Many users say that HP's decision to discontinue the e3000 series line is premature. |
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Trilling frog tadpoles can metamorphose within 17 days, pumping the same hormone through their systems that induces premature births in humans. |
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Having nearly lost my first son the first time, and all the complications of a premature baby the second time, this time should be sweet as. |
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But critics claim the decision is premature and that the PCT has gone back on a promise made last spring to find an alternative site. |
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The whiteness of his robust crop of hair could, with a slight stretch, be thought premature. |
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In this example, each normal beat is followed by a premature ventricular contraction occurring in a bigeminal rhythm. |
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The premature fusion of one or more of the cranial sutures between the cranial bones is referred to as craniosynostosis. |
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From another angle, however, it is possible to argue that his premature death was willed by the state. |
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Spontaneous miscarriage, premature delivery and stillborn birth are possible results of an infected foetus. |
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Baby Gabi was born three-and-a-half months premature and was given only a 25 percent chance of survival. |
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Ideological polarizations on educational issues tend to be facile and premature. |
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Bashfulness and dyspathy are a tough husk in which a chosen and delicate organization is protected from premature ripening. |
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Sophie, 38, was recovering in hospital after undergoing an emergency Caesarean section to deliver her premature daughter. |
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Abortion, or miscarriage, implies the premature expulsion of the contents of the impregnated Uterus. |
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Markers of premature coronary artery and cerebrovascular disease are prevalent. |
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Often premature and unconvincing generalisations are made from rather more limited and partial changes. |
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To discard potential new directions for research at this early stage would be premature. |
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The purpose of an infant incubator is to secure and improve the chances of survival of a premature or weakly infant. |
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We followed a path worn into the grass, past what looked like a cornfield in its most premature state. |
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Her face and body was angular and weathered with premature lines on her face around her mouth and crow's feet at the corner of her eyes. |
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I need friendly font sizes that don't cause premature use of unattractive, presbyopic eyewear. |
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Discussion of a broad mandate for the president to enact his higher education agenda is premature, given the closeness of the election. |
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He said there would be need to make up for the three weeks that had been lost following the premature closure of the institution. |
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Researchers and women's advocates say that recommending cesarean section to prevent future pelvic-floor damage is premature and extreme. |
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The artificial ventilation of the lungs can damage the fragile lungs of these severely premature babies. |
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Two major causes of premature fatigue during exercise are dehydration and carbohydrate depletion. |
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In the go-go days, dot.coms went public and were coddled by investors like premature babies in incubators. |
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This, he said, would be premature, as a date has not yet been decided for the relocation of the jobs. |
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The premature closure of Fairhaven Road and problems caused by access from Frenches Road to Linkfield Lane exacerbates the situation. |
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Tiny twin girls born eight weeks premature kept special care staff busy as the New Year's Day smiles were mixed with concern. |
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However, modern neonatal intensive care does allow the survival of many premature babies that would have perished in the past. |
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In any case, Pang et al. may have unknowingly found an unstated risk for hospital birth of having a mildly premature baby. |
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The premature changing to a less costly diet may be economically appealing but can cause unthriftiness and poor pig uniformity. |
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New research suggests that psychological stress may play a role in premature aging. |
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Indeed it was these difficulties that necessitated the premature termination of the study. |
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Free radicals are thought to be responsible for helping to cause premature ageing, heart disease and cancer. |
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Other risk factors may include premature delivery, very low birth weight, and injuries to the brain at birth. |
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The PSAs encourage audiences to learn more about sudden infant death syndrome and the risk factors for low birth weight and premature delivery. |
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She told how the woman was anxious about her baby's health because he had been born seven weeks premature. |
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Sarah Polley is in good form in this romantic weepy about facing premature death. |
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I know my way around a prem unit, having had six premature babies, but basically they fooled me. |
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It's a bit premature for the Irish government to be talking about issues of money, as the joint committee does not report until March. |
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Pregnant mothers too require blood transfusions from time to time as do some premature babies. |
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Until the facts are authoritatively established and recorded, it would be premature to frame the further legislation that will be required. |
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She believed his decision to debar the Filipino athletes from the games was premature. |
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This may result in abortion, premature delivery or Congenital Rubella Syndrome. |
