Cardiovascular neuropathy is a result of damage to vagal and sympathetic nerves. |
|
The counter measures aimed at combating witchcraft often involved sympathetic magic that was aimed at hurting the witch physically. |
|
If the sympathetic nervous system is damaged, however, the blood vessels do not constrict and blood pressure progressively decreases. |
|
Taking a sympathetic approach helps while an aggressive one worsens situations. |
|
But a sympathetic relative consulted a natural healing reference book that advocated eating 15 cherries a day to arrest gout. |
|
When the normal sympathetic reflex arc fails to discontinue at the appropriate time, a temporary vasoconstrictive action of small vessels occurs. |
|
The network operates nationally and internationally, in alliance with sympathetic professionals. |
|
In a world that was hostile to their practices and beliefs, the Anacreontic tradition will have given them a more sympathetic imaginary home. |
|
My lady doctor, while very sympathetic, says there's nothing that can be done. |
|
The allusions to a few recent works of sympathetic labor history in this piece are a genuine consolation. |
|
Increases in arterial flow stimulate efferent vagal outflow, inhibiting sympathetic drive and decreasing blood pressure. |
|
And Flaus is marvellous in the role, making the eccentric, repellent Krapp a sympathetic figure. |
|
Obviously, there's repetitive strain injury and reflex sympathetic dystrophy. |
|
Interestingly, the Milwaukee Sentinel published some stories in the early 1880s that were unusually sympathetic to the city's Asian laundrymen. |
|
Well, they were all nice and sympathetic, which was somehow worse in a weird way. |
|
Adjacent to the vertebral body, the abdominal aorta, inferior vena cave, sympathetic nerve trunk, and the left renal vein are seen. |
|
Turn again to this lot, and their sympathetic reaction to some self-proclaimed religious freak who has been put up the spout out of wedlock. |
|
Do you think that Arafat's coverage has been, over the years, too soft, too sympathetic by the press? |
|
The writing and directing move the story along, painting a rather sympathetic portrait of a very unsympathetic character. |
|
Consequently, he is an unsympathetic character, whom he is hard pressed to make sympathetic. |
|
|
The precise merit of his book is that he details how pluralist authors have evolved in response to both sympathetic and unsympathetic critics. |
|
If you look past the occasional snippiness of the Post's reporter, it's not a bad portrait of person that most of us will find very sympathetic. |
|
They reduce sympathetic nervous tone and induce natriuresis by their actions on the renal vasculature and tubules. |
|
While her family are unquestionably meddlers, their motives are more or less sympathetic. |
|
But Lowell remains a more audacious, more unpresentable maker than even the most sympathetic acolyte can allow. |
|
His portrait of Tyneside is unpatronisingly sympathetic and he even conveys the accent convincingly. |
|
Normally, I'm sympathetic to investors who get snookered by the volatility and outright lies that drive so many small-cap stocks. |
|
Frank Wood is an honestly unembellished Jody, and Patrick Clear a restrainedly sympathetic Bill. |
|
But the sympathetic atmosphere of the present occasion gives me the confidence to carry out such a risky undertaking. |
|
She let her voice go right down to a mumble at the end and looked up to meet his sympathetic brown eyes. |
|
I need a sympathetic, understanding elder right now, one who can help me out in my dilemma. |
|
And still he encouraged her on, with sympathetic phrases and understanding nods. |
|
An assuring hand was placed on her arm, and she looked up to meet his sympathetic, understanding gaze. |
|
There's a sense that this guy is not quite understanding enough or sympathetic enough to the allies' point of view. |
|
The film doesn't gloss over the violent nature of the drugs industry, but its sympathetic portrait of the mules is quietly provocative. |
|
An uncompromising champion of royal authority, he was sympathetic to victims of its abuse by corrupt courtiers. |
|
Its uniqueness resides in its singularity as a mainstream Hollywood film containing sympathetic portrayals of Beat concerns. |
|
You took a fairly two-dimensional character and made her believable, even sympathetic at times. |
|
Jones proves to be a sympathetic director, coaxing Pepper to one of his most convincing performances as a callous, black-hearted wretch. |
|
In Measure for Measure an examination of sexuality implies a searching and sympathetic depiction of the monachal orders. |
|
|
But reading the book provides a greater depth of sympathetic understanding. |
|
I mean, where's the harm in a guy wanting a drinking buddy, a shoulder to cry on and a sympathetic ear? |
