotherapy to treat diseases of both the body and the mind. |
|
One simply cannot equate psychotic disturbances which alter the entire personality with physical diseases. |
|
You must be more or less intact at death and not suffering from certain specified diseases. |
|
The rat population is rapidly on the increase, bringing with it increased risk of diseases. |
|
Tuberculosis had the highest incidence rate of serious diseases, followed by hepatitis B, dysentery, gonorrhea and syphilis. |
|
|
The organisms that cause the sexually transmitted diseases gonorrhea and chlamydia can also infect the eyes and cause conjunctivitis. |
|
The programme is especially designed to help and support people diagnosed with cancer and other life-threatening diseases. |
|
Many of those who support human embryonic stem-cell research do so for the best of motives, to try and find cures for incurable diseases. |
|
Experts say that lack of sleep may cause insomnia in children as well as chronic diseases. |
|
Why do the bulk of press gallery pundits catch the political diseases from the parties? |
|
The women and children suffer from malnutrition, communicable diseases, lack of hygiene and sanitation facilities. |
|
As mountain gorillas are susceptible to human diseases, conservationists had feared the worse. |
|
But since we live in a world in which diseases do exist, we develop defenses against it. |
|
Enteroviruses, including coxsackieviruses and echoviruses, are important viral pathogens in humans, causing a variety of diseases. |
|
The success of the immunization programs against these highly communicable diseases have wiped them from our collective memory. |
|
People with chronic diseases like diabetes should get greater support in the community and at home. |
|
Measles, mumps, and rubella are all serious contagious diseases that spread rapidly, especially in populations without immunity. |
|
Two other diseases, human granulocytic ehrlichiosis and babesiosis, are also transmitted through deer tick bites. |
|
In the past, syphilis and other granulomatous diseases have been associated with vulvar cancer. |
|
The relationship amongst these diseases affecting the hepatic vessels is depicted diagrammatically. |
|
Traditional externalities, such as limiting the spread of contagious diseases, explain little of modern government involvement with health. |
|
Herbs with a floating energy have diaphoretic properties and are used for the initial stages of colds, flus, fevers and eruptive skin diseases. |
|
Clinically these diseases mimic pyogenic bacterial infections, Gram negative septicaemia or cryptic tuberculosis. |
|
Initially, medical experts worked to contain the spread of contagious diseases. |
|
It can result from a variety of diseases, disorders, and injuries that affect the eye. |
|
|
Glaucoma is a group of diseases that can lead to damage to the eye's optic nerve and result in blindness. |
|
Pathology is the study of diseases but, like many ologies, it has come to refer to the object of study itself. |
|
Look for varieties of peppers, eggplant, and okra that are resistant to wilts and other diseases. |
|
In addition, there are several other diseases that can also result in economic loss. |
|
And each child who isn't immunized gives these highly contagious diseases one more chance to spread. |
|
Overweight children should be put on Atkins-style diets to lose weight and prevent life-threatening diseases, a cancer specialist has claimed. |
|
During the past four years, 80 million people have been successfully treated for elephantiasis, one of the world's most disfiguring diseases. |
|
It is important to carry out inspections on eateries and fruit juice outlets and intensify measures to contain the spread of such diseases. |
|
Most virus diseases I believe would be containable moderately readily, once we know how they're transmitted. |
|
Among vaccine-preventable childhood diseases, only measles was reported, but no diphtheria, tetanus or whooping cough. |
|
That's because children were vulnerable to infectious diseases such as scarlet fever, diphtheria, whooping cough and measles. |
|
People with infectious diseases may be isolated from those they might infect. |
|
These common communicable diseases cannot be eliminated if the levels of immunisation in the community fall below a critical value. |
|
Outbreaks of diarrhoeal diseases are still one of the major public health emergencies in India. |
|
The overuse of bleeding, mercury, arsenic, opium, emetics, and purgatives weakened patients almost as much as the diseases of the day. |
|
Then we need to add chronic lung diseases such as emphysema and chronic bronchitis to the list of smoking-caused illnesses. |
|
Scientists have discovered many genes that play important roles in human diseases. |
|
Neurodegenerative diseases causing transmissible spongiform encephalopathies are the subject of intense research. |
|
It requires donor screening and testing to prevent the transmission of communicable diseases. |
|
Vaccination against all childhood diseases has been strongly encouraged by the government. |