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One mare aborted in 1998 and developed mastitis, and this mare has experienced premature lactation in the subsequent years. |
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We saw tiny premature babies who would spend their first birthday in hospital. |
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A miracle baby who was born three months premature is set to celebrate her first birthday. |
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The outlook is bleak for children born extremely premature according to a new British study. |
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Three teenage boys had their legs waxed in front of hundreds of their school pals to raise money for premature babies. |
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Though still premature, these findings could eventually impact research into stem cells, tissue regeneration and aging. |
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Some premature babies suffer from breathing difficulties but this did not appear to be the case with Jennifer. |
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Measles in pregnancy can cause miscarriage, premature labour or a baby with low birth weight. |
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His observations led to the careful control of oxygen delivery to premature babies. |
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Sheesh, a bummer to be sure, but the show isn't just about despair, faulty canaries and premature death from lung cancer. |
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As with placental abruption, placenta previa can result in the birth of a premature baby. |
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In the cot next to his was a tiny baby who had been born 12 weeks premature, she recalls. |
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The condition can result from either premature closure of the lambdoidal suture or positional head deformity. |
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These people marched to protest the premature bestowal of freedom by exterior forces. |
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Sinus rhythm, with bigeminal premature ventricular contractions, and a ventricular couplet. |
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A previous work-up had discovered frequent premature ventricular complexes and runs of bigeminy on a Holter monitor examination. |
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Some accuse the manufacturers and retailers of conniving in the premature death of old technology. |
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The result is premature apoptosis of progenitors and failure of stem cells to mature and differentiate. |
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Smoking among women, especially during pregnancy can lead to miscarriages, premature birth, and low birth weight of infants. |
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The pair were both touched by the work of the specialist ward when they lost children to premature deaths. |
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Born premature and always small in stature, Lord John Russell served twice as prime minister. |
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Our report on the Yorkshire Evening Post's premature coverage of the death of the Queen Mother caused outrage among royalist Register readers. |
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A premature attack on Mountjoy's forces resulted in a rout by his cavalry and a long retreat back to Ulster through a hostile countryside. |
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Sam was diagnosed with premature arthritis as a pup and shocked everyone with his liveliness despite his debilitating disease. |
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Predictions that he would drop like a stone were therefore a little premature. |
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Johnson then went on to echo the thoughts of a great many at the time, even if their celebrations have proven a tad premature. |
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The main risks for premature babies are infection and breathing difficulties. |
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The oxygen and nutrient deficiencies caused by too much smoking result in premature lines on the skin and a loss of natural elasticity. |
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From the beginning there have been preservationists who have argued that restoration is premature. |
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Yoko Ltd manufactures a revolutionary bonnet which is designed to make life more comfortable for premature babies. |
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Early diagnosis of the disease might unleash a process of premature medicalisation. |
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It is important to understand it in context and avoid premature use of medications. |
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The assertion that these claims have been shown to be grossly inflated is a little premature in my opinion. |
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Smoking during pregnancy is associated with low birth weight, premature delivery, placenta previa, miscarriage and post-delivery death. |
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However, a few months later the Assembly of the League of Nations rejected out of hand the proposal as being premature. |
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At six weeks premature, Sam was much larger than many of the other babies in the unit. |
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I don't think the public has yet forgiven the press for that episode of arrogance and premature triumphalism. |
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As well as being sore and unsightly, sunburn causes premature ageing and puts you at risk of skin cancer. |
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The self-regenerating potential of skin is exhaustible, and after several sunburns premature aging of the skin occurs. |
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The goal umpire kept his arms by his side, indicating that the player's intervention was premature. |
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Apart from the associations with premature ageing, darker hair suits my Anglo-Asian olive skin. |
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If your baby is premature or can't nurse right away after birth, you may have to feed the baby in other ways. |
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And when you are entering your teens, making all that fuss about the adolescent equivalent of martini smacks of premature fustiness. |
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Abera is now a worthy successor to his great predecessor, whose premature death in 1973 is marked by a monumental tomb in Addis Ababa. |
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In premature infants, necrotizing enterocolitis is the most common surgical cause of an acute abdomen. |
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His intervention, however, was deemed premature by the referee and he was sent off for handling outside his area. |
