It has already been used to scan historical artefacts, including Egyptian mummies, and body organs and bones for teaching medical students. |
|
All this in a plant with no eyes or imaging organs anybody knows about, no brain or nervous system to support mindfulness. |
|
A new antifreeze protein discovered in tiny snow fleas by Canadian researchers may allow organs to be stored longer before being transplanted. |
|
Where the split occurs along the body determines how much duplication of organs there is and the degree of competition between the two heads. |
|
The taxidermists will first remove the pet's internal organs which can be returned for burial at the request of the pet owner. |
|
They lie in particular positions that differ among organs and regions of organs. |
|
Other organs usually are affected as a consequence of miliary tuberculosis. |
|
Even more important, why can't we regenerate tissue to repair damaged organs like our heart or lungs? |
|
Those that arise from surface linings of organs are the commonest group and are called carcinomas. |
|
It most often affects the brain and liver, but it can hurt all organs of the body. |
|
Small portable organs consisting entirely of regals were widely used in the 16th and 17th centuries. |
|
Breathing is by special gas exchange organs along the side of the body called tracheae and malpighian tubules. |
|
In rare cases toxocariasis can lead to partial blindness and swelling of the organs and central nervous system. |
|
This type of lung cancer grows more quickly and is more likely to spread to other organs in the body. |
|
I think it is undeniably wrong to clone a person just to take organs or whatever else they may need. |
|
Target organs in this respect include nasal or oral cavity, lung, oesophagus, stomach mucosa, duodenum or skin. |
|
There was a slowing down in growth as the reproductive organs developed and a marked upswing in growth after flowering. |
|
The doctor fearing that Penguin's internal organs had been dangerously damaged, decided to open his belly up to examine his entrails. |
|
Treatment must be rapid to protect organs such as the kidneys, lungs, and liver from damage. |
|
For example, the conventional Western musical keyboard used on pianos and organs has always had its problems. |
|
|
Consequently, holly is often used for the black keys on pianos and organs and for the pegs and fingerboards on violins. |
|
The major group of mesozoans, the Dicyemida, live as microscopic parasites in the renal organs of squid and octopuses. |
|
Musically, the album isn't afraid of drawing on different instruments, from mouth organs to banjos, to acoustic guitars and piano. |
|
Plant growth originates from meristems, localized tissues with stem cell features that are at the origin of all organs of the plant. |
|
Sensory nerves carry messages from the sense organs to the brain for processing. |
|
This flows between the organs of the body along pathways called meridians or channels. |
|
They may then deviate from a Fibonacci pattern and tend to form approximate whorls of three organs or have a somewhat irregular arrangement. |
|
Critical organs such as hearts, lung, kidneys and livers are only taken from donors who are brain dead and whose hearts are still beating. |
|
Around these reproductive organs is the perianth, usually consisting of an outer whorl of sepals and an inner whorl of petals. |
|
On Monday, a High Court judge challenged law enforcement organs to promote and uphold the interests and aspiration of the community. |
|
One form of skin cancer, malignant melanoma, can spread to other organs very rapidly. |
|
The transplantation of organs is now an established part of medical practice. |
|
The remaining morphospecies are organs of cycads, ginkgophytes, lycopods, sphenopsids, and bryophytes. |
|
In winter when food is scarce, keas have been known to feed on the fatty internal organs of dead and live sheep in the high country. |
|
Primary lymphoid organs in the thymus and bone marrow constitute the major site of lymphocyte development. |
|
They are the main constituents of membranes outside cells and tiny metabolic organs inside every cell. |
|
I think of it as arising from pain fibers that are not mucosal but deeper in hollow organs or in solid masses. |
|
The rush of adrenaline to the brain causes the flow of blood to the skin and the internal organs to slow. |
|
Stem cells, taken from embryos, are the basic building blocks from which tissues and organs grow. |
|
The activity level of the major organs increases, and hormones are secreted through the adrenal gland and nervous system. |
|
|
Insect adhesive organs are either smooth and deformable cuticle pads or fields of adhesive setae. |
|
Foetal organs are well formed and acquire strength by the sixth and seventh months. |
|
They use their vibrissae as sensing organs underwater to monitor the movements of fishes and other prey. |
|
For example, the clinician may want to know if the disease is active, or which organs might be involved. |
|
This web-like tissue binds cells and organs together but permits these cells and organs to move, as necessary, in relation to each other. |
|
The integument is composed of the skin, which covers the entire body, in addition to accessory organs derived from skin. |
