An infusion of the root, leaves and flowers encourages the elimination of toxins from the body. |
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Additionally more common toxins tend to be those that are inhaled, such as cleaning solvents, aerosolized paints, thinners, etc. |
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Detox diets are quite popular now, where you virtually fast for a week to get rid of all the toxins in your body. |
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This is a powerful detoxifier which helps the body get rid of toxins and restores and protects the liver. |
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It protects the body tissues from toxins from the atmosphere, food and other sources. |
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In any of these diets increasing water intake is essential to help flush toxins out the body. |
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Water is also essential to good health, feeling vital and to flush toxins from the body. |
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The caterpillars harness the plant toxins and use them as a natural defence against predation. |
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It is common to find traces of toxins in plants and foods that are healing and nutritious. |
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Some types of bacteria release poisons called toxins while they are multiplying in food. |
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If animals containing these toxins are eaten by humans, the result may be illness or even death. |
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She informed me that she didn't mean for the whole four weeks, just for a few days to free my body of all the toxins. |
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For carcinogens and most reproductive toxins, however, regulators assume no threshold. |
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I also highly recommend colonic therapy to eliminate toxins faster, but see your GP and a wholistic practitioner before trying this. |
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Smaller herbivorous dinosaurs, however, may have fed to a greater extent than their larger kin on plants defended by qualitative toxins. |
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Mixing your drinks adds insult to injury and increases the amount of toxins you have to cope with. |
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Like chili plants, tarantulas produce agony-inflicting toxins designed to repel would-be predators, researchers say. |
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As the birds accumulated the toxins in their fat reserves, the shells in their clutches thinned and broke easily, or never hatched. |
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The toxins of certain snakes and of bacteria also block neuromuscular transmission and paralyse their victim. |
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It is believed that the organism proliferates in decaying organic material, producing the toxins that are then taken up by animals. |
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Once produced, plastic water bottles clog landfills and litter the landscape, and toxins in the plastic can find their way into ground water. |
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Most paralysis ticks lodge onto passing indigenous species that are immune to their toxins. |
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Some experts believe the toxins in our drinking water are the number one health threat causing cancer, heart disease and lead poisoning. |
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They have tiny hairs which contain toxins and if you come into contact with enough of them you can come out in a nasty rash. |
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When birds swallow these fish, toxins are passed on to their tissues, thus bioaccumulating up the food chain. |
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Chemical toxins differ from biological weapons in that they are nonliving pathogens and require direct infection and contact with the victim. |
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Also, the governments have to think seriously about the threat of chemical weapons and biological toxins. |
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High levels of PSP toxins have also been detected in queen scallops and mussels scattered up the west coast. |
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But sometimes the genes do not work as well as they should, so the toxins slowly accumulate in your body. |
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Some bacteria, such as those that cause tetanus and diphtheria, produce powerful toxins. |
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Examples of known predictable liver toxins are the cleaning solvent carbon tetrachloride and the pain killer acetaminophen. |
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It also dismisses laboratory evidence which suggests that nutrients can help the growth of algal toxins. |
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When it comes to carcinogens and toxins, for example, Priceless assumes that there is no safe threshold. |
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When the temperature rises and the sun shines the algae thrives and can produce harmful toxins. |
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This is the only product that can neutralize toxins from rattlesnakes, cottonmouths, and copperheads. |
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Nausea can also be of central origin, arising from direct excitation of medullary receptors by systemic toxins. |
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It is hoped such agreements will lead to lower levels of airborne traveling toxins. |
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Normal and necessary parts of our diet, such as salt and sugar and fat, have also been re-defined as toxins to be banished from our bodies. |
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A build-up of toxins in the organs, muscles, and tissues can lead to stiffness, sluggishness, and a general lack of enthusiasm or energy. |