|
By taking on these sympathetic forms, literary biography can supply parallel narratives to those of novels. |
|
When our hero passed, she could barely look him in the eye, she just shielded herself behind her sympathetic companions. |
|
The dogs were sympathetic to this proposal, so the wolves, making their way inside the sheepfold, tore the dogs to pieces. |
|
The first time he trips and falls, his mother responds with sympathetic cooing noises. |
|
And, you know, he was a tough priest who was sympathetic, but you know, I think he was used to tragedy. |
|
Make sure the staff are well qualified and sympathetic towards beginners and newcomers. |
|
For all their weakness, cowardice, and self-delusion, these men strike an unexpected, sympathetic chord. |
|
When his friend took over the Papal throne, Galileo thought he would finally find a sympathetic ear. |
|
His mysterious death in Naples in 1495 ended European hopes of placing a sympathetic figure on the Ottoman throne. |
|
Kagan and his colleagues have hypothesized that inhibited children have a lower threshold for sympathetic activation. |
|
These are rich, seductive, deeply sympathetic images aimed to counter tabloid stereotypes. |
|
The sympathetic nerve supply to the lung arises in the upper six thoracic segments of the spinal cord. |
|
The way she mauls the sympathetic doctor suggests she is a victim of the solitude that afflicts all these characters. |
|
When the baroreceptors sense the slightest drop in pressure, a coordinated increase in sympathetic outflow occurs. |
|
Centrally, there is reduced density and sensitivity of the baroreceptors and a down regulation of sympathetic receptors. |
|
He has been attending the Doctors and Dentists Group for many years, finding it a vital help, offering practical guidance and a sympathetic ear. |
|
The third did offer a sympathetic ear but no practical solutions, other than to suggest to the claimant that he should prioritise his work. |
|
Teenagers caught up in the turmoil of their parents' messy divorce are being offered a sympathetic ear by a new service in Winchester. |
|
|
They are offering a sympathetic ear to farmers suffering in the present weather crisis. |
|
What the bride needs more than anything else during this time is someone who will offer a sympathetic ear and practical advice. |
|
Both were sympathetic but lacked the will to tackle a problem that was not exclusively theirs. |
|
However, his music failed to evolve stylistically after the early 1830s and he was often charged with mannerism by less sympathetic critics. |
|
It sent a sympathetic, shivery rush from my spine to the backs of my knees. |
|
The device was sandbagged, the area cleared and then the tranquillity shattered briefly as a sympathetic charge disposed of the shell. |
|
The sympathetic nerves control circulation and perspiration and are part of your autonomic nervous system. |
|
He is a listener rather than a talker, and sympathetic in an amused, ironic way. |
|
Her only sympathetic ear at first is that of Sally, her French tutor, with whom she communicates by audio tape. |
|
My whole family felt the level of care provided was impressive and the nursing team attentive and sympathetic. |
|
He has a job at a lumberyard, a sympathetic boss, and a well-intentioned brother-in-law. |
|
By Wednesday, Sheridan was aswarm with inquisitive and sympathetic strangers asking troubling questions. |
|
She returned to the store and, with the help of a more sympathetic assistant, found a wig she liked. |
|
Too much sympathetic nervous system activity can be associated with stress, anxiety, and dysphoric mood. |
|
The sympathetic nervous system, not white blood cells, is critically important in the regulation of energy expenditure and thermogenesis. |
|
The most important aspect of treating oesophageal pain is a sympathetic appraisal of patients' problems. |
|
Some of the make-up artists gave me sympathetic looks but continued to apply black eye liner and mascara. |
|
He now has recorded all three of the symphonies, and he is sympathetic to their appealing late Romantic gush. |
|
Recent researchers have been less reductionist and more sympathetic than Adorno, but they too have skirted round the audience. |
|
All too often you're talking to two sides eager to portray themselves in a sympathetic light. |
|
|
A sympathetic judge lets her off with a fine and a reprimand and she goes driving off on a high ready to tilt at windmills once more. |
|
Cocaine acts by inhibiting norepinephrine reuptake in peripheral sympathetic nerve terminals as well as stimulating central sympathetic outflow. |
|
Wishing for no more tidal waves in the stormy emotional ocean of the day, Shey returned her mother's overly sympathetic smile. |
|
So the occasional Leftist claim that my work was sympathetic to Nazism is the height of absurdity. |
