Gone are the days of workers marching together towards the hammer and sickle. |
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Furthermore, albums such as Nova Akropola and Opus Dei used images of Trotsky and the hammer and sickle, as well as the swastika. |
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Rifondazione was founded in 1992 as a reaction to the turn by the PCI away from its name and its traditional symbol of the hammer and sickle. |
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Under the weight of the hammer and sickle for 75 years, both painting and photography were created primarily in the service of the state. |
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In sickle cell disease, the amino acid valine is substituted for glutamic acid in the beta-hemoglobin chain of hemoglobin. |
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At the prompting of former Soviet Union countries, the EU is also considering banning the hammer and sickle and the red star. |
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The two parts of the painting are joined by the ampersand, which here begins to resemble a sundial or the hammer and sickle of the Soviet past. |
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In addition to your child's primary care doctor, your child should receive regular care from a hematologist or a sickle cell clinic. |
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Other significant conditions were aspiration of vomitus and sickle cell disorder. |
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World leaders in sickle cell research will present new research findings at the meeting. |
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Another went racing across the wash of the boat, its sail and sickle shaped tail leaving no doubt as to its identity. |
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It does have some decent scenes of horror, including an impaling with a pitchfork and a sickle. |
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If you had a test to look for abnormal red blood cells, for example in sickle cell anaemia, you will be told whether this was found. |
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Transfusions of red blood cells are sometimes needed when red cells break down in newborn babies, and to treat sickle cell disease. |
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Normal red blood cells are round and pliable, but in persons with sickle cell anemia these cells become firm and inflexible. |
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At baseline, levels of circulating leucocytes and vascular cell adhesion molecules were elevated in the sickle cell mice. |
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This may be the first symptom of sickle cell disease in babies, who also may develop a fever. |
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Thus, consistent with previous findings, these dense cells are likely to contribute to poor rheology of sickle cell blood at all O2 saturations. |
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At the time of aplasia, the child with sickle cell disease is highly contagious. |
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After their competition the steamy athletes scraped off the oily mess with a strigil, which looks something like a sickle. |
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His medical eyepatch had been replaced with a more fun looking one, a black one with the hammer and sickle. |
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There were not many more British enthusiasts for the hammer and sickle than there had been for the double-headed eagle. |
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An example is sickle cell disease, where the red cells become rigid and deformed and break down more readily, leading to anaemia. |
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However, if the sickle hemoglobin S is combined with the target cell, some mild to moderate anemia may occur. |
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People with one normal gene and one sickle gene are carriers of the abnormal gene. |
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Counseling and education regarding the trait are important because the sickle gene can be passed to a carrier's children. |
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Cronus used a sickle to castrate his father Uranus, and he is often portrayed throughout literature as having a long beard. |
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Bone marrow transplantation may be considered in some cases of sickle cell anemia, thalassemia, and aplastic anemia. |
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The story begins in Russia, where the young chess prodigy tore through distinguished grand master opposition like a sickle through soft grain. |
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He also often bears a scythe or sickle in his arms, reflecting that Time's eroding force cuts down everything. |
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Prior to her current pregnancy, this patient had been admitted 3 times during adolescence for sickle cell crises and had documented retinopathy. |
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The object had a trail of very thin plasma coming up off of it and coming down below it giving it a shape like a bulbous ice sickle. |
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They bend over in the small barley fields, terraced out of the mountainsides, cutting the sheaves with sickle moon scythes. |
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The moon waxes from new to sickle, crescent, half-full and disk, and wanes back again as the relative positions of sun and moon change. |
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As he lifted his hand to salute us, I saw that the shiny red badge on his cap still bore the gold hammer and sickle of the Soviet Union. |
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Then, with a sickle, Kasle plucks weeds for Rs 20 a day on the landowner's fields. |
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The assembly of sickle hemoglobin requires high hemoglobin concentrations in vivo and in phosphate buffers of low molarity. |
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I asked Ahmad Khan one night as we drank sweet tea, under a sickle moon white as a picked bone that hung in the sky above us. |
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The Leonid meteor shower, which radiates from the so-called sickle of Leo, displays a double peak this year. |
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One patient had sickle cell anemia and showed sickled red blood cells in the dilated sinusoids. |
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Among other uses, the activity coefficients have successfully rationalized the copolymerization of sickle hemoglobin in mixtures with nonpolymerizing agents. |
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The periodic agony that accompanies sickle cell was joined by the torment of persistent eye infections and repeated surgeries. |
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Many garden tillers have sickle bar mower attachments available. |
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France's Communist party has undergone a revolution and dropped the hammer and sickle from its membership cards. |
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The blood dyscrasias that most commonly lead to leg ulceration are sickle cell disease, thalassaemia, thrombocythaemia, and polycythaemia rubra vera. |
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Bone spavins, bogs, thoroughpins, and weakness are common to sickle hocks. |
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These include a transistor radio, which was well known as the president's favorite mode of communicating propaganda, and the Soviet hammer and sickle. |
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However, her medical records indicate that she has bronchitis, TB, bilharzia, malaria, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and multiple coughs and colds, all due to sickle cell. |