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Even a healthy animal not exposed to noxious substances will have some toxins present in the body. |
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Finally, vitamin C can help rid the body of heavy metal toxins, including mercury, lead, cadmium and nickel. |
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The plant will still emit almost three tonnes of nitrous oxide, ammonia and other toxins into the Lower Fraser Valley per day. |
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By stimulating both kidneys and bowels, burdock has diuretic and laxative actions, and hastens the elimination of toxins from the body. |
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Under these circumstances, children could be exposed intensively and continuously to both inorganic and organic respirable toxins while outdoors. |
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These chemicals include known or probable carcinogens, neurotoxins and reproductive toxins. |
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Some antibodies are antitoxins, which directly neutralize any toxins secreted by the antigens. |
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In addition to massage, spas offer various body scrubs that remove dead skin and unclog pores, making it easier to sweat out toxins. |
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Dry body-brushing stimulates the lymphatic system, so it will transport toxins out of the body more effectively. |
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Raw bean sprouts, such as alfalfa, chickpea, lentil, and mung, have natural toxins that are only broken down by cooking. |
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Herbs like cascara sagrada, senna, chickweed, aloe vera, and rhubarb are excellent in assisting the body in the removal of toxins and waste. |
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All of these produce toxins as the bacteria multiply in the intestines after the food has been eaten. |
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Home spa treatments are effective, and even taking a bath is great, since the osmotic effect of bath water helps draw out toxins. |
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Some say sluggish blood and lymph circulation allow fluids and toxins to accumulate, causing fat cells to inflate and bulge up against the skin. |
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There is also an enormous slag heap stretching 4 kilometres that blows dust and leaches toxins when it rains. |
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All living organisms, including humans, are constantly exposed to foreign substances and poisonous chemicals or toxins. |
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Ethanol, similarly to most environmental toxins, requires metabolic activation and subsequent detoxification by a series of enzymes. |
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We also grow herbs, perennials, shrubs and ornamentals without using toxins. |
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But we can't go on trying to deal with effluent and waste and toxins without putting in resources. |
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Coffee specifically draws toxins from the liver through the mesentery of the small intestine. |
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Stay away from iced beverages because they hinder digestion and can create toxins leading to skin breakouts. |
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The toxins produced by many of the bacteria that cause septicaemia can severely damage any of the cells of the body. |
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It transports nutrients to cells and eliminates metabolic wastes, toxins and excess fluids from the body. |
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We binge on the wrong foods, overindulge in caffeine and are exposed to environmental toxins. |
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Tilden postulated that improper diet led to stagnation of food in the colon, which then putrefied and formed toxins. |
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Thus, even eating a healthy diet leads to an increasing burden of new man-made toxins, many of which have not been toxicologically assessed. |
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The liver is often the first organ to indicate reactions to herbal remedies as this is the part of the body where toxins collect. |
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I thought it might have just exploded and poisoned my poor body with it's toxins. |
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Any water that is left over leaves the body with the toxins, through sweat and urine. |
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Doctors later realised Liam's appendix had burst, releasing dangerous toxins into his body. |
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This may be a bacterial infection or following the ingestion of plant or chemical toxins. |
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Several representatives of this family of small, diurnal frogs are famous for their bright skin coloration and associated toxins. |
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Gene insertions could also link chemical pathways to previously inactive toxins or transfer allergenic proteins. |
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Some suggest that crying could be an inborn healing mechanism, or a way of removing toxins that build up with stress. |
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Sometimes you get sick because of the build up of toxins over time. Your body sweats the toxins out and purifies you in an effort. |
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Outdoor burning releases high concentrations of carcinogens, particulates, carbon monoxide and many other toxins. |
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The bacteria then multiply rapidly and produce toxins, which result in the rapid progress of the disease. |
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Fumes from cleansers, mildews, molds and other toxins are continually recycled back to us in our climate control systems. |
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Flush toxins from your body and keep metabolic processes humming along at peak levels. |