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For the general practitioner a well-used library is one of the few correctives of the premature senility which is so apt to overtake him. |
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Umbilical hernias occur more often in premature infants and those of African American descent. |
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Birth hormones are injected into the amniotic sac to induce premature birth. |
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The intention of the policy is to protect the roading network from premature structural detrition and procedures for loadings are set out. |
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When I mentioned my theory to her, she told me that she was supposed to have been born a Gemini, but was premature and ended up being a Pisces. |
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Katie and Kelly, now celebrating their 21st birthdays, were born ten weeks premature and were initially given a 50-50 chance of survival. |
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If you're the principal money earner in a young family, then your premature demise would leave a large hole in your family's finances. |
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Other low birthweight babies are not premature, but are small because of poor growth, usually as result of poor function of the placenta. |
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I fear reports of my being shot are premature, though in the event there will a long list of suspects. |
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However, the authors believe that many of these premature deaths are preventable. |
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One might take him as a premature harbinger of cultural studies, but for his important flaw of attachment to art. |
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Conlon's rocket sent his side's supporters into raptures but O'Donohoe held his nerve to cut short the Sligo side's premature celebrations. |
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Whatever the dangers of open fields and common pastures, enclosure movements are premature. |
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Thus the difference in susceptibility to RDS in premature singletons and multiples may depend on the size of the conceptus. |
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The UK's worst six constituencies for premature death and infant mortality are inside Glasgow's city boundaries. |
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Then at 31 weeks into her seventh pregnancy her membranes ruptured and premature labour ensued. |
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The condition, which is currently incurable, ultimately leads to premature death. |
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Women pregnant with multiples are more likely than those with singletons to suffer premature delivery, toxemia, and hemorrhage. |
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Excessive ultraviolet ray exposure can cause premature aging of the skin, cataracts, skin cancers and immune system suppression. |
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It's still too premature to say whether it will be allowed, but it is being looked upon fairly favourably. |
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Formal logic is applied again, this time to determine whether a premature or erroneous idea prevails. |
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The euro was dangerously premature, they argued in open letters published in major newspapers. |
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After some minutes, he heaved himself to his feet to the evident relief of the crowd who had mistakenly cheered, but it proved premature. |
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Therefore, taxonomic designation based on only manus prints would be premature without associated pes impressions. |
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Researchers may have found a side effect associated with stress which could lead to premature aging. |
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Mice fed a control diet consisting of mouse chow and no additional supplementation experienced irreversible platelet damage and premature death. |
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Photoaging involves the premature aging of skin, evidenced by mottling, wrinkling, and sagging caused by a compromise of the elastic tissue. |
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In a fission bomb, the fuel must be kept in separate subcritical masses, which will not support fission, to prevent premature detonation. |
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But one swallow does not make a summer, and it might be a tad premature to call an end to this bear market. |
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At present, however, it is premature to assume that Kazakh oil will make up the gap. |
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Occasionally, the author appears to overreach his material to draw premature conclusions. |
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And, I'm not a doctor but I don't really think strawberry marks are due to him being premature. |
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For instance, the rules of backgammon state what to do with cocked dice, premature plays and set-up errors. |
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But the ones it affects the most are the teeny babies, premature babies, or ones with lung problems. |
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But their victory celebration proved to be somewhat premature when a fleshless fist collided with Rita's head knocking her to the ground. |
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In the 70 years since his premature death, he has inspired plays, films, novels and songs. |
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She took terbutaline, an asthma drug, to stop premature labor for the last three months of her pregnancy. |
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He grimaced, his mind dwelling on the premature thoughts that brewed inside him. |
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The judge added it was premature and unfair to reach conclusions based on the State's summary of its case. |
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The brains of premature babies are fed by a rich network of tiny blood vessels which are thin, fragile and easily damaged. |
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The skin undergoes continual renewal but injury from the sun can upset the renewal process and produces premature aging as well as skin cancer. |
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Signs of a sick tree include a premature change in leaf color, misshapen leaves, thinness of the canopy and early loss of leaves. |
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Almost a year to the day since her premature birth and little Mirium is still proving to be a miracle baby. |
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The ignorance purveyed by these programs puts young people at risk of HIV infection and premature death. |
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It implies a reduced ovarian reserve and the possibility of incipient premature ovarian failure. |