|
Cloney has provided a clear description of the types of organs in ascidians. |
|
The other issue would the one of whether, if someone has not opted out, their next of kin still had to be contacted before organs were taken. |
|
Inulin type fructan was detected in all vegetative organs of Campanula rapunculoides L. plants. |
|
It used to be maintained that there were almost 200 vestigial organs in the human body. |
|
The media function as organs of the government, disseminating its propaganda line with scant regard for the facts. |
|
If the disease is untreated, the heart, brain and other organs can be damaged. |
|
These organs of the global economy are likewise members of the United Nations family. |
|
Indeed, rice coleoptiles are one of the few plant organs that can grow under anoxia. |
|
That is, the citizens of the states, as well as all other organs of government, were to have an equal voice in constitutional matters. |
|
The service chiefs are very experienced men who reach the head of major organs of the State after a long career experience. |
|
In that state where all the organs of the state and civil society too have been communalised how can one hope for justice within the state? |
|
Her lungs had been crushed, her left clavicle and ribs were fractured, vital organs had ruptured. |
|
The public service pay conflict marks a further step in the trade unions' transformation into organs of government and big business. |
|
Is it acceptable that the management of a state company should ignore fundamental organs of the State? |
|
|
He or she must not undermine the primacy of democratic law-making by the organs of government directly or indirectly accountable to the people. |
|
Is it a state of affairs where free speech is suppressed by the organs of the State? |
|
Less commonly, bowel cancer can spread to other, more distant organs such as the lung or brain. |
|
The Director of Public Prosecutions is independent of the other organs of State in the exercise of his duties. |
|
The organs they produce include segmental muscles, nephridia, gonads and gonoducts. |
|
He said there were now criminals in the country who considered themselves more powerful than the organs of the state. |
|
The Levellers broke down organs in churches during the English 17th-century Civil War. |
|
Well of course the very early organs were all mechanical and there was no electricity because they didn't have any. |
|
Donated blood and organs should be screened to prevent transmission of West Nile virus, federal officials say. |
|
Brain organs which were used got bigger and those which were not used shrunk, causing the skull to rise and fall with organ development. |
|
This procedure uses artificial extracorporeal circulation to provide oxygenated blood to vital organs while the heart is stopped. |
|
The liver and reproductive organs of the puffer fish contain tetrodotoxin, an extremely powerful nerve poison. |
|
If you want to have specific organs donated, will doctors remove anything else? |
|
Whereas we are now getting used, and will increasingly get used to transplants of other vital organs below the neck. |
|
The examination of the internal organs is usually done under general anaesthetic by a gynaecologist. |
|
Dehydration can impair the function of vital organs like the kidneys, brain, and heart. |
|
It is usually found in the lymph nodes but can also spread to involve other organs such as the spleen and bone marrow. |
|
In only specific organs is a biopsy recommended without there being an identifiable lump. |
|
These excretory organs open through nephridiopores on the ventral surface of the body wall. |
|
This is a disease that affects all organs of the body, but affects the liver and brain most lethally. |
|
|
In many instances, bodies reject transplant organs because their immune systems see them as foreign tissue. |
|
Two leafy organs protect the floret of grasses, the lemma, and the palea, and both are considered to represent reduced vegetative leaves. |
|
The second factor which supports xenotransplantation is that these animal organs may be less susceptible to certain human infections. |
|
Research on porcine cells, tissues, and organs in xenotransplantation should continue if certain conditions are met. |
|
This distinguishes them from the various organs used for xenotransplantation. |
|
Etherington adopts an apt change in registration, giving vent to the diapasons that would have been the lynchpin of organs in Handel's own time. |
|
Review, the Weekly Standard, and other conservative organs provide the talking heads for cable news. |
|
In such a case, it is a great mitzvah for a Jew to donate organs to save another person's life. |
|
These organs were played only with sliding stops, not a keyboard like a modern organ. |
|
One doesn't have to be a right-to-lifer to feel squeamish about harvesting organs from a second-trimester fetus. |
|
The Elek were a race that were not born, but grown in clone vats with bionic limbs and nanofiber organs as part of their physiology. |
|
A device to make the organs of brain-dead donors more suitable for transplant will be evaluated in a government-funded study. |
|
Many other animals have sense organs that can detect stimuli beyond the confines of the human senses. |