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Approximately 30 villages were gassed with chemical agents that included mustard gas and nerve toxins. |
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The insect-resistance gene discourages the build up of mycotoxins, potentially dangerous toxins that are probable human carcinogens, in corn. |
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They produce lots of toxins, called mycotoxins, which can contaminate our food. |
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It is through our diets that we get exposed to many toxins, especially the fat-soluble toxins that are found in the fatty part of our foods. |
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An electromagnetic current stimulates the toxins in your body, which then exit via the 2,000 sweat glands on each foot. |
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The pulp and paper industry has historically discharged dioxin and other environmental toxins into rivers and streams. |
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It is not an indication that something is wrongfulness, rather it is a sign that your physical structure is getting disembarrass of toxins. |
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The first toxins were simply saliva toxins, and we've actually worked out what was in the venom of the very first venomous snake. |
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From his hiding place behind the entry door, he could easily see the storage tanks that the toxins were being stored in. |
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Work to rid yourself of toxins in your food, relationships, emotions, and environment, and vital energy will expand in your life. |
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The toxins derived from this variety are toxic only to the larvae of butterflies and moths. |
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Also, the toxins from this excess waste matter can be reabsorbed into the bloodstream and circulated throughout the body, causing many problems. |
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It is known that drinking too much water can be harmful, leading to exposure to toxins and pollutants in water. |
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These toxins may be due to pollutants in the environment or to such things as smoking or drug abuse. |
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It is certainly terrorizing that such toxins and carcinogens have been poisoning us for so long and continue to do so. |
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The treatment purges the body of toxins, restores the homeostatic balance and replenishes the tissues with vitality. |
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Hot baths help cleanse the skin of released toxins and allow the pores to eliminate more toxins. |
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Fango is volcanic in origin. The mud is rich in minerals and promotes the release of toxins and relieves muscular and arthritic pain. |
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Scientists theorize that birds could use toxins in their feathers and skin to ward off parasites and insects. |
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It is difficult to identify fish which have high concentrations of toxins in their system. |
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It is usually followed by herbal plasters and poultices called lepa to help draw toxins out of the pores of the skin. |
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Greasy pig disease, a kind of eczema, may also be producing toxins which contribute to food poisoning. |
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Nausea and vomiting and diarrhea are useful ways to rid the body of infection and toxins. |
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The pyrogenic exotoxins, also known as erythrogenic toxins, are responsible for the rash of scarlet fever. |
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Water dilutes, dissolves and helps eliminate toxins and trash that could otherwise inhibit immune function, muscle recovery and growth. |
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This is also an envy free zone because I am so far removed from Grub Street with its horrible toxins. |
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Processing and disposal of hemp products would produce no industrial toxins, and certainly no dioxins. |
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An extreme divergence in venom evolution can extend even to the secondary loss of toxins. |
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The blood needs the magnesium in Epsom salts, which neutralizes the toxins. |
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Hepatic metabolism and the subsequent excretion of toxins are the primary means of detoxification in the body. |
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The most commonly known are bacteria such as anthrax, plague, and tularemia, and toxins such as botulinum toxin. |
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Although hydrogen peroxide functions as a disinfectant, it contains toxins harmful to the health. |
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The chip has obvious application to measuring toxins relevant to bioterrorism, he said. |
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But in other large Arctic animals, such as polar bears and seals, these toxins are known to cause serious health problems. |
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Releasing toxins via the skin through perspiration reduces the load on both the kidneys and liver. |
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In the study of environmental toxins, the causation of diverse effects is usually the rule rather than the exception. |
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When animals ingest chemicals such as PCBs, the toxins are not broken down in the body but are instead stored in fatty tissue. |
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Once this happens, our bodies will no longer crave toxins and my pining for chicken popcorn will fade. |
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Amazingly, one of the toxins resembles an enzyme found in potent snake venoms. |