|
|
In this way he was a real specialist, in contradistinction to the town specialists who are identified with certain diseases or disasters. |
|
They are even implicated in diseases such as endometriosis and in cancers of the various reproductive organs. |
|
As a gynecologist, what I find most disturbing is the increase in sexually transmitted diseases in our community. |
|
Detecting bacterial endospores is a critical challenge to chemistry, since a number of serious diseases and health problems are caused by them. |
|
But it may not be good for its fellow killer whales because it may introduce diseases. |
|
Human diseases can be studied through the genetic dissection of quantitative traits in experimental models such as mouse and rat. |
|
Of these, many laboratories are directly working on viruses causing respiratory, enteric and neurological diseases. |
|
Note in particular the much lower incidence of diseases such as enteric fever and dysentery. |
|
Will the insurer cover routine wellness care, such as inoculations against distemper, rabies and other diseases? |
|
This species is also susceptible to a variety of diseases such as distemper, which is controlled in domestic dogs. |
|
For example, parvovirus, distemper and rabies are diseases that can be vaccinated against. |
|
Rickettsial diseases are vector-borne illnesses usually carried by ticks, lice, fleas, or mites, and are widely distributed throughout the world. |
|
The USDA regulates plants, plant products, and other organisms that may introduce plant diseases or pests. |
|
Epidemiological studies, for example, can help to identify factors contributing to particular human diseases. |
|
The epidemiology of diseases such as cancer is certainly different from what we are accustomed to in the West. |
|
We have confirmed that research on cancers and cardiovascular diseases dominates published epidemiology. |
|
Lack of physical activity is a major contributor to cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and obesity. |
|
We must not undo the excellent work that has ben done in almost eradicating these diseases from our shores. |
|
These two steps alone will eradicate a large number of diseases we face today. |
|
Undernutrition is a well known contributory factor to high mortality in children due to infectious diseases. |
|
|
Mortality during famines was rarely caused solely by starvation but from related diseases like dysentery, typhoid, and typhus. |
|
Cholera, dysentery, tuberculosis, and other new diseases took my mother and my friends in a matter of months. |
|
A recent study found that some urban rats were infected with organisms that could cause diseases including diarrhoea and dysentery. |
|
While the tidal waves wreaked havoc, the death toll from epidemics caused by diseases such as dysentery, cholera and typhoid could be far higher. |
|
Elder flowers are a popular herbal treatment for all bronchial and pulmonary affections, scarlet fever, measles and other eruptive diseases. |
|
Protect your plants from damage caused by frost, wind, pests, diseases, animals, hungry or mischievous kids, and jealous neighbors. |
|
Under the topic of auto-immunity, most programs included only two specific diseases, systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis. |
|
In patients suffering from a variety of severe diseases the detection of erythroblasts in peripheral blood is associated with poor prognosis. |
|
A senior pharmaceutical company executive says estimates of the prevalence of diseases are often exaggerated. |
|
Chronic diseases account for billions of dollars in annual medical expenditures. |
|
Because such diseases can lie dormant for 40 years before symptoms appear, many more cases are expected to surface. |
|
However, some time is required to treat dormant diseases such as chronic asthma and diabetes. |
|
The hospital trust shares its medical expertise in the field of blood diseases with the facility in India. |
|
Poorly maintained sprayers result in wastage of inputs and uneven control of pests, weeds and diseases. |
|
Everything that can be done to stop the transmission of diseases like avian influenza is important in controlling it. |
|
This predictability of the dying phase is not always as clear in other chronic incurable diseases. |
|
Disease manifestations, such as fever, dropsy, diarrhea, or cyanosis, were used as names of diseases. |
|
Cures using herbs for diseases such as fever, jaundice, dropsy and leprosy are enumerated. |
|
The distinction from tuberculous lymphadenitis is very important, since these diseases have differing treatments and prognoses. |
|
Neurologists are often accused of being interested in only rare incurable diseases. |
|
|
The five categories of risk are sickness, invalidity, old age, accidents at work and occupational diseases, and finally unemployment. |
|
In general it may be stated that iodoform is now used in all the wounds, injuries, diseases, requiring the action of an antiseptic. |
|
Some of our friends here are suffering from communicable diseases like scabies and coughs. |
|