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It was a brave gamble, a bid for power, by an ambitious, clever and canny politician who saw his career facing a premature end. |
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In fact, commanders counselled caution and warned that hasty judgements by the media would be premature! |
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Pollution causes damage similar to sun exposure, leading to wrinkles and premature aging. |
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The premature growth arrest of breast and skin epithelial cells grown on plastic substrates may be due to an inadequate culture environment. |
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Indeed, it was his anxiety to survey the scene while laying siege to the donjon at Challus-Chabrol that brought his premature death. |
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In the US and Australia where large amounts of time and money have been spent on education and prevention programmes, premature deaths have been halved. |
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He also described how kangaroo care fits this original paradigm and the role that health care technology should play in the care of premature infants. |
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Furthermore, they may cause premature depletion of the follicle pool by induction of follicular atresia or oocyte apoptosis and, thereby, lead to reduced fertility. |
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This is in order to prevent premature wear of the valve seats. |
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He continues with a discussion of the benefits of discarding nonviable embryos, including those that may be premature or result in low birthweight. |
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Anne was once more pregnant but at the end of the month, alarmed by news of Henry's heavy fall at a joust, she gave premature birth to a dead son. |
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This premature ignition lowers the power output and can damage the engine. |
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Erythropoietin, the red cell production hormone, can reduce the need for transfusion in stable medical patients with cancer and premature newborn infants. |
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She was rushed into hospital, where doctors tried to stop the labour to no avail and baby Adam was brought into the world over three months premature. |
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Although it may be premature to conclude that the quality of teaching will improve, the idea itself is a milestone in the development of teaching as a profession in Namibia. |
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Radiation therapy to the abdominal and pelvic regions in children and adolescents may potentially expose the ovaries to radiation and cause premature ovarian failure. |
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They had a host of injuries, from broken bones to premature labor pains. |
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He was a man destined to perish at a tragically premature age. |
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The balladeer's 1999 announcement that he would never tour again because of heart problems was premature, as last year's album Live at Vicar Street proved. |
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Such knee-jerk negativity is both premature and counterproductive. |
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According to the company-commissioned study, premature deaths from cigarettes saved the Czech government between 943 million koruna and 1.19 billion koruna. |
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And finally, oxygen therapy given to sustain the lives of premature infants can cause retinopathy of prematurity, causing permanent vision loss or blindness. |
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It is known that excessive oxygen can damage the retina of a premature baby leading to a condition called retrolental fibroplasia which results in blindness. |
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Air pollution, of which vehicle emissions are the major contributor, is thought to be responsible for around 24,000 premature deaths in the UK every year. |
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When a pregnant woman is infected with listeriosis, she may have a miscarriage, premature delivery or stillbirth, or her newborn baby may become seriously ill and may die. |
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A mother had to be flown to a Norwich hospital to give birth to identical twins because there were not enough incubators at Southend's premature baby unit. |
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They are generally reserved only for extreme situations such as that of twins born to a surrogate mother twelve weeks premature and a woman with a malformed uterus. |
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The often premature fish death is met with a mixture of concern, wonder and further investigation, otherwise known as a valuable learning experience that will now be denied. |
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We should oppose these attempts to force through a premature consensus. |
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As I said earlier, I think it's premature to call him an out-and-out hero. |
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Practical control of premature sprouting in storage is achieved through the use of low temperatures or treatment with chemical sprout suppressants. |
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Craniosynostosis is the second most common birth defect in the face and skull of children, and defined as the premature fusion of the skull bones at the sutures. |
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We have just completed a study of 71 perinatologists, 35 neonatal nurses, and 48 parents of extremely premature babies, seeking their views of our outcome table. |
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In other settings, it has been shown that premature hospital discharge of patients with unstable vital signs was responsible for a twofold increase in 30-day mortality. |
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The particulates, or soot, in diesel exhaust cause a host of health problems, from asthma to lung disease to premature death, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. |
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Craniosynostosis, the premature fusion of the cranial sutures, is a significant medical problem, occurring in both syndromic and nonsyndromic forms. |
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A significant cause of death in premature infants and, on occasion, in full term infants is respiratory distress syndrome or hyaline membrane disease. |
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Research has shown that multifetal pregnancies increase the risk of premature delivery, low birth weight, and other complications that can lead to developmental problems. |
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The new mum said that the doctors were shocked to hear how baby Samuel had been born and quickly ran checks and put him in an incubator for premature babies. |