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A number of researchers have suggested that venom toxins are modified saliva proteins. |
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The expensive equipment filters out toxins from incinerated mercury and cuts the dangerous discharge by 50 per cent. |
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The reason is that the toxins have a conical shape, which is complementary to the channel conical vestibule. |
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Similarly, spinach and other leafy vegetables help to rid the liver of toxins. |
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These act as a giant poultice, drawing toxins out from the skin, compressing and compacting the soft tissue. |
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By the final days, kidney function declines, toxins begin accumulating in the body, and multiple organ systems fail from lack of nutrition. |
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If inhaled continuously these toxins accumulate in the body leading to serious health problems. |
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Avoid king mackerel, which accumulates more toxins, including mercury, than other mackerel species because of its size. |
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They are so alive with nature's intelligence that fatigue-causing toxins cannot accumulate in the body when you eat them. |
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Fluid in the lymph vessels can become sluggish, which can cause toxins to accumulate. |
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When the rate of absorption exceeds the rate of elimination, toxins accumulate in the body. |
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One of the main causes of cellulite is crash dieting, which causes toxins to build up in the body. |
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Learn to remove ear toxins holistically with this ear-candling book and video. |
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The danaid butterflies, such as the Monarch, are well recognised to be doubly defended from predators by two classes of plant-derived toxins. |
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Both of these toxins remain without effect in serum-free preparations of M. martensi abdominal nerve fibers. |
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The enzymes and toxins in scorpion venom are used by the arachnid to paralyse its prey and digest its food. |
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These toxins can damage immune systems, trigger cancers and cause genetic defects. |
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All toxins from Australian funnel-web spiders are referred to by the generic name atracotoxin as all of these spiders, regardless of genus, belong to the Atracinae subfamily. |
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Synthetic carpets, chemically treated fabrics, painted and lacquered furniture are toxins that make continual skin contact, or may release fumes as they age. |
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It will help to flush all the bad toxins out of your system. |
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This work shows that five marsupials, two hedgehogs, a shrew, a mole, four mongoose, a raccoon, two mtistelids, and 15 rodents have some form of resistance to venom toxins. |
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The lung is constantly exposed to a broad spectrum of environmental toxins, including microbiologic pathogens and their products, particulate matter, and ozone. |
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Deafness is associated with many hereditary and non-hereditary diseases and may also result from pre or post-natal exposure to a variety of toxins and traumas. |
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Host cells are rapidly killed by cytolytic enzymes or toxins. |
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Like many plants, calatheas are very good at removing toxins from the air, caused by cleaning products, modern furnishings made of synthetic materials and so on. |
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Licorice resolves toxins and harmonizes the other medicinals. |
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Sarsaparilla root contains saponins, which reduce microbes and toxins. |
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Both are constricting and reduce the flow of toxins, causing backups. |
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This disease is caused by naturally occurring toxins that are found in the tissue of some shellfish. |
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He tells us about the devastating consequences of these toxins entering the watershed. |
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This helps the body to eliminate toxins and waste products, and will also help counteract the common pregnancy complaints of constipation and nausea. |
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And chemical and biological weapon toxins have a certain shelf life. |
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Earlier this month, Toledo, Ohio, watched its municipal water supply descend into an undrinkable stew of algal toxins. |
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Drink a 1.5-litre bottle of water a day to flush out toxins. |
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Shampoo, toothpaste and body wash contain harmful toxins too. |
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Small homes often have only kerosene lamps to provide light, which spew toxins equivalent to two packs of cigarettes a day. |
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Garlic stimulates the lymphatic system and helps it to throw off toxins. |
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Since Australian funnel-web spiders can live for more than five years in captivity, a small group of these spiders yields plenty of toxins for King's chemical analysis. |
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The old tub, carrying a load of oil pregnant with toxins and separated from the sea by a single layer of metal, should never have been allowed to leave the Baltic Sea. |