|
Barney is more sympathetic to the suggestion that the past counts against us. |
|
Processes used included rebuilding the pots with modern, sympathetic materials and providing specialist packing for each vessel. |
|
But to the contrary, the people were sympathetic towards her for having no father and a wastrel of a brother. |
|
We also ask our church members and sympathetic local people to be on the watch for anything or anyone suspicious. |
|
He is startling in the role of Jed, an achingly vulnerable figure who is tenderhearted, sympathetic, yet still very dangerous. |
|
A Ph.D. is a long, weird and mind-bending experience, and bureaucracies generally are sympathetic about this fact. |
|
The response from MPs consisted of sympathetic murmurs and mumbled hear-hears. |
|
He was bold, outrageous, witty, shocking and sympathetic without being the least bit soppy or sentimental. |
|
Drugs can modulate the activity of the sympathetic nervous system by affecting the synthesis, storage, release or reuptake of noradrenaline. |
|
If jurors you think are sympathetic to you get on the jury and bad jurors for you get off, you're happy. |
|
But for the most part the people who came to hear Nehru were sympathetic, and often adulatory. |
|
It's just as well there's no-one here right now to be sympathetic and supportive. |
|
If you feel a company is in breach of contract, don't be afraid to seek independent legal advice or a sympathetic colleague. |
|
Although Joan does things that some might consider repugnant, Linney fashions her alter-ego into a sympathetic human being. |
|
So this will hopefully prepare for a more sympathetic reading of the translated article below. |
|
Here we will activate your sympathetic nervous system using a famous model pain stimulus: dunking your hand in ice water. |
|
|
The fine crafting of the words and the kernels of human truth they contain come together as sympathetic wholes. |
|
The script called for her to be sympathetic, in spite of his reptilian appearance. |
|
The autonomic nervous system is divided into two more systems: the sympathetic nervous system and the parasympathetic nervous system. |
|
He then answers his own question with a vicious sideways slash that drops the bloody-nosed gumshoe to the ground while the entire audience winces in sympathetic pain. |
|
The sympathetic nervous system regulates blood flow and perspiration. |
|
Pain as a stressor activates the sympathetic nervous system. |
|
Patrick is the most tender-hearted, sympathetic, devoted person I know. |
|
We explore the role of an important stress pathway, sympathetic nervous system release of norepinephrine and epinephrine, in tumor growth and metastasis. |
|
That is not to say the students who submit to the elitism and racism promoted by the USC Greek system are wholly sympathetic. |
|
Paradise may be unattainable, but Arcadia posits that sympathetic company is necessary to a meaningful life. |
|
The government has moved to crack down on independent-minded judges, human rights groups and the media and has been accused of packing the courts with sympathetic judges. |
|
He is lean, well muscled, the complexion of a hazel nut, with black, sympathetic eyes. |
|
Both of these are strong sympathetic stimulants which in turn may increase warmth by stimulating the secretion of adrenergic hormones such as testosterone. |
|
I'd asked, aghast, since Hardy was so obviously sympathetic to women. |
|
The sympathetic nervous system pumps the body up, but when you take a deep breath the parasympathetic nervous system kicks in and starts to wind the system down. |
|
The sympathetic characters are quickly killed off, leaving two. |
|
Findlay is sympathetic to the self-referential and allusive nature of the play, Shakespeare's most mature comedy, and makes no attempt at realism. |
|
His relationship with the Labour party was an uneasy one, with the political party wary of angering the man who owned newspapers sympathetic to Labour principles. |
|
Thyrotoxicosis, anticholinergic drug poisoning, and amphetamine or cocaine use can result in signs of increased sympathetic activity and altered mental status. |
|
Even Communist Party members, those most sympathetic to anticlericalism and antireligious acts, could not entirely abandon their religious attachments. |
|
|
He highlights how anti-communist prejudice has lent weight to a sympathetic view of the propertied classes particularly over the treatment of slaves. |
|
But people are very sympathetic and appreciating us being here. |
|
Mr. Ziegler's is an elegant, sympathetic, and extremely readable biography, which really does breathe the breath of roistering life back into the vanished knight of letters. |
|