We chose these varieties because of their resistance to a number of diseases, as well as good yields of well flavoured fruit. |
|
Because their skin is inherently irritable, patients with atopic diseases may not tolerate topical retinoids, even if they apply a moisturiser. |
|
Parents in some parts of Britain have travelled abroad or paid privately for single vaccinations against the individual diseases. |
|
Of all mental disorders, depression is probably the one most frequently seen co-morbid with other diseases. |
|
There are incurable diseases in medicine, incorrigible vices in the ministry, insoluble cases in law. |
|
As such, despite our physical isolation, we are at constant risk from incursions by exotic pests and diseases. |
|
Regulations also provide for the notification of prescribed industrial diseases and accidents. |
|
Of course we all want to see all possible diseases cured, but surely not at the cost of human sacrifice? |
|
It can be used for febrile diseases where the heat is burning up the fluids of the body. |
|
Dense foliage in irrigated winter wheat may favor development of different foliar and leaf spotting diseases. |
|
Many diseases or medical conditions have vertigo as an associated complaint, Gantz notes. |
|
The use of plant infusions to cure many different types of diseases is very common in Brazilian folk medicine. |
|
Invariably, new suckers carry the pests and diseases that have infected the parent plant. |
|
In addition, they are prone to any number of disfiguring diseases that can transfer to other fruiting trees like rowan and crab apple. |
|
However, not all diseases have good animal models, and some pathogens will infect no other species but humans. |
|
Grape growers often use roses at the ends of the rows in the vineyard as forewarners of any diseases that might affect the vines. |
|
This cross sectional survey was not designed to provide direct evidence of transmission of infectious diseases in prison. |
|
|
There are also some major infectious diseases for which vaccinations have not been developed. |
|
American foul brood is the most serious of all brood diseases, followed by European foul brood. |
|
The diseases most commonly caused by these bacteria are known as American foul brood and European foul brood. |
|
In the evening before the holiday people suffering from diseases go to places where fraxinella is known to grow. |
|
If wolves come into contact with domestic dogs, they pick up diseases and may cross-breed. |
|
Against this background, the emergence of new human infectious diseases or viruses is unsurprising. |
|
The classic means of protecting persons exposed to infectious diseases is vaccination. |
|
Copper sulfate is the oldest and most effective mean for protection of fruiters, bushes, grapevines and other plants from various diseases. |
|
Posters portraying symptoms, preventive and curative aspects for diseases, tips for first aid and healthy diet also form part of the auditorium. |
|
People consume tokek because most believe the reptile has curative properties for a variety of skin diseases. |
|
Shark cartilage pills are advertised as cure-alls for any number of ailments and diseases. |
|
Foliar diseases such as Cercospora leaf spot, curly top, and powdery mildew do occur, but are normally easier to control than soilborne diseases. |
|
The only way to eradicate these diseases is to sterilize or fumigate the soil. |
|
They may have functional dyspepsia or diseases such as peptic ulcer or gastro-oesophageal reflux disease. |
|
The value to researchers is that such studies can be most successful in tracking incidences of various common diseases. |
|
The use of high-dose corticosteroid has been the cornerstone in the treatment of some infective or immunologic lung diseases. |
|
Rather than being a single disease, it is in fact a complex of related diseases which include forms known as yellow mosaic and veinbanding. |
|
They need constant care and protection, vitamin pills, potions against possible diseases, and so on. |
|
Many biological warfare agents cause illness that could be mistaken for common diseases such as influenza. |
|
It also caused post-flood diseases for children like influenza, diarrhea and fever. |
|
|
Leading causes of kidney failure are diabetes, followed by hypertension, glomerulonephritis, and cystic kidney and urologic diseases. |
|
The mutations that cause cystic fibrosis and dozens of other diseases are now routinely diagnosed in genetic testing labs. |
|
Certain painful and tragic hereditary diseases such as cystic fibrosis might be cured and even eliminated. |
|
Along with asthma and cystic fibrosis, BPD is one of the most common chronic lung diseases in children. |
|
Lung transplants are performed when people have diseases such as emphysema and cystic fibrosis. |
|
In the dry season, the women would fetch it and carry it home in jars on their heads, or from dirty tanks which gave us diseases. |
|
The most common diseases to affect roses are black spot, powdery mildew, and rust, but many disease-resistant roses are available. |
|