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For several bacterial diseases, such as diphtheria and tetanus, physicians can prevent the illness by immunizing people against the microbes' toxins. |
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But in the buzzing reality of daily life, bees collect from hundreds of types of plants, so whatever toxins they pick up are diluted to the point of harmlessness. |
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Number one is the build up of toxins such as acetaldehyde and free radicals, as your liver struggles to cope with metabolizing large amounts of alcohol. |
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Group A streptococci also produce toxins that can cause circulatory collapse in streptococcal toxic shock syndrome or fever and a rash in scarlet fever. |
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In developing countries, poisons consumed are commonly toxins such as organophosphorus compounds and aluminium phosphide, and thus mortality is high. |
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Once again, there's an impressive list of toxins found in these products that may include naptha, phenol, diglycol laurate, amyl acetate or nitrobenzene. |
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Workers are fully exposed to chemical toxins and hazardous machines, and suffer sickness, disfiguration, and death at the highest rates in world history. |
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To begin, they lay down two layers of plastic membranes, protecting the new growth from the toxins below. |
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As for the claims that activated charcoal will help purify your body from toxins? |
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These toxins accumulate in the fat of fish, the source of fish oil. |
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The range of threats from bioweapons can come from bacteria, viruses, and toxins, each with their own levels of mortality and potential for epidemic spread. |
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This replenishes the water table while it filters and reduces toxins that otherwise would be picked up from impervious surfaces and concentrated in stormwater runoff. |
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The chimneys at these fertiliser plants are fitted with scrubbers to trap these toxins, and all of this noxious material is collected in a solution known as scrubbers liquor. |
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This fungus produces a variety of toxins which are called avermectins. |
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But existing controls on certain persistent toxins such as DDT and chlorinated hydrocarbons had begun to prove effective in European and American waters. |
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In addition, clients are admonished to drink at least two quarts of water each day to help cleanse the body of toxins associated with weight loss and exercise. |
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Her daughter suffers from bi-lateral spasticity, a form of cerebral palsy which Miller believes was induced by toxins accumulating in her breast milk. |
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The value of defenses such as spines or sticky hairs, the regurgitation of plant toxins on an enemy, and the ability to mimic a snake is easy to imagine. |
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One way the body can eliminate toxins is via the skin through sweating. |
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The body can only tolerate a certain level of these toxins before they begin to build up and make us sluggish, lethargic, irritable and disillusioned with life. |
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Since rat root comes from a plant that grows on the edge of the lake there are concerns that the plant is carrying toxins. |
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He adds that avocados are nutrient-dense foods that help the body produce glutathione, a compound that is necessary for the liver to cleanse harmful toxins. |
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Some Brita models can deal with certain toxins, such as lead, that can come from outdated pipes. |
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The other obvious way to help your body deal with excessive toxins from that large meal is to dilute the toxins by drinking more. |
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Each of the 700 species of cone snail has its own unique venom, made up of a specific cocktail of toxins. |
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Protein intake, for example, causes an excess of toxins of amine groups when it is broken down for energy. |
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The toxins are pro-inflammatory enterotoxins, but toxin B is a more potent cytotoxin. |
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It's 'supposed' to whiten your teeth and pull the toxins out of your body. |
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The toxins are degraded by drying, so hay containing dried buttercups is safe. |
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Genera with mushrooms containing deadly toxins include Conocybe, Galerina, Lepiota, and, the most infamous, Amanita. |
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In addition, hurricanes can carry toxins and acids onto shore when they make landfall. |
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Apart from plastics, there are particular problems with other toxins which do not disintegrate rapidly in the marine environment. |
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Other persistent toxins are PCBs, DDT, pesticides, furans, dioxins and phenols. |
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This is cause for great concern that the oysters are being killed by the toxins in the dispersant, as well. |
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Certain peptides secreted by the bacteria themselves bind to a receptor called AgrC and trigger the bacteria to make toxins. |
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In this way, marine toxins can be transferred to land animals, and appear later in meat and dairy products. |
