They may be recruited by injury to the epithelium and their elastases are potent mucin secretagogues that can facilitate plasma exudation. |
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The increased tracheal blood flow contributes to increased airway exudation. |
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It is the same plastic exudation as that which in some cases becomes concreted into a false membrane. |
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Resin exudation, cankers and cracked bark are characteristic on P. roxburghii. |
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Affected trees developed small chlorotic leaves, wilted and finally died showing cankers and gum exudation on the stems. |
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The neurogenic stimulus did not alter albumin exudation in any group. |
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The selected symptoms were pain, lachrymation, photophobia, exudation, pruritis, vascular dilation, oedema and analysis of macrophotographs of conjunctival capillarograms. |
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In the xylem, following the application of nitrate, both the exudation rate and the concentration of the cytokinins increased, with ZR being the dominant species in the sap. |
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Mastic, also spelled Mastich, aromatic resin, obtained as a soft exudation from incisions in mastic trees. |
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Chrysocolla is an exudation found in the shafts, which we have already mentioned. |
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Degranulation via cytolysis involves eosinophil rupture and exudation of cellular contents, making eosinophils difficult to stain and recognize histologically. |
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The most conspicuous symptom is the red-rusty exudation which covers bark tissues on trunks and twigs. |
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About 3 weeks later, the tree shows first symptoms of 'drying out', in the form of reduced oleoresin exudation. |
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However, the first symptoms may not appear until the following winter when resin exudation can be observed on the buds. |
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Glandular secretion is stimulated with no alteration in plasma exudation. |
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Symptoms are characterized by resinous exudation on the surface of shoots, branches, exposed roots and boles. |
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Further research is required to clarify what constitutes low, medium and high exudation. |
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Apocatastasis, The subsidence of a tumour, or the re-establishment of an exudation or secretion. |
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Watering green areas by drip, exudation or sprinklers. |
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Chronic inflammation is of longer duration and is characterized microscopically by the presence of lymphocytes, monocytes, and plasma cells and, in general, is associated with little fluid exudation. |
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It is primarily generated by osmotic pressure in the cells of the roots and can be demonstrated by exudation of fluid when the stem is cut off just aboveground. |
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Skin applications to cure eczema may give temporary relief, but if the exudation is suppressed, some other more serious disease of childhood may develop. |
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Their data showed that the Cry3Bb1 protein was released into soil via root exudation and through decay of plant biomass, but dissipated in less than 21 days under all tested conditions. |
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During epidemics, when environmental conditions favour exudation and spread, the bacterium may cause systemic infections associated with crown pockets. |
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Organic acid exudation or phosphatase activity stimulation by the pea crop increases soil phosphorus availability and facilitates uptake of this mineral by the cereal crop. |
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In severe burns, the body loses large amounts of nitrogen, in the urine and by exudation from the burned body surface. |
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VistaMR is the first compound in a new class of mineralocorticoids with innovative application to target exudation in the back of the eye. |
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Eyes with macular oedema, serous elevation of the sensory retina, or exudation should be treated by gentle laser photocoagulation to thrombose the aneurysm. |
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Native mumijo commonly used in traditional medicine is a brown to blackish-brown exudation of variable consistencies that seeps from rock layers of different mountain regions. |
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