To begin with, prisoners are among the least lucrative of clients, and certainly the least sympathetic to juries, so that few lawyers are willing to litigate on their behalf. |
|
The fuhrer may have fallen but his ideology persists in this redoubt of Nazism, untroubled by a sympathetic Argentine regime. |
|
The texts, written by merchant seamen for a poetry competition, are strikingly direct, and are telling in Martyn Hill's sympathetic rendering and admirably clear articulation. |
|
Instead her sympathetic looks were directed towards his back. |
|
The Munali rumpus is a warning that their actions can generate reactions that only help to aggravate the situation and estrange them from an otherwise sympathetic public. |
|
Well, tonight the telegenic trial lawyer argues the case of a lifetime before a highly sympathetic hall of delegates and a supremely divided nation. |
|
I suspect that the teacher saw a situation getting out of hand, defused it skilfully, gave me a firm but slightly more sympathetic telling-off and that was the end of it. |
|
Just a couple of carefully worded questions, delivered in his soft Welsh voice, and patients would pour out their symptoms to his sympathetic ear. |
|
It offered not only a sympathetic ear but also structured advice on what to do next, and helped us through the maze of local authority and social services applications. |
|
They have to consider that this animal is capable of friendship and has strong family ties, and it feels compassion and it can be sympathetic and forgive. |
|
He had a bluff and ebullient, although sympathetic manner, and was hospitable, always the life and soul of the party frequently one he had given himself. |
|
The surgeon dissects the distal sigmoid colon from the mesentery and ligates the inferior mesenteric vessels without disturbing the presacral sympathetic plexus. |
|
Consternation froths up into a fragrant tizz of sympathetic disapproval. |
|
Robin Wright portrays Surratt as a stoic and sympathetic figure, certain to win over filmgoers just as she did her lawyer. |
|
Goebbels, in fact, would be seen as the leader most sympathetic to the modernists. |
|
He says the owner of the house in which he lives has not been sympathetic to him. |
|
But she nevertheless declares herself to be sympathetic to the former secretary of state. |
|
|
He finds the hidden depths in her character and reasons to be sympathetic towards a woman who might initially seem little more than an empty-headed good-time girl. |
|
What bugged him was that Southers appeared to be sympathetic to the unionization of the TSA work force. |
|
After spending the last few years trying to understand the pull of the material world, I am far more sympathetic to its blandishments and far more forgiving of its excesses. |
|
She splattered mud on a sympathetic spouse who has suffered from breast cancer and multiple sclerosis. |
|
A sympathetic figure, Tyson has been repentant about many aspects of his behavior. |
|
The agent behind the desk was very understanding and sympathetic. |
|
Jerry whacked at the old soldier's head with a sympathetic slapstick. |
|
Brockovich's unemphatic insistence on the economic struggles of ordinary working people is a perfect instance of Soderbergh's essentially sympathetic sensibility. |
|
The third can at least be muted by some dampening, and by putting sufficient thought into case design and component layout to minimise sympathetic vibrations. |
|
Halici captures all the quiet desperation of his character, but the unvaried delivery can be monotonous and the acoustics of the space are not sympathetic. |
|
The chance of earning a fast buck has given birth to a thriving souvenir industry on the streets around, selling stuff that ranges from the sympathetic to the sick. |
|
Those seminary students and congregations who were sympathetic found themselves expelled and disendowed. |
|
Miosis is pathognomonic for opioid drug administration and is a consequence of effects on the sympathetic nervous system. |
|
The resulting synod in Zurich placed most of the blame on Calvin for not being sympathetic enough toward the people of Geneva. |
|
Even infused with a toadying creepiness, Oswald flourishes as a sympathetic chap, the guy you can't help rooting for. |
|
Second editions retracted the headline and attempted to portray a more sympathetic attitude towards Bruno and mental health in general. |
|
They were all as drunk as Chloe, and I being a little in a sympathetic condition, they took me into their confidence. |
|
In a play entitled Jeanne d'Arc, a sympathetic gesture is made towards De Gaulle, who had chosen the cross of Lorraine as a symbol. |
|
The diagnosis was sympathetic ophthalmitis after all infective and inflammatory causes were excluded. |
|
Reduced cerebral blood flow with orthostasis precedes hypocapnic hyperpnea, sympathetic activation, and postural tachycardia syndrome. |
|
|