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Their passion is untempered and unbuffered by the fact that he has been joined with several hosts since his premature death in a shuttlecraft accident. |
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Although removing the ovaries eliminates estrogen production that is linked to tumor growth, it also carries risks associated with premature menopause. |
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She warned that sunbeds cause premature ageing of the skin resulting in loss of elasticity, sagging, wrinkling, freckling, yellowish discolouration and brown patches. |
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The Council says tanning in solariums, however controlled, still poses a health risk and can cause sunburn, premature ageing and increase the risk of developing skin cancer. |
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Anybody who has been the victim of a judge who has been premature in his expostulations has good reason to recall how devastating outbursts can be. |
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Excessive heat build-up in an attic can shorten the longevity of composition roof shingles by causing premature evaporation of the oils in the asphalt. |
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The end organ effects of hypertension, particularly in the heart, brain and kidneys, can be devastating, leading to premature coronary, cerebral or renal arteriosclerosis. |
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However, epidemiological evidence suggests that trans fats account for about 100,000 premature deaths from cardiological disease in the United States each year. |
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That, in turn, might lead to the trial itself being brought to a premature end without result, and in consequence, the needless expenditure of much public money. |
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But anticipations of victory, however rational, were premature. |
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Most of the damage has now been repaired, but the boat was still without lifelines so caution was required when moving around lest we ended up going for a premature swim! |
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Although similar parabolic relationships were observed in two other tropical avifaunas, it may be premature to assess the generality of that relationship. |
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Risk factors associated with positional head deformity are premature birth, hypotonic muscle disorders, congenital torticollis, and intrauterine constraint. |
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We therefore explain heterogeneity between trials mainly by changes in the conventional treatment of respiratory distress in premature neonates over time. |
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Four cows have been culled amid concerns they may have contracted brucellosis, a contagious disease, which in cattle causes abortion or premature calving. |
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If you're premenopausal, this will cause premature menopause. |
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It is premature to talk of lessons while fighting is still going on. |
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The sun is the number one cause of premature ageing and skin damage. |
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The attack brought on premature labour that lasted two and half days. |
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He seemed to have brought a premature end to his international career. |
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The twins were born four months premature at Stepping Hill Hospital. |
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Two thirds of babies who die shortly after birth are born premature. |
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The mildest critics argued that they were premature and that a decent interval should have been allowed before the struggle to analyse and understand began. |
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Such pronouncements are premature but the warnings are certainly in place. |
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It runs in his father's side of the family, along with premature baldness. |
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It would have been unnatural, or premature, to refer to the restoration before the dispersion had taken place, provided such restoration were an object of justifiable prospicience. |
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Her premature death at age 30 stunned her family and friends. |
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Finary, I have no information for the committee on any premature release of FOMC confidential material. |
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Avoid any plants that are wilted or drooping or crowded close together in a display, which can cause premature bract loss. |
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All of these recurrent UTIs occurred in uncircumcised premature infants older than 60 days of age. |
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He became widely popular in his lifetime and remained so after his premature death at the age of 39 in New York City. |
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Nivea has come up with an anti-ageing hand cream to combat premature skin ageing and help prevent age spots. |
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On 1 May 1917, Haig wrote that the Nivelle Offensive had weakened the German army but that an attempt at a decisive blow would be premature. |
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Stephen Roose Hughes, whose exertions in finding and identifying the bodies probably led to his own premature death soon afterwards. |
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Manfredo and some American commentators called the stoppage premature because Manfredo did not appear hurt. |
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It was inefficient and produced a lot of heat which led to premature failures in the circuitry. |
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Once at their final positions, the boats were under strict orders to avoid premature detection that might give away the operation. |
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Puerto Rico has the highest known incidence of premature thelarche ever reported. |
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The explanation may be the premature death of the mother in childbirth as Cecily Neville, Edward IV's mother raised Lady Elizabeth Plantagenet. |
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For more than 2 decades, their island has hosted an inexplicable epidemic of premature breast development, or thelarche. |
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In 1861, Lincoln expressed the fear that premature attempts at emancipation would mean the loss of the border states. |
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However the premature death of the Hungarian Lord left Pannonia defenseless and in chaos. |
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Florus's report of the peace brought to Germany by Drusus is glowing but premature. |
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Brain tumors which increase GnRH output may also lead to premature puberty. |