This is the season when powdery mildew, late blight and other fungal diseases arrive. |
|
There are several fungal diseases that like roses, the most common being blackspot and powdery mildew. |
|
The fungi causing powdery mildew, leaf rust, Stagonospora, and Septoria diseases may infect the leaves at this time. |
|
Of course the cooler temperatures may also result in a greater incidence of fungus diseases such as powdery mildew. |
|
There are different skull shapes, different frequencies of blood types, different incidences of heritable diseases. |
|
Drugs inhibiting the enzyme would prevent cell death, the goal in treating stroke and neurodegenerative diseases. |
|
Hantavirus, Ebola and Hendra are just a few other new diseases to recently emerge in humans. |
|
The extinction of New Zealand quail is thought to have been caused by the appearance of diseases from introduced game birds. |
|
Seedling diseases including damping off and seed rot are the most common soybean disease problems in Nebraska. |
|
These findings suggest a role for prebiotic, probiotic, and soil organisms in the treatment of allergic and autoimmune diseases. |
|
Smoking is a major contributor to many serious diseases, such as heart disease and lung cancer. |
|
Volunteers who provided their skin cells to be cloned had diseases such as diabetes or spinal cord injury. |
|
Certain diseases, such as diabetes, can cause a cataract to occur at an earlier age than normal. |
|
|
The value of animal research for finding new treatments for human diseases is a continuing debate. |
|
Increasingly we will hear about patients with common diseases who have typical symptoms. |
|
Cancer is second only to diseases of the heart and blood vessels as a cause of death. |
|
They do little research into tropical diseases yet these diseases affect millions. |
|
Neck pain can be the result of many disorders or diseases in the structure of the neck. |
|
It may soon be used in humans to treat heart disease, diabetes, and other such diseases. |
|
They are relevant to food only insofar as they cause diseases in plants and animals. |
|
Quitting smoking can help reduce your risk of gum disease and other oral diseases such as cancer of the mouth. |
|
Are not sin, transgression and iniquity dread diseases that lead to spiritual death? |
|
Should everybody know what diseases they are predisposed to suffer from in old age? |
|
An imbalance of excitation and inhibition may underlie several neurological diseases, including autism, Tourette's syndrome and schizophrenia. |
|
The most effective way to prevent transmission of infectious diseases, including hepatitis A and B, is through pre-exposure immunization. |
|
Oesophageal and gastric cancer are common diseases that pose considerable challenges to surgeons. |
|
Another indicator was the high rates of child malnutrition, gastro-enteritis, tuberculosis, and other quintessential diseases of poverty. |
|
Theories of mental diseases commixed with philosophy and religious beliefs. |
|
Changes in the inner ear or in the nerves attached to it, earwax buildup and various diseases can all impact your hearing. |
|
Trees can help reduce the incidence of respiratory diseases as well as lung cancer. |
|
At present, gene therapy is being contemplated for both genetic and acquired diseases. |
|
In the US, gene therapy is currently only being tested for the treatment of diseases that have no other cures. |
|
And despite all the good news about dental health, tooth decay remains one of the most common diseases of childhood. |
|
|
I'll rest easier knowing I'm inoculated against eradicated diseases like Smallpox. |
|
Millions of people die each year from preventable diseases for lack of very basic drugs. |
|
In some countries, especially developing countries, certain diseases are common among the people. |
|
Fungicides also can be an effective management tool for diseases when applied preventatively. |
|
Health authorities initiated preventive measures to prevent infectious diseases, if any. |
|
In the absence of civic or infrastructure development, people in Sittilingi, Tamil Nadu, fell prey to numerous preventable diseases. |
|
And he's told me how children would come in and they would inoculate them against diseases, but he knew there had to be something else. |
|
Children, the old and people in weak physical condition or with an impaired immune system are less able to resist such diseases. |
|
She felt like she was getting a thousand diseases just from their second-hand smoke. |
|
Although these diseases seldom occurred in an acute form in Europe, standards of health declined. |
|
Rearing turkeys was no easy job even in small numbers and diseases such as pip and gape took their toll despite good care and attention. |
|
It is pro-Porto Alegre, pro-people, pro a world where poor children don't die from preventable diseases. |
|
It may also create cures for diseases, uncover unique phytonutrients, or introduce entirely new views on what constitutes good nutrition. |
|
At a time when diseases spread by mosquitoes such as dengue fever and filariasis are on the increase, the experts' warning is alarming. |