He looked so sympathetic that I felt sorry about doing my block and asked him to have a whisky. |
|
He had gone into Korea feeling sympathetic to communism, coming as he did from a poor family, but the experience left him permanently repelled. |
|
Roger Lewis notes that like a number of Sellers's characters, he is played in a sympathetic and dignified manner. |
|
It's the picture tube,'' he said, and laid a sympathetic hand on the brow of the Trinitron. |
|
Maternal overreactive sympathetic nervous system responses to repeated infant crying predicts risk for impulsive harsh discipline of infants. |
|
The attention to Volapuk is appreciated, the coverage of Esperanto multifaceted and sympathetic. |
|
The director considered her portrayal of Lady Macbeth to be the most sympathetic he had ever seen. |
|
You wouldn't be so sympathetic if she were ugly and coarsehanded, like a woman who has worked for her food. |
|
Renal denervation therapy attempts to address this difficult-to-treat population by blocking the sympathetic nerve activity to the kidneys. |
|
Warm-water immersion balances the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems to help you calm down. |
|
The parasympathetic and sympathetic innervation of the pupil and the characteristics of normal pupil function were described. |
|
The key issue is the balance of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems. |
|
Further, he conceptualized the sympathetic nervous system in its role as accelerator and the parasympathetic nervous system as brake. |
|
This consists of the sympathetic nervous system and the counterbalancing parasympathetic nervous system. |
|
Instead of cheering on sympathetic underdogs, viewers make parlor games out of predicting who'll be America's next nationally derided patsy. |
|
Jamie Foxx is sympathetic to Butler's situation but then the legal eagle figures out the grief-stricken widower is slipping out of control. |
|
Kibbitzed by sympathetic bystanders, the desperate driver tinkers ineffectually under the hood. |
|
Specifically, ATII causes increased sympathetic activity, sodium reabsorption and water retention, and arteriolar vasoconstriction. |
|
Chapter two explores Victorian Afghanistan while chapter three is concerned with the sympathetic liberal state in Hardy's The Woodlanders. |
|
Sir Robert Smirke's design of King's was sympathetic to that of Somerset House which is situated adjacent to the Strand Campus. |
|
|
Wellington, noted for his poor aim, claimed he did, other reports more sympathetic to Winchilsea claimed he had aimed to kill. |
|
From 1838 onwards Boole was making contacts with sympathetic British academic mathematicians and reading more widely. |
|
The sympathetic nervous system appears to modulate ureteral activity as shown by the presence of adrenergic receptors in the ureter. |
|
Use caution if administering adrenergic drugs because sympathetic effects of olodaterol may be potentiated. |
|
Zygoneures lie mostly within the cerebro spinal axis, some cells of the sympathetic system offering an exception. |
|
They operated separately from trade unions and the National Executive Committee and were open to everyone sympathetic to the party's policies. |
|
However, he was noted for his poor aim and reports more sympathetic to Winchilsea claimed he had aimed to kill. |
|
Government MPs sympathetic to the opposition's arguments are starting to break cover. |
|
Another factor in Highland Jacobitism was James VII's sympathetic treatment of the Highland clans. |
|
Her voice whispers breathily, swells right up to the verge of tearfulness and then gracefully backs away, ever sympathetic and ever poised. |
|
When work commenced again on the building, it was not always of a sympathetic nature. |
|
A child of India's revolt against the British raj, he felt naturally sympathetic with the Nicaraguans. |
|
At lively talkbacks some accused the show of overly sympathetic attitudes toward evangelicals, while others said it mocked the faithful. |
|
Rumor had it that the two were sympathetic to the guerilla groups. |
|
Geographical distance also prevented them from receiving anything more than a sympathetic ear from Rome. |
|
The spinal nerves provide sympathetic nervous supply to the body, with nerves emerging forming the sympathetic trunk and the splanchnic nerves. |
|
The valley and its surrounding mountains are described in sympathetic detail. |
|
He also became concerned about the plight of workers and was more sympathetic to the labor movement. |
|
This process was corrupted by French officials sympathetic to the French in Algeria who took much of the land they surveyed into public domain. |
|
But, unlike The Art Of Getting By, It's A King Of Funny Story and Thumbsucker, this time the hero's more sympathetic than slappable. |
|
|