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It head-butts toxins 25 times as powerful as typical pit viper venom, a phenomenon luckily not discovered by handling. |
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As a result, these end up in the landfill, together with toxins such as plasticisers, fillers, and colour additives that are not biodegradable. |
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Apart from plastics, there are particular problems with other toxins that do not disintegrate rapidly in the marine environment. |
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Examples of persistent toxins are PCBs, DDT, TBT, pesticides, furans, dioxins, phenols, and radioactive waste. |
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Considered one of the best mid-meal snack or finger food in summer, cucumber is known to flush out toxins from the body. |
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Other caterpillars acquire toxins from their host plants that render them unpalatable to most of their predators. |
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Neutralization depends mainly on having all the specific antitoxins against a, p, e and iota toxins. |
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The flood water can pick up the toxins from different spills and contaminate the land that it passes over. |
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The toxins are very harmful to the people and animals in the area, as well as the environment around them. |
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They then introduced special antibodies with toxins and found that the immunotoxins penetrated the leukaemia cells and killed them faster. |
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No one really argues with the massive amount of pollution and toxins. |
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Inhalants are poisons, pollutants, toxins and fire hazards, and were never meant to be inhaled. |
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Coal ash contaminates soil, water and can re-suspend in the air exposing nearby communities to numerable toxins. |
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Microorganisms can cause tissue damage by releasing a variety of toxins or destructive enzymes. |
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For example, Clostridium tetani releases a toxin that paralyzes muscles, and staphylococcus releases toxins that produce shock and sepsis. |
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Marine and freshwater toxins such as ciguatoxins, saxitoxins, domoic acid, and brevetoxins are becoming more widespread around the world. |
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Then there's wolfsbane, whose toxins penetrate the skin and paralyse breathing in half that time. |
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Trimming or peeling green areas are inadequate to remove copresent toxins, and such potatoes are no longer suitable as animal food. |
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Other chemicals, including quinaldine and plant toxins, are also used to capture reef fish alive. |
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The oak processionary moth, found mostly in trees in west London, is covered in sharp hairs containing toxins during its caterpillar stage. |
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Herb and tree seedling growth may be inhibited even after bracken fern is removed, apparently because active plant toxins remain in the soil. |
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Even after a single use, the toxins contained in products such as Dust-Off have been associated with death. |
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Accumulation of paralytic shellfish poisoning toxins in bivalves and an ascidian fed on Alexandrium tamarense cells. |
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Zebra mussels filter toxins from the water and pass them up the food chain. |
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He argued that accelerated aging is because of autointoxication, which is due to the toxins produced by gut microflora. |
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It blends Epsom salts, Amazonian clay and ricegrass extracts to rid toxins from your skin. |
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They included adhesins, invasin, elements involved in iron acquisition, protectins, and toxins. |
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While parents fret over the toxins in plastic toys and teething rings, they now have to consider what chemicals may be lurking in their car seat. |
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Electronics factories use reproductive toxins like toluene and neurotoxins like n-hexane as well. |
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Most shellfish lose their toxins almost completely within four to six weeks after a gonyaulax outbreak. |
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Especially stick to use-by dates with smoked salmon and mackerel as toxins can form which are not killed by cooking. |
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Exposure of gill cells to algal extracts, brevetoxins and PST toxins was for 2 hrs, and to karlotoxin for 2, 3, 4 and 5 hrs. |
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The hearing in Taunton was told she found the death caps, which contain up to 20 toxins, under oak and fir trees in their garden last November. |
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For most people the effects of exposure to low levels of toxins from many sources over long periods are unknown. |
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These toxins break down the walls of blood vessels and blood leaks out under the skin to cause the red blotchy rash of meningococcal septicaemia. |
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The toxins have polluted the groundwater and poisoned the soil. |
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Bell SG, Codd GA Detection, analysis and risk assessment of cyanobacterial toxins. |
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Furthermore, eggs are rich in an amino acid called cystine, which helps fight against the alcoholinduced toxins that contribute to your hangover. |
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Contaminants from these two categories lead to elevated amounts of toxins in street dust. |