|
This damage impairs the immune system, leading to infections, cancer, or degenerative diseases such as heart disease. |
|
The embryonic stem cells could then be used in transplantation therapy in patients with degenerative diseases of other tissues. |
|
She had a particular interest in multiple sclerosis and in other chronic degenerative diseases of the nervous system. |
|
Lack of awareness regarding all vector-borne diseases like filariasis is the major bottleneck in the promotion of such schemes. |
|
In these cases there might be chronic bleeding, hemorrhoids, rectal prolapse and other diseases. |
|
My uncle gleefully told me about all the different diseases that each different biting thing carried. |
|
|
For children, dietary guidance must focus on health promotion and habits fostering later prevention of chronic diseases. |
|
By slowing down the aging rate, we basically delay the onset and the progression of a whole host of mortal and debilitating diseases. |
|
Of the 50 patients, 23 belonging to the paediatric age group had congenital diseases. |
|
There are no documented congenital diseases specific to Austrian Americans. |
|
Our results suggest that delta infection may not be very common in Indian patients with HBV-related liver diseases. |
|
The country has made headlines lately with the resurgence of preventable diseases such as plague, malaria, dengue fever and tuberculosis. |
|
This attractive, glossy red apple has some resistance to diseases such as apple scab, cedar apple rust, and fire blight. |
|
The previous inhabitants, Taino indigenes, were destroyed by diseases, weapons, and enslavement brought by the Spanish. |
|
As researchers show how the two diseases are very much alike, I'm waiting with bated breath to see what kind of biological differences, if any, these eggheads might find. |
|
Food irradiation, it argues, reduces the incidence of food-borne diseases. |
|
The incidence of various diseases, including cancer, increases with age. |
|
He established one of the first licensed fetal-tissue banks in the country, collecting pancreases for research that may lead to cures for incurable diseases. |
|
He learned to recognize pneumonia, bronchiectasis, pleurisy, emphysema, pneumothorax, phthisis, and other lung diseases from the sounds he heard with his stethoscope. |
|
Among the nations there are fearful wars and dreadful diseases. |
|
It is commonly utilized either as a nutritional supplement or as a phytochemical remedy for different diseases ranging from chronic inflammation to circulatory dysfunctions. |
|
The review also found significant indirect evidence that links mold, moisture and microbiological activity to asthma and other respiratory diseases. |
|
It is estimated that nearly 60-70 per cent of all disabilities are due to preventable causes like malnutrition, communicable diseases, childhood infections or accidents. |
|
This is why they are called infectious or communicable diseases. |
|
In addition to paediatrics and infectious and communicable diseases, he long fostered an interest in environmental hazards, such as air pollution. |
|
While it is a serious step to limit a person's freedom of movement, there seems to be little alternative in the case of highly infectious communicable diseases. |
|
|
Vaccination has a heroic history in the control of communicable diseases. |
|
A variety of other degenerative diseases have been, and are being, identified as causes of dementia, including Creutzfeldt Jakob disease and Pick's disease. |
|
But a new strain of industrial diseases is taking their place. |
|
He was taken to the infectious diseases hospital three days later. |
|
In the post-genome era, disease gene mapping using dense genetic markers has become an important tool for dissecting complex inheritable diseases. |
|
The company's specialty pharmaceutical products include generic injectables used in such areas as anesthesia, cardiovascular, infectious diseases and pain management. |
|
In England, the increase of inoculable diseases was 20 per cent., notwithstanding an expenditure of 200 millions sterling since 1850 in sanitary works. |
|
The children, who are mainly toddlers, could pick up infections and may not after all be inoculated against the childhood diseases, it has emerged. |
|
If fungal diseases or aphids do appear, the plants are simply sprayed with a combination of one tablespoon baking soda and one tablespoon dish soap mixed in a gallon of water. |
|
The conquest of major epidemic diseases such as the plague and smallpox was an important contribution, but vulnerability to disease had persisted as a result of poor health. |
|
And of course they carry infectious diseases such as plague. |
|
Very unusual and increasingly violent phenomena are originating from nature all over the world in the form of weather disturbances and plague-like new diseases. |
|
It featured some horrendous claims about anthropologists abusing a South American tribe and even conniving in their deaths from introduced diseases. |
|
