What is the medical term for bruise? What is a chronic neurological disease? What does mild degenerative disease mean? Is degenerative bone disease hereditary? What is chronic thromboembolic disease? What is a progressive degenerative disease of the basal nuclei?
What does collimation do in fluoroscopy? What is the Hermean magnetosphere? What is the glabella? What does magnetic declination mean? What is dyadic withdrawal? What is a tilted uterus? What is isostatic rebound? What is chromatic aberration?
Like many, many adults with cerebral palsy, I learned long ago that “not progressive” means that the damage to the brain does not progress, but cerebral palsy’s effects on the body most definitely DO worsen over time. Because we are told CP is not progressive, and because most healthca...
Novel findings, using DECT, have further indicated that, in the absence of gout, urate crystals deposit in costal cartilages and intervertebral disks in middle-aged men [17], and at several sites of axial and peripheral joint involvement in spondyloarthropathy and seronegative rheumatoid arthritis ...
Chorionic villi sampling is a medical test that takes a small piece of tissue from the villi extending from the surface of the placenta. The test looks for genetic disorders and sampled tissue created from the same egg as the fetus.
What does transverse mean in medical imaging? In medical imaging, transverse refers to images or slices that cut across the body horizontally, providing a cross-sectional view. 11 How does the axial direction affect mechanical design? The axial direction influences mechanical design by determining the...
What does flap mean in surgery? A flap isa piece of tissue that is still attached to the body by a major artery and vein or at its base. This piece of tissue with its attached blood supply is used in reconstructive surgery by being set into a recipient site (injured area onto which ...
All movement-based methods involved tri-axial accelerometry through actigraphs or similar devices. PSG was the predominant EEG-based method (n = 106), however a handful of studies used EEG alone, in either single channel (n = 2), standard (n = 4), or high-definition formats (n = 3)....
What does opponent-process theory explain? What is field theory? What was Redi's hypothesis? What does pressure flow theory mean? What is dynamical feedback in a climate system? What is optimal escape theory? What is equilibrium in mechanics?
The occurrence of plant disease requires the interaction of three factors. In the absence of any one of these three, diseases do not occur. The three factors are: 1. A susceptible host 2. A virulent pathogen 3. A suitable environment ...