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Gangliosides that associate with lipid rafts mediate transport of cholera and related toxins from the plasma membrane to endoplasmic reticulum. |
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X deactivates bacteria and prevents the release of toxins, halting the infection in its tracks. |
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In its bite, the tiger keelback delivers slow-acting salivary toxins, which disable a clotting factor in the blood of its victims. |
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As the major detoxifier for the body, the liver processes countless amounts of toxins and removes them from our body. |
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The ones that she studies acquire their toxins from sponges and sea squirts. |
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Last month the EU banned two phthalates, DEHP and dibutyl phthalate, from cosmetics because the chemicals are classified as reproductive toxins. |
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Shriveled brown spots on potatoes may indicate deadly trichothecene toxins. |
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Botulinum toxins are naturally occurring substances which affect the release of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction of striated muscles. |
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Such toxins can accumulate in the tissues of many species of aquatic life in a process called bioaccumulation. |
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Breathing problems may indicate a serious reaction to toxins in the sea urchin. |
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The tentacles may be utilized to capture prey or defend against predators by emitting toxins in a painful sting. |
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The species is susceptible to bioaccumulation of toxins and to the destruction of nesting trees by logging. |
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An example of algal toxins working their way into humans is the case of shellfish poisoning. |
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In extreme cases, anaerobic conditions ensue, promoting growth of bacteria such as Clostridium botulinum that produces toxins deadly to birds and mammals. |
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Plants evolve mechanisms of resistance to being eaten by caterpillars, including the evolution of chemical toxins and physical barriers such as hairs. |
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Plants contain toxins which protect them from herbivores, but some caterpillars have evolved countermeasures which enable them to eat the leaves of such toxic plants. |
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Botulinum toxins have in some cases been linked to respiratory failure and even death, according to a warning issued by the Food and Drug Administration. |
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Participating in the development of rapid detection and decontamination for agents of bioterrorism such as Clostridium botulinum toxins, Yersinisa pestis, Bacillus anthracis. |
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Using ozone in a moldy room or a room filled with chemical toxins such as those that outgas from carpeting, neutralizes the toxins and renders them harmless. |
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Its saliva contains toxins which paralyze earthworms in particular. |
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One of the biggest sources of toxins in our life is deodorants or anti-perspirants which we use on a daily basis as they contain chemicals and aluminium. |
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All atmospheric toxins, asphyxiates or potentially explosive gases are to be listed on the material safety data sheets required for permit spaces by the regulation. |
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Street dust then reaches water sources through runoff, facilitating the transfer of toxins to environments and communities that rely on these water sources. |
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Known as hemodiafiltration, that method is better able to clean the kidneys of larger toxins than standard dialysis, which mainly removes small molecules. |
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Nevertheless, due to their ability to inhibit DNA transcription and replication, other similar toxins are also used in chemotherapy to inhibit rapidly growing cancer cells. |
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Some countries regulate importation and handling of molluscs and other seafood, mainly to minimize the poison risk from toxins that can sometimes accumulate in the animals. |
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Whether they're investigating toxins in our oceans or researching polymers in space, for new chemical engineers looking for employment the sky is literally the limit. |
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It takes a few days before toxins are taken up by the plankton. |
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The correlation between meat content and DST during the depurating period suggests that high food availability gives faster depuration of the toxins. |
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In this way, the toxins are concentrated upward within ocean food chains. |
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They contain a pharmacopoeia of drugs including alkaloids, glucosides, phytotoxins, selenium and a host of other toxins that induce a variety of symptoms. |
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Extracts from bracts stopped the bacteria responsible for these dental conditions from being able to stick to surfaces and prevented the release of some bacterial toxins. |
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Colonic hydrotherapy is beneficial during a detox as it helps get rid of all the toxins, speeding you on your way to healthy, glowing skin and more energy. |
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Therapeutically guided detoxification stimulates diffusion of toxins outside the cells and tissues, and facilitatates all eliminatory pathways of the body. |