I'm also sympathetic to thumbsucking continuing for however long the child wishes to indulge, in private or at home. |
|
Our view relies on a plenitudinous metaphysics to which we are antecedently sympathetic, and adds to it one bold hypothesis. |
|
Smaller details, however, may have been altered, and the word choice makes the reader more sympathetic to Caesar's cause. |
|
Compared to previous administrations, Napoleon III was far more sympathetic to the native Algerians. |
|
She had pewter-coloured hair set in a ruthless permanent, a hard beak and large moist eyes with the sympathetic expression of wet stones. |
|
In the historical novel The Grove of Eagles, by Winston Graham, Godolphin is shown as a sympathetic figure. |
|
The state as established under Franco was nominally neutral in the Second World War, although sympathetic to the Axis. |
|
When Welsh was mugged while sleeping at a cheap hotel, he was given a job as a porter by the sympathetic hotel manager. |
|
He doubtless hoped for a sympathetic ruling from President Reagan, at 70 no spring chicken himself. |
|
Some more sympathetic landlords supplied a free passage to what was hoped to be a better life. |
|
Of modern German philosophy he was a diligent, if not always a sympathetic, student. |
|
His connection with humanists was a decisive factor as several canons were sympathetic to Erasmian reform. |
|
Nerve growth factors or neurotrophins are proteins that enhance the growth potentialities of sensory and sympathetic nerve cells. |
|
Clement was a Gascon sympathetic to the King, and on Edward's instigation had Winchelsey suspended from office. |
|
Albinus crossed to Gaul in 195, where the provinces were also sympathetic to him, and set up at Lugdunum. |
|
The targets suggest the attackers are sympathetic to the vast censorship apparatus known as the Great Firewall of China. |
|
Other Muslims might have been expected to be sympathetic, even enthusiastic. |
|
As such, many of these arguments will be unpersuasive to persons who are not already sympathetic to noncognitivism. |
|
Effects of the extract of the mouse submaxillary salivary glands on the sympathetic system of mammals. |
|
These American raids alienated many sympathetic or neutral Nova Scotians into supporting the British. |
|
|
The new coalition of traditional landowners and sympathetic industrialists constituted the new Conservative Party. |
|
We review 2 cases of surgically and pathologically confirmed paraganglioma of the cervical sympathetic chain. |
|
The close economic, family, and historical ties ensured Bermudians were strongly sympathetic with the rebels at the start of the War. |
|
The purpose of the donor charge is to impart sufficient energy into the UXO explosives charge in order to cause a sympathetic detonation. |
|
In recent decades, most historians have criticised him, the main exception being Kevin Sharpe who offered a more sympathetic view of Charles that has not been widely adopted. |
|
The prime ministers of Canada and Australia, John Diefenbaker and Robert Menzies, respectively, were sympathetic to the concept, but, again, it was never put into practice. |
|
The collection has humorous and sympathetic portraits of Newfoundland characters, and creates an elegiac mood in poems concerning sea tragedies or Great War losses. |
|
He was certain that there are grimmer elements in the play, but they are overlooked because the audience focuses on the story of the sympathetic young lovers. |
|
We had briefed there would be no sympathetic aborts for the section. |
|
Insensitive munitions are designed to resist unplanned detonation by fast or slow cook-of, bullet impact, fragment impact, shaped charge jet impact or sympathetic detonation. |
|
The six tests normally include fast cookoff, slow cookoff, sympathetic detonation, bullet-impact, fragment-impact, and shape-charge jet impact tests. |
|
Icelanders were, in general, sympathetic to the cause of the Allies. |
|
Hammond had been introduced to the King earlier, at an audience where he made such protestations of loyalty that Charles came to believe him sympathetic. |
|
In particular, rural candidates, generally sympathetic to British rule and less confrontational, were assigned more seats than their urban counterparts. |
|
They are more sympathetic to immigration, free markets, and free trade, and less sympathetic to protectionism, make-work policies, and government intervention in business. |
|
Western countries were sympathetic to the Chinese in their struggle, particularly in their stubborn defence of Shanghai, a city with a substantial number of foreigners. |
|
After Grindal died in 1548, Elizabeth received her education under Roger Ascham, a sympathetic teacher who believed that learning should be engaging. |
|
I keep stumbling on websites about chemtrails and I'm starting to think I could quite easily become sympathetic to the chemtrail theorists' cause. |