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Although Balboa suffered a premature death, his actions and deeds are remembered by history as the first European to cross America. |
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Following the premature death of Alexander, Iran came under the control of the Hellenistic Seleucid Empire. |
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Rizal himself, whom the rebels took inspiration from and had consulted beforehand, disapproved of a premature revolution. |
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The speedy transfer of power maintained the goodwill of the new nations but critics contended it was premature. |
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However, in a hypoalbuminemic, acidotic newborn, such as a premature infant, this may occur at a much lower serum bilirubin concentration. |
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Impure water used to make concrete can cause problems when setting or in causing premature failure of the structure. |
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These effects can result in increased medication use, increased doctor or emergency room visits, more hospital admissions and premature death. |
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The World Health Organization estimated in 2014 that every year air pollution causes the premature death of some 7 million people worldwide. |
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In a 2015 consultation document the UK government disclosed that nitrogen dioxide is responsible for 23,500 premature UK deaths per annum. |
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Percy did not care about the condition of this premature infant and left with Claire, Mary's stepsister, for a lurid affair. |
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Serum progesterone concentration associated with superovulation and premature corpus luteum failure in dairy goats. |
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Exposure to outdoor conditions can lead to chapping, windburn and other discomforts that can damage the skin and lead to premature aging. |
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This caused muscle atrophy, hind limb dysfunction, peripheral neuropathy and even premature death of these mice, according to the authors. |
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These health effects include premature death, acute respiratory illness, aggravated asthma, chronic bronchitis and decreased lung function. |
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They cause early puberty and premature breast development in girls, and small and undescended testicles in boys. |
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He died just a month later after developing necrotising enterocolitis, a life-threatening condition in premature babies. |
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Predictive value of Apgar scores for developmental outcome in premature infants. |
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The tragedy of life is, it must be premature, inconclusive and inconcludable, in order to be life. |
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The team hopes further tests could lead the drug to be used to prevent premature birth, which is the biggest single cause of infant death. |
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Lewis and others argued the stoppage was premature and that a champion should be given the benefit of the doubt. |
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Like all English clubs, Villa lost seven seasons to the Second World War, and that conflict brought several careers to a premature end. |
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Charity gives birth to a premature boy and, showing all the maternal instinct of a killer bee, decides that she'll have him adopted. |
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The most inspiring, however, was a simple wish to walk for three-year-old Kiley Griggs, born premature and diagnosed with cerebral palsy. |
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Group B streptococcal late onset sepsis with submandibular phlegmon i a premature infant after beginning of breast feding. |
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Rachel, who was born 16 weeks premature weighing just one and a half pounds, has perfect pitch. |
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Placental abruption was defined as premature separation of a normally implanted placenta from the uterus after 20 weeks gestation. |
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Primary premature ejaculators are those for whom the condition has been present since their first coital experience. |
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A major cause of premature birth occurs where the waters break too soon due to a thinning of the membranes around the baby, causing them to tear. |
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Catheter ablation of premature ventricular contractions arising from the mitral annulus after mitral valvoplasty. |
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Too much exposure to the sun can cause the premature aging of skin. |
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Evidence against either a premature stop codon or the absence of Ob gene mRNA in human obesity. |
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We report 3 cases with 1 homozygous and 2 heterozygous mutations at codon 37 causing a premature stop codon. |
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High levels of triglycerides carry an increased risk of metabolic abnormalities, heart disease, and premature death. |
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Overall, those children born premature were almost twice as likely to suffer somatic complaints and externalise their problems. |
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The March of Dimes works to improve the health of babies by preventing birth defects, premature birth and infant mortality. |
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She went into spontaneous labour and delivered a premature, stillborn microcephalic fetus. |
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Babies between one and four months, premature babies, low birthweight babies and boys are more at risk than others. |
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Unfortunately, Hannah's mixed game came to a premature end when her partner Kevin Ruttle pulled a calf muscle and had to concede. |
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Our earlier calls for AUDUSD pullbacks were clearly premature and highlight the difficulty in timing trades on sentiment extremes. |
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However, castor oil, which is converted to ricinoleic acid in the gut, is an irritant that may induce premature labor. |
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They excluded high-risk deliveries, including multiparous women, multiple gestations, and premature births. |
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This book shows that inequality is literally a killing field, with millions of people dying premature deaths because of it. |
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Effects of hypocarbia on the development of cystic periventricular leukomalacia in premature infants treated with high-frequency jet ventilation. |