Farmed fish regularly and in increasing numbers escape into the wild where they interbreed, spread diseases to native species and dilute the natural gene pool. |
|
Recurrence of common complex diseases also may be increased in the children of consanguineous parents because of a greater proportion of shared genes. |
|
Stories on hot-button topics like recreational drug use or sexually transmitted diseases would be written without an alarmist or finger-wagging tone. |
|
Deforestation and other radical ecosystem alterations also promote diseases, such as malaria and cholera, as well as new strains of existing contagions. |
|
In 1859, when she was staying at her grandparents' home, Lotty became ill with bronchitis and pleurisy, diseases which seem to have affected her for the rest of her life. |
|
After the 1903 drought, cattle diseases such as pleuropneumonia and rinderpest followed behind a disguised increase in tax rates for rural Africans. |
|
The combined goals of preventing sexually transmitted diseases and unwanted pregnancy should be considerations when choosing a contraceptive method. |
|
|
Cod-liver Oil may also be used by inunction, in the foregoing disorders, but it is best administered internally, and in the following diseases, viz. |
|
Plants are exposed to a great number of pathogenic microorganisms, but a relatively small proportion of them are able to invade plants and cause diseases. |
|
On the Australian mainland, they killed them by giving them poisoned food and clothing contaminated by diseases they had never before experienced. |
|
In general, tubulointerstitial diseases progress more slowly than do glomerular diseases, diabetic and hypertensive nephropathy, and polycystic kidney disease. |
|
Other diseases related to RA that may cause pulmonary fibrosis are systemic lupus erythematosus, polymyositis and dermatomyositis, Sjogren's syndrome, scleroderma and others. |
|
Medical personnel fear an outbreak of cholera and other contagious diseases if the bodies of the corpses are not cleared before they start decaying. |
|
Soon it may be feasible to correct genetic disease or alter the genetic machinery of cells in a way that may be used to treat cancer or other acquired diseases. |
|
Such information may turn out to be useful for correlating protein expression levels with diseases or other conditions, such as reactions to drugs. |
|
Deafness is associated with many hereditary and non-hereditary diseases and may also result from pre or post-natal exposure to a variety of toxins and traumas. |
|
More than a dozen highly contagious and potentially lethal diseases can be spread by horses, hounds, and hunt followers as they race across country. |
|
Along with this, Farr developed a classification of diseases, the forerunner of today's international classifications administered by the World Health Organisation. |
|
Using survey data, ARS researchers examine diets as a factor in select diseases and help public policy officials make decisions about food safety and food fortification. |
|
Despite all the diseases they carry, the nuisance they make of themselves and their general foulness, I'm actually quite fond of these little rats. |
|
It is important to remember that certain diseases, such as viruses, Eutypa dieback, and crown gall, cannot be directly controlled with pesticides at the present time. |
|
A similar phenomenon is seen with other infections, such as leprosy, leishmaniasis, and fungal diseases including cryptococcosis and sporotrichosis. |
|
Check stored bulbs and corms for fungal diseases and damage by rodents. |
|
People with congenital diseases of the heart or lungs, such as cyanotic congenital heart disease, are at high risk of infections which can then spread to the brain. |
|
In the meantime, new diseases like furunculosis, infectious pancreatic necrosis, infectious salmon anaemia and cardiomyopathy syndrome are surfacing at regular intervals. |
|
The earliness of the crop may help it escape severe yield loss due to rust and mildew but, undoubtedly these diseases will have some impact on the yields. |
|
She had a history of a right ovarian cystectomy several years earlier but no history of sexually transmitted diseases or pelvic inflammatory disease. |
|
|
In southeast and south central Nebraska, leaf and stripe rusts, powdery mildew and Septoria leaf blotch are the most common and important foliar diseases. |
|
My dada is old, so all he and his friends talk about is diseases. |
|
This isn't merely an old-fashioned system, but an effective, practical way to reduce pests and diseases and to help keep your soil healthy and fertile. |
|
The complexity of genetic diseases has been far greater than anticipated, and the public's interest in learning about genetic predispositions is unexpectedly low. |
|
The 12-member consensus panel included representation from internal medicine, gastroenterology, infectious diseases, pediatrics, family practice, oncology and the public. |
|
He adds that this immune defect may also be present in other diseases where a build-up of waste and plaques occur, such as in cardiovascular disease and Gaucher's disease. |