|
Furthermore, Tri suggested brain-dead patients donate their hearts, livers, eyes and other organs to those in need. |
|
The fact that the baby is still doing the lambada on all internal organs it can find is far more reassuring to me. |
|
This power is realised directly through the organs of state power and local self-government. |
|
Internal voids resulted from the more rapid decay of internal organs and musculature than the cuticle of the exoskeleton. |
|
This would give a second chance to people who are waiting for organ transplants for which available organs are in short supply. |
|
Organs transplanted from living donors achieve a greater rate of success than do organs from deceased donors. |
|
Under the current system, most organs are donated by patients on life support machines who die after suffering irreversible brain damage. |
|
|
Nevertheless, successfully transplanting animal organs into human beings is still a long way off. |
|
The organs need to be transplanted into the other person within a matter of hours. |
|
The heart or other organs can be transplanted or kept going by mechanical methodry, but the brain without electrical impulse is useless. |
|
However, for people who need vital organs replaced, the deficiencies of artificial substitutes are a matter of life and death. |
|
Many different tissues can be transplanted such as whole organs like the heart, or cells as in bone marrow transplantation. |
|
My mother was an anatomy professor, so I grew up among bones on wires, organs in jars, and dissected bodies on marble-top tables. |
|
After medical team members have confirmed brain death, permission to harvest the donor kidneys and other organs must be obtained from the patient's family members. |
|
Kirsty, who was born with her heart back to front and with other major organs misplaced, will compete in her wheelchair in a three kilometres junior race. |
|
Aussie fund managers will need a tough hide and nerves of steel to withstand the bagging they'll be copping from News organs if this one goes down. |
|
The liver is one of the few human organs that regenerates, so having pieces removed usually does not impair function. |
|
Down syndrome and other chromosomal rearrangements are often accompanied by improperly functioning organs and immune systems. |
|
Some of these supplements, called glandulars, contain bovine brain, pituitary, pineal gland, and spinal cord, all organs where infectious prions may concentrate. |
|
When too much thallium circulates in the blood, it invades all the organs of the body, impairing their operation, destroying hair follicles, muscles, and nerves. |
|
Reflexology is an ancient system whereby the feet and key points thereon are massaged and this stimulates corresponding organs and parts of the body. |
|
One is that it could provide sick people with matching organs or tissues. |
|
The Wonder theaters were all built around the same time, and parts for the organs were shipped out as they became available. |
|
Heart muscles and some other involuntary muscles are also affected in some forms of muscular dystrophy, and a few forms involve other organs as well. |
|
He also found that date palm wine was used in the sterilisation of the body and organs during mummification and aromatic spices were used in the embalming. |
|
Such jars were used in ancient Egyptian burials to store the internal organs of mummies but the jar is the only example in the Harrogate collection to contain a residue. |
|
They are organs without bodies, rather than bodies without organs. |
|
|
Guidelines from the Royal College of Pathologists allow mortuary technicians to dissect bodies and remove organs in the absence of the pathologist. |
|
The family is characterized by thickened stem organs and by linear or sword-shaped leaves-small and grasslike in the crocuses and blue-eyed grasses. |
|
This attitudinal change will not just happen, we the people must require it of our leaders, of our organs of government, of private enterprise, and of ourselves. |
|
It is precisely those pivotal organs of government on which we would normally rely for consensual, but authoritative, action in a crisis such as now. |
|
These organisations and their spokesmen say quite openly that what they are concerned with is the issue of violation of human rights by the organs of the state. |
|
But over the years this profile has been destroyed and now these critical organs of local government development are mere excess baggage to Government. |
|
The Fascist Party and its organs were dissolved amid popular celebration. |
|
The president, the parliament including all other organs of the state should be subservient to the constitution that would make the country a responsible state. |
|
He sings sweetly behind a curtain of organs and electronic keyboards. |
|
It has also been noticed that the brain tends to function better in a cooler environment whereas organs like the heart function better at normal body temperature. |
|
Zinc helps organize cells into healthy tissues and organs so your baby has what it needs during the first weeks of pregnancy when vital organs are being developed. |
|
He claims the hospital was more concerned about protecting its reputation than trying to find suitable donor organs from a compatible blood group. |