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After discovering his concession might have been premature, a new, more refined, wager was made. |
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This is why Kangaroo Care is highly recommended for premature babies that no longer require intravenous therapy and oxygen. |
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The Evening Telegraph reported yesterday how Debbie Niblett was taken 110 miles to Ashton-under-Lyne, Manchester, to give birth to her premature twin boys. |
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Middlesbrough tot Aiden McLaughlin enjoying a trip to Crimdon Dene Holiday Park, near Hartlepool, to celebrate his progress after being born premature at just 24 weeks. |
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Serial electrocardiographic recordings demonstrated dynamic anterior ST changes and T-wave inversions, a left anterior hemiblock, and frequent ventricular premature beats. |
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This may account for almost half of all premature deaths of merlins. |
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Sami Ulus Children's Hospital in Ankara, said premature birth and medical complications caused by premature births are the greatest causes of death in newborns. |
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For Ayman al-Zawahiri, the leader of al-Qaeda, declaring a caliphate was a premature step that was bound to exacerbate the sectarian civil war in the heart of the Arab world. |
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Not all patients display the characteristic tendon xanthomata, and the family history is not always available and does not always reveal premature heart disease. |
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Multiphase character of the brazed joint metal structure and shrinkage microporosity are main reasons of premature failure of brazed joints in loading. |
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In female athletes, excessive physical exercise may lead to disorders, including delay in the onset of puberty, amenorrhoea and premature osteoporosis. |
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Before you find an agent, it's important to assess what costs to cover in case of premature death,'' said Herb Perone, a spokesman for the American Council of Life Insurance. |
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The prohibitive cost of treatment for premature babies, or preemies as they are called, has been a matter of acute concern for parents in Dubai for a while now. |
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Consumption of chicken raised on such hormones was no higher in families with girls experiencing premature thelarche than in those where girls developed normally. |
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Maternal toxicities include spontaneous abortions, premature labor and delivery, premature rupture of membranes, placenta previa, and abruptio placentae. |
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According to a thesis from the Sahlgrenska Academy, one of the reasons for premature birth could be inflammation in the amniotic fluid or the placenta caused by bacteria. |
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Baby born two months premature has respiratory problems, a possible hemorrhage and severe hyponatremia, which is low-sodium concentration in the blood. |
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Dot peening also deformed metal parts and caused premature rust. |
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Designed to eliminate spit-back, well-back and premature pump shut-offs. |
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It would be premature to say bipartisanship is back and that the current Republican-controlled Congress has broken the gridlock that has gripped it in recent sessions. |
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The System corrects the skin's cell functions and improves the signs of premature aging and photodamage, such as fine lines and wrinkles, hyperpigmentation, and saggy skin. |
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Another protective mechanism to prevent the premature activation of trypsinogen to trypsin inside the pancreatic duct is rapidly sweeping out zymogens from the pancreas. |
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Long-term reliability, however, is questioned because ankle fusion has been associated with premature arthritis, pain, and dysfunction of the adjacent hindfoot joints. |
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The NICU wards in DHA hospitals are the largest available in the country but some parents of premature babies have complained of waiting lists as beds are not available there. |
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Although Kindwall et al described these differences in patients with wide QRS tachycardias, they obviously would apply to single premature complexes. |
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Because New Historicists rule English departments and professional organizations, and not yet from the grave, Kastan's book is premature as obituary, but timely as resume. |
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Henry's premature death in 1422, at the age of 36, led to his only son Henry VI coming to the throne as an infant and the country being ruled by regents. |
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At the time of Edward's premature death, his heir, Edward V, was only 12 years old and had been brought up under the stewardship of Earl Rivers at Ludlow Castle. |
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The number of annual premature deaths is considerably higher than the fatalities related to auto collisions in the same area, which average fewer than 2,000 per year. |
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Kim Hartman as Alison is the slummiest of the sleep-starved mummies but hers is the most emotional journey as she recalls her premature son's battle for life. |
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It actually overstepped the mark because with stoppage time approaching several fans came onto the pitch and even dislodged the goalframe to my left in premature celebration. |
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Produced by Adrian Sherwood, the music combined hiphop with experimental rock and dub and sounded like a premature version of what later became trip hop. |
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When formalised competitions started in the 1980s Jack Rowell brought premature professionalism to Bath and began to assemble a side with power and precision. |
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His father's premature death in 1897 had a lasting effect on him. |
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In a study of 2,900 pregnant women, those whose cervixes were shortened 24 weeks into the pregnancy had a substantially higher risk of premature birth than other women. |
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Here Burns grew up in poverty and hardship, and the severe manual labour of the farm left its traces in a premature stoop and a weakened constitution. |
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Premature ovarian failure occurs in up to 20 percent of women who are premutation carriers of the FMR1 gene. |
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