|
They help to prevent more deadly diseases from affecting your pet. |
|
In the distant future, individual susceptibility to major common polygenic diseases such as heart disease and cancer may be ascertained from DNA genetic profiling. |
|
Many of the chronic diseases linked to obesity are preventable. |
|
The parents of a youngster who pricked his finger on a hypodermic needle in a park face an agonising wait to find out if he has caught any diseases. |
|
Occasional outbreaks of German measles, whooping cough, polio, and other contagious diseases prompt public health campaigns to immunize Amish children. |
|
The development of purified cardiac glycosides, the active principles of digitalis, has been a distinct step forward in the treatment of diseases of the heart. |
|
It is believed that viruses causing deadly diseases such as ebola and salmonella were procured in Russia and that anthrax was obtained from North Korea. |
|
We would be left with only anecdotal information on which to base prognosis and treatment for many common cancers and we would know much less about many common diseases. |
|
Infectious diseases rather than chronic degenerative diseases were the order of the day, and the majority of the population lived in poverty and squalor. |
|
Apart from hygienic measures, homoeopathic medicines can play a marvellous role as prophylactics to control the outbreaks of such epidemic diseases. |
|
They are now self-taught experts on prophylactics and parasitic diseases. |
|
Thus, our results suggest that delta co-infection is more common in acute liver diseases while delta super-infection occurs more frequently in chronic liver disease. |
|
However, a high PSA score does not always indicate cancer and can be caused by other prostate diseases such as benign prostatic hypertrophy or prostatitis. |
|
A sudden pale complexion with cold sweat is the sign of sudden prostration of yang qi due to febrile diseases caused by exogenous pathogenic wind-cold. |
|
|
Mosquito borne diseases, such as dengue fever and encephalitis, are generally more influenced by ambient conditions than diseases passed directly from human to human. |
|
The present invention relates to the use of certain prussiates for plant nutrition and for the prevention and cure of certain deficiency diseases in plants. |
|
Moreover, chronic diseases of kidneys, lung, brain, liver, joints, etc., and stress related psychosomatic illnesses cause significant morbidity in the general public. |
|
Skin fungal diseases are called dermatophytoses from phyton, a plant. |
|
The presence of pubic lice should prompt an evaluation for other common sexually transmitted diseases, such as chlamydial infection and gonorrhea. |
|
Glen says mass-farmed animals are pumped full of antibiotics to ward off potential diseases they may spread, due to their living in such close proximity to one another. |
|
Free radicals react destructively with many cellular components causing cell damage and leading to many diseases from cataract to cancer, heart disease to dementia. |
|
The top ten diseases among purebred dogs include several that afflict humans, including cancer, epilepsy, heart disease, allergy, retinal disease and cataracts. |
|
The top ten diseases in purebreds include several that are major health concerns to humans, including cancer, epilepsy, retinal disease, cataracts, and heart disease. |
|
All heifers received routine health management, which included deworming and vaccination for clostridial and respiratory diseases, pasturella, leptospirosis, and vibriosis. |
|
The vet suggests several lab tests to rule out a urinary tract infection and other more serious diseases such as diabetes mellitus and diabetes insipidus. |
|
As animals face into another summer at grass, beef and dairy farmers have been urged to take effective precautions against killer animal diseases. |
|
Siti said babies and children were most vulnerable to lung infections, malaria, diarrheal diseases, cholera and measles, which usually emerge after floods. |
|
Transmission of diseases such as avian influenza, salmonensis, and avian cholera could lead to massive die-offs of urban and wild Canada geese and other species. |
|
Cigarettes contain many pesticide residues, some chlorine chemicals that when burned produce dioxin, a known human carcinogen and cause of a host of diseases. |
|
Parents often wonder why it takes a year or more and multiple shots to fully immunize their children against diseases like diphtheria and pertussis. |
|
A balanced diet can lower the risk of infectious diseases and this is apparent in the reduction of diseases such as cholera, diphtheria and polio in England. |
|
For example, completion of the chicken genome will provide a valuable model for human embryology and development as well as for study of reproductive diseases. |
|
This extremely rare and fatal brain disorder belongs to a family of human and animal diseases known as the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. |
|
They are the main pathogenic factors of endogenous diseases. |
|