|
Great Ormond Street has given Mr Walker and Reece's mum Donna Walker a bleeper each so doctors can contact them at any time of day or night if organs become available. |
|
Traditional Dutch street organs are a familiar sight in Holland as you would expect, but Territorians don't have to travel overseas to see and hear them. |
|
How many knew or worried about their dead relatives' organs until they were stirred up by showboating politicians, chancing lawyers, and medical crusaders? |
|
The ultimate expression of the code is dependent on the specific biotic and abiotic environment in which cells and organs find themselves as they develop and grow. |
|
Seeds are bulky organs with high metabolic and biosynthetic activity. |
|
His work involved studying correlation coefficients for the relation between measurements of organs in animals and is important for the beginnings of biometry. |
|
Our sense organs are part of our biological organism, living organism. |
|
Schistosomiasis, also known as bilharzia, is an epidemic disease characterized by the gradual destruction of the kidneys, liver and other organs by a parasitic worm. |
|
|
As the last words of the song fade, the swell of organs segues into a trebly acoustic guitar and hi-hat section highly reminiscent of early Modest Mouse. |
|
Unlike donors of vital organs like kidneys, marrow donors can give again and again. |
|
They died because not enough organs were donated for transplantation. |
|
Since there was no artificial liver or heart equivalent to the artificial kidney, if these transplanted organs did not function immediately, death was inevitable. |
|
Kidneys were the first organs to be successfully transplanted. |
|
And then what about those that have actually decided to get so advanced with their sensory organs that they can actually discard the shell and become shell-less molluscs. |
|
He's 62 now, and his latest research is animal transgenics, examining how animals' genes can be altered to make their organs more suitable for human transplantation. |
|
With respect to gene expression, transcriptomes from different plants or organs at different physiological states can now be monitored and compared. |
|
The tracker mechanism continued in use into the 19th century and has been revived on present-day organs because it gives an immediacy of touch from key to pipe. |
|
In the largest organs the trackers may be tens of metres long. |
|
When it moved, it shook his vital organs as if he was standing on an earthquake simulator in a geology museum, and when it spoke, his nerves jumped and jangled in his body. |
|
The pollen organs are synangia, each consisting of a ring of microsporangia united at their bases around a hollow center, a common feature among so called pteridosperms. |
|
The presence of microscopic algae in the circulatory system and internal organs can help to locate where the victim died, as they vary from place to place. |
|
But, because the liver is missing and there's a hole in the toad's body, the blood vessels and lungs burst and the other organs ooze out, he said. |
|
Also threatened is the mysterious giant squid, unusual numbers of which have been found beached in Spain recently, some with their organs damaged almost beyond recognition. |
|
The point is not that vestigial organs have no function whatsoever. |
|
Mr. Santhosh said that few people were able to benefit from a medical achievement as great as transplant of human organs because of non-availability of organs. |
|
The labrum may also participate in nociceptive and proprioceptive mechanisms as free nerve endings and sensory end organs have been identified in its superficial layers. |
|
A sonogram uses sound waves to make pictures of organs in the body. |
|
These are cells which can be the raw material for all sorts of organs and tissues, from the pancreas to nerve cells, or neurones in the brain, to heart cells. |
|
|
The macular neuromast organs bear otoliths, as described above. |
|
Others had malformed internal organs or eye and ear defects. |
|
Following the advance of the division of labour, societies come to encompass a greater number of different organs which are more and more solidary with one another. |
|
There are conditions where the heart and many other organs are functioning relatively well, but the brain is very ill. |
|
Listening to the slow percolation of the organs and the smoky raspiness of his vocals on his classic tracks, you can hear the sound of true inspiration. |
|
The reproductive organs are enclosed within the keel petals. |
|
Human organs are complex aggregates of cells and tissues, and it is possible that concentrations of trace elements vary among the various aggregates. |
|
His vital organs appear to be undamaged, but his life is clearly in danger as more details of the attack emerge. |
|
During the time of the pharaohs, such funerary vessels were used to store the organs of the deceased. |
|
The digestive system is made up of the alimentary canal and the other abdominal organs that play a part in digestion, such as the liver and pancreas. |
|
Sharks can detect vibrations in the water from a few 100m via their lateral lines, a series of pressure-sensitive organs extending along their flanks and over their faces. |
|