|
When they ranked global warming dead last on their list of cost-effective spending priorities, critics alleged that he had cherry-picked sympathetic thinkers. |
|
It was also a sympathetic environment for his most famous poem, The Palinode, composed in praise of Helen, an important cult figure in the Doric diaspora. |
|
|
The third type of growth derived from the sympathetic system is the chromaffine tumor, or paraganglioma, as it is often called, because of its origin from the paraganglia. |
|
Post-dural puncture headache, backache and prolonged sensory, motor, and sympathetic blocks are among the most common complications of spinal analgesia. |
|
While scholars in the Anglophone world are generally sympathetic to the spirit of this call, they face considerable challenges in finding a nomenclature to match it. |
|
After uptake of TYR by sympathetic nerves via the cell membrane norepinephrine transporter and translocation of axoplasmic TYR into vesicles, NE exits the vesicles. |
|
Phaeochromocytomas are neuro-endocrine catecholamine-secreting tumours that arise from chromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla or sympathetic paraganglia. |
|
By activating this afferent pathway, Barostim restores sympatho-vagal balance by reducing sympathetic activity and increasing parasympathetic activity. |
|
Wealthy Loyalists wielded great influence in London and were successful in convincing the British that the majority view in the colonies was sympathetic toward the Crown. |
|
Several characteristics about the Tribune made the newspaper an excellent vehicle for Marx to reach a sympathetic public across the Atlantic Ocean. |
|
Cellular hypersensitivity to uveal pigment confirmed by leucocyte migration tests in sympathetic ophthalmitis and the Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada syndrome. |
|
Portions of those letters quoted by Bruccoli indicate that though Hemingway could be sympathetic, he used a lot of ink telling Fitzgerald to shape up or ship out. |
|
Stet is sympathetic and believable, and the emotional connections he forges with the owner of the salvage yard, a gruff but caring Viet vet, and with his sister are affecting. |
|
Whereas Molinet was sympathetic to Richard, Vergil was in Henry's service and drew information from the king and his subjects to portray them in a good light. |
|
We must be content to signalize a by-stroke of sympathetic delicacy. |
|
Pheochromocytomas are rare catecholamine producing neuroendocrine tumors typically located in the adrenal medulla or along the sympathetic ganglia. |
|
During postexercise recovery period, the ANS activity is mediated by regain of parasympathetic nervous system activity and withdrawal of sympathetic nervous system activity. |
|
Symptoms and signs of increased sympathetic activity include hypertension, tachycardia, cardiac dysrhythmias, increased perspiration, fever, hyperglycaemia and restlessness. |
|
He was more sympathetic to Rome than his father had been, and based on numismatic evidence styled himself rex, implying client kingship status under the Empire. |
|
I could think of no words adequate to the occasion. So I belched. Not out of contumely, you understand. It was a sympathetic belch, a belch of brotherhood. |
|
Steve has a down-to-earth, sympathetic approach towards his mediumship, and promises an emotional rollercoaster ride for his audiences, always full of laughter and tears. |
|
He found the opposition Tory leadership more sympathetic to his cause, and, when they came to power in 1710, he was recruited to support their cause as editor of The Examiner. |
|
|
Social commentary was a feature of Chaplin's films from early in his career, as he portrayed the underdog in a sympathetic light and highlighted the difficulties of the poor. |
|
Among his main reasons, he pointed out that the Brazilian Church was sympathetic to the ordination of Gene Robinson, as well as the ordination of all LGBT people. |
|
Indeed planning appeal cases clearly indicate that inspectors are not sympathetic to uncharacteristic alterations and the addition of suburbanising features. |
|
Gemma Ryan was convincingly distinctive in her portrayal of both the unartful Helena and the bold Titania, whileLynn Francis was a hilarious and sympathetic Bottom. |
|
A ganglioneuroma is an uncommon tumor of the sympathetic nervous system. |
|
From the start Methodism was sympathetic towards poor people. |
|
It did so with style, sometimes sympathetic to but distinctly separate from the yahoos of the John Birch Society or the bizarre conspiratorialists of the Liberty League. |
|
His presence in Greece, and in particular his death there, drew to the Greek cause not just the attention of sympathetic nations, but their increasing active participation. |
|