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Why, he asks, does wearing the swastika attract widespread scorn, while no one blinks at the person wearing a hammer and sickle on his baseball cap? |
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A hematologist can assist in the often difficult task of determining the exact type of sickle cell disease, especially in the presence of rarer hemoglobin variants. |
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I hope they mean that we develop shared sovereignty, but I think they are referring to Heinlein's Soviet menace of a hammer and sickle on the Moon. |
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The hammer and sickle and two very groovy 1950s jets are old-style Soviet. |
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Before I saw your crimper roller in last month's New Farm article, I was planning to sickle mow the wheat next spring prior to hand transplanting. |
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Linus Pauling recalled how in 1945 he heard from W. B. Castle, a Harvard physician, about sickle cells and the need for deoxygenation to produce them. |
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Babies are given a blood test when they are born, to look for some serious conditions such as sickle cell disease, under-active thyroid, phenylketonuria, and cystic fibrosis. |
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People with sickle cell trait don't have sickle cell disease or exhibit any signs of the disorder, but they can pass the gene for the disease to their children. |
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Sickle cell disease is an inherited disorder of the red blood cells characterized by abnormally shaped red cells. |
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Sickle cell anemia is an inherited blood disease that can cause bouts of pain, damage to vital organs and, sometimes, death in childhood. |
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Abstract Sickle hemoglobin nucleation occurs in solution as a homogeneous process or on existing polymers in a heterogeneous process. |
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Sickle cell disease affects about 1 in 500 African Americans and 1 in 1,000 Hispanic Americans. |
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Sickle cell disease is a blood disease that children inherit from their parents. |
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One of his sons says Van Sickle wants to go home, while his other three children say he is too far gone to know what he wants. |
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Sickle cell anemia is caused by a mutation from a glutamate to a valine in the beta chain of the hemoglobin molecule. |
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Sickle cell erythrocytes have decreased oxygen affinity and increased unsaturated hemoglobin in the arterial blood. |
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Clouds, vivid outlines against the light, sickle moon, flourescent immaculate white. |
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In order ways, too, they resembler red cells in humans with sickle cell trait, a milder form of sickle cell disease. |
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Childhood and adolescent growth of patients with sickle cell disease in Aracaju, Sergipe, north-east Brazil. |
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The crossed hammer and sickle symbolise the union of workers and peasantry in their fight for their rights. |
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The hammer and sickle and the full Soviet coat of arms are still widely seen in Russian cities as a part of old architectural decorations. |
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The Late Latin falco is believed to derive from falx as meaning a sickle, referencing the claws of the bird. |
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In fact as part of the standard kit, Roman soldiers would carry a sickle, which would be used to forage food. |
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Fracture prevalence and relationship to endocrinopathy in iron overloaded patients with sickle cell disease and thalassemia. |
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A variant in the globin genes can cause a host of systemic disorders, from sickle cell and other forms of anemia to thalassemia. |
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Shroyer JV, 3rd, Lew D, Abreo F, Unhold GP Osteomyelitis of the mandible as a result of sickle cell disease. |
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A priest clad in a white robe climbs the tree and with a golden sickle cuts the mistletoe, which is caught in a white cloth. |
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The thalassemias, sickle cell disease, and other hemoglobinopathies represent a major group of inherited disorders of hemoglobin synthesis. |
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More marked elevations are found in few conditions, easily diagnosed clinically, such as sickle cell or megaloblastic anemias. |
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An 8-year-old girl with homozygous sickle cell disease had been receiving monthly transfusions and chelation therapy since having a stroke 3 years earlier. |
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Many advocates of germline engineering say it is needed to allow couples to avoid passing on genetic diseases such as cystic fibrosis or sickle cell anemia. |
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The finds include, among other things, deeply denticulated sickle blades knapped from flint which were used for harvesting, as well as arrow heads and stone implements. |
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Sickle cell disease is a haemoglobinopathy responsible for high morbidity and mortality among neonates in developing countries. |
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In addition, data were presented from Sangamo's collaborative hemoglobinopathy programs with Biogen for the treatment of sickle cell disease and beta-thalassemia. |
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Twenty-seven additional chapters treat erythropoiesis, thalassemia, sickle cell anemia, and hemoglobinopathies, their world distribution and health burden. |
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Genetic disorders, and in particular hemoglobinopathies such as sickle cell anemia and thalassemia are common in Saudi Arabia, especially in the eastern and southern regions. |
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The Latin term for falcon, falco, is related to falx, the Latin word meaning sickle, in reference to the silhouette of the falcon's long, pointed wings in flight. |
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The company's three lead, late stage products are for treatment of sickle cell anemia, transthyretin familial amyloid polyneuropathy, and neurocysticercosis. |
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This edition has new cases on sickle cell disease, rectal bleeding, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, primary syphilis, pityriasis rosacea, and congenital cataracts. |
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Regulus, the brightest star of Leo the Lion, marks the tip of the prominent Sickle asterism. |
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I FIRST used the YAG laser in vitreous disorders in 1987 where we described the successful lysing of tractional retinal detachments in sickle cell patients. |
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As you get higher, native vegetation takes over, so a prospect might be framed by the dangling leaves of the beautiful koa tree, each leaf a gently curved, trembling sickle. |
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Van Sickle believes that perfusing organs with helium gas at higher pressures could allow for cooling rates that are 100 times faster than is possible with current methods. |
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Sickle cell disease and other haemoglobin disorders such as thalassaemia and G6PD are inherited blood diseases that affect how oxygen is carried in the body. |
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