Plaster and ceramic replicas of organs and appendages rest on the shelves alongside sets of false teeth. |
|
Perforated cards began to replace barrels for fairground organs during the 19th century, and at about that time the player piano, with a punched paper roll, was introduced. |
|
The LifePort is lightweight and portable allowing organs to be perfused and evaluated from the time of recovery until transplant. |
|
Simple pipe organs existed, but were largely confined to churches, although there were portable varieties. |
|
Some fish, such as catfish and sharks, have the Ampullae of Lorenzini, organs that detect weak electric currents on the order of millivolt. |
|
In most species, gonads are paired organs of similar size, which can be partially or totally fused. |
|
There may also be a range of secondary organs that increase reproductive fitness. |
|
These fish rely on regions of lymphoid tissue within other organs to produce immune cells. |
|
Other organs of the UN rather than GA and SC may not request an advisory opinion of the ICJ unless the General Assembly authorizes them. |
|
|
Other organs of the UN only request an advisory opinion of the Court regarding the matters falling into the scope of their activities. |
|
The lesion may then involve adjacent organs such as vertebrae, pleura and soft tissues. |
|
Ultimately, industrial guilds would serve as the organs through which industry would be organised in a future socialist society. |
|
Patients deemed dead by the neurological standard are ideal organ donors because their organs are still perfusing at the time of procurement. |
|
Wolves typically commence feeding by consuming the larger internal organs of their prey, such as the heart, liver, lungs and stomach lining. |
|
The vestigial left lung is often small or sometimes even absent, as snakes' tubular bodies require all of their organs to be long and thin. |
|
Many organs that are paired, such as kidneys or reproductive organs, are staggered within the body, with one located ahead of the other. |
|
Furthermore, atlases of anatomy exist, mapping out organs of the human body or other organisms. |
|
Researchers have recently discovered a turtle's organs do not gradually break down or become less efficient over time, unlike most other animals. |
|
He also began a PhD into the great pipe organs of the Leeds-based organ builder James Jepson Binns but sadly he never got to finish it. |
|
The caterpillar wiggles these organs to frighten away flies and predatory wasps. |
|
Electric pipe organs should not be confused with organs that have no pipes, and which produce sound by electronic means using speakers. |
|
In addition to meat, almost all internal organs of reindeer can be eaten, some being traditional dishes. |
|
Unlike most ancient human remains, bog bodies have retained their skin and internal organs due to the unusual conditions of the surrounding area. |
|
As a result, the skeletons are well preserved, but skin and most internal organs have not been preserved. |
|
Most physicians believed that these disorders were caused by physical factors such as the malfunction of organs or an imbalance of the humors. |
|
Diphthongs contrast with monophthongs, where the tongue or other speech organs do not move and the syllable contains only a single vowel sound. |
|
He has found that pycnogenols not only prevent free radical damage to internal organs but also help prevent skin wrinkling. |
|
By way of distinction, the organs of the company were expressed to have various corporate powers. |
|
Given his monocratic nature, this organ joins in itself prerogatives that in all other collegial organs are attributed collectively. |
|
|
If ingested, it damages internal organs irreversibly and may even be fatal. |
|
The communes are still very real, of course, but their organs serve primarily as communications conduits and allocations redividers. |
|
The ruffe also has an exceptional ability to detect water vibrations through organs called neuromasts. |
|
Animals within Sedentaria have more sedentary lifestyles and other traits associated with sessility such as reduced sensory organs and parapodia. |
|
Functions... are specialized, or separated from each other, and... a complicated set of organs is appropriated to each of them. |
|
The organs are simple and spinous, the spines small distally on the organ, larger proximally. |
|
Trumpets, cornets, and other reeds en chamade, characteristic of Spanish organs after ca. |
|
He had reason to believe the stercoraceous flavour, condemned by prejudice as a stink, was, in fact, most agreeable to the organs of smelling. |
|
The thanatomicrobiome is a relatively new term and is the study of the microbes colonizing the internal organs and orifices after death. |
|
Traditionally, sausage makers would salt various tissues and organs such as scraps, organ meats, blood, and fat to help preserve them. |
|
The chemical reaction takes place in organs called photophores near the hatchetfish's belly. |
|
Internal organs like the spleen swell up and become as hard as sausages. |
|
The fruits and vegetables alkalise the water, proving to be more beneficial to your body by cutting down the acid in organs and tissues. |
|
Chris Elliott is one of the most sought-after concert organists, having played mighty Wurlitzers and other organs at top venues around the world. |
|
Internal organs were removed from the corpse and placed in four canopic jars. |
|
Moreover, he believed that zemstvos, organs of rural self-government in late imperial Russia, had held out significant political promise. |
|
These elongate, motile sense organs are referred to as antenniform legs.The antenniform legs are very long relative to body size. |
|
The polity had all of the organs of an integrated modern state and maintained a robust trading network. |
|
Histologic examination of other organs did not reveal any further evidence of disseminated zygomycosis. |
|
Lymphadenoid tissue includes the lymph glands, spleen, bone marrow, and tonsils, and the lymphatic tissue of the organs and mucous membranes. |
|
|
These organs concentrate on material questions concerning the state's territory, including local security, records, transportation, and finances. |
|
Like the apparently redundant organs of Klingon warriors, even junk DNA can come in very handy at times. |
|
Elongate, multicellular raphide sacs form parallel rows in all organs investigated. |
|
This can evidence heterochronism of growth and development of both separate systems and organs and the whole child's organism. |
|
Coakley presents experimental evidence that various organs can be benefited by intraorganic medication. |
|
There are also some beautifully carved canopic jars, made to house the organs removed during mummification. |
|
After three or four days the bacteria enter the bloodstream, and infect organs such as the spleen and the lungs. |
|
They became experts in what is called extispicy, or the readings of organs of sacrificed animals. |
|
The small jelly-speck, which we call the amoeba, has no organs save what it can extemporize as occasion arises. |
|
To make your remaining fat stores last, you burn fewer calories to keep your heart, brain, and other organs working. |
|
The teeth of such of the reptiles as are dentulous, are simple organs of prehension, and not intended for mastication. |
|
The body of the comb-jelly is soft like that of the jellyfish, but the plan of structure and the organs are somewhat different. |
|
At the late stages of the silver eel metamorphosis, their digestive organs deteriorate, presumably making more room for eggs. |
|
Modulation of nerve growth factor in peripheral organs by estrogen and progesterone. |
|
The 72-year-old professor and pioneer in neuroplasticity says that every time the brain is revitalised, other organs get rejuvenated as well. |
|
Anatomy and microanatomy of the venous system of scrotal organs and spermatic cord. |
|
The specimen had such well-preserved wing features that the details of its stridulating organs were clearly visible under an optical microscope. |
|
The researchers have revealed that knocking out nodal causes internal organs are jumbled, and the organism dies. |
|
From this tradition we know that of all the organs of the body, the most reformable organ is the heart. |
|
In the 1930s he had a job demonstrating Hammond organs for a Newcastle firm and also taught music privately. |
|
|
The organs of the body that had suffered colliquative necrosis and putrefaction suddenly came to life. |
|
As such, only body organs that may be directly exposed to radiation, such as skin and eyes, are potential targets for phototoxicity reaction. |
|
Auto-Intoxication It's about a medical condition where the body's organs poison their own system. |
|
The claims cover methods of selectively removing cancer cells ex vivo from blood stem cells and other organs using reovirus. |
|
Brucellosis is a zoonotic disease, which has the potential to affect all organs and systems. |
|
During her op in November, surgeons discovered the cancer had spread and that she would need all her reproductive organs removed. |
|
A hermaphrodite only has the outward characteristics of one gender but has both the reproductive organs of the male and female. |
|
The second section offers profiles of famous players of Hammond organs from a variety of musical genres and eras. |
|
Metabolism and compartmentation of imported sugar in sink organs in regulation to sink strength. |
|
Instead of turning the water within organs into ice, he supercools it into glass. |
|
These PET scans show the concentration of an important enzyme, MAO B, in the internal organs of a smoker and a nonsmoker. |
|
The retrieval of vital organs from patients who are deemed to have suffered brain death or cardiac death poses a serious moral problem. |
|
The main cause of undersexed in men was not enough pressure in sexual organs system, physical factors and psychological factors. |
|
Urological cancer can target any of the organs of the urogenital system, including the bladder, prostate, kidneys, and adrenals. |
|
The ability to freeze and thaw organs and tissues withoutdamage has been a longtime goal of cryobiologists. |
|
Brain, spinal cord and retina are considered the target organs in which the virus actively replicates causing extensive tissue vacuolation. |
|
All her previous attempts to woe Varus have failed but her new magic will be successful, since the boy's organs will give her magic potency. |
|
Most of the well-fed young grew four reproductive organs called ovarioles, compared with only two for the less-pampered ants. |
|
The squid make use of two narrowly spaced organs called statocysts to sense sound. |
|
At the end of monitoring, each roof rat was euthanatized, and isolation of Salmonella from different organs was performed. |
|
|
This may cause a greater proportion of photosynthates to be translocated to above-ground organs rather than the roots. |
|
Behcet's disease is a chronic vasculitis of unknown etiology, which may involve many organs and systems. |
|
Four of the five principal organs are located at the main UN Headquarters in New York City. |
|
The ICJ can also be called upon by other UN organs to provide advisory opinions. |
|
The main constitutional organs of the League were the Assembly, the Council, and the Permanent Secretariat. |
|
Equivalent organs of state in other Commonwealth realms, such as Australia and New Zealand, are called Executive Councils. |
|
In addition, many Reform temples use musical accompaniment such as organs and mixed choirs. |
|
During the necropsy, he pored carefully through the body, combing the tissues and organs for signs of an abscess or wound. |
|
As a liquefiable substance it flows through the organs and channels of the body. |
|
The sternum is very strong and sufficiently long to provide protection for the internal organs from impacts with water. |
|
The Hox genes, for example, control which organs individual regions of an embryo will develop into. |
|
Its sensory organs are well developed, though it is unable to distinguish between colours. |
|
In females, only the right ovary appears to function, and it is currently unknown why only one of the organs seems to function. |
|
The scales are of two types, true storage organs and the bases of the foliage leaves. |
|
That is, the internal organs of digestion and reproduction never enter the arms, as they do in the Asteroidea. |
|
Its name comes from the greenish color of the turtles' fat, which is only found in a layer between their inner organs and their shell. |
|
The oxygenated blood can be directed towards only the brain and other essential organs when oxygen levels deplete. |
|
Atop the whale's skull is positioned a large complex of organs filled with a liquid mixture of fats and waxes called spermaceti. |
|
Removal of the internal organs was an important part of the mummification process. |
|
Some organs concentrate certain elements and hence radionuclide variants of those elements. |
|
|
The lesion on the rectosigmoid is delineated, and adhesions are lysed from contiguous organs such as adnexae, the uterus, or other loops of bowel. |
|
Dolphins' reproductive organs are located on the underside of the body. |
|
Some leaves, and certain organs in shellfish, are dolabriform. |
|
In the opinion of experts, the method of hemocatharsis used in the device is also highly promising for the preservation of organs before transplantation. |
|
This naturalist believes that the apparatus by the aid of which the act is performed is the series of dorsal languettes or the organs which represent them. |
|
In this condition of the system, the internal forces of organs are so perfectly balanced, that a trifling incident may start them lifeward, or deathward. |
|
Typical histologic lesions including small areas of necrosis and occasional capillary microthrombii within skeletal muscle and other organs are commonly reported. |
|
The song schools of the abbeys, cathedrals and collegiate churches were closed down, choirs disbanded, music books and manuscripts destroyed and organs removed from churches. |
|
The spermaceti organs may also help adjust the whale's buoyancy. |
|
Plutonium that reaches body organs generally stays in the body for decades and continues to expose the surrounding tissue to radiation and thus may cause cancer. |
|
A few other fish have structures resembling labyrinth organs in form and function, most notably snakeheads, pikeheads, and the Clariidae catfish family. |
|
Children who overindulge in sweets often lose flesh, partly because an undue amount of sugar overtaxes the eliminative organs and upsets the bodily machinery. |
|
The leading organs of the ICRC are the Directorate and the Assembly. |
|
Their other organs also lose mass and their spines get shorter. |
|
Prompted by this, neuroscientists have gradually narrowed down the search for the most vital of all memory organs to one principal structure, the perirhinal cortex. |
|
Bones support and protect the various organs of the body, produce red and white blood cells, store minerals, provide structure and support for the body, and enable mobility. |
|
By in situ hybridization, expression of all 3 microRNAs is robust in immature hair cells of both auditory and vestibular organs and is present in the statoacoustic ganglion. |
|
As we lend full support to both army and police, let these security organs remain apolitical in order to carry out their tasks successfully Salam concluded. |
|
Grieving parents Santokh Singh Loyal and Amrit Kaur, from Hockley, initially thought their little girl had been murdered so her organs could be harvested. |
|
If a misalignment chokes off the nerve supply to the various organs in the body, called subluxation, the machine detects it and Lemire realigns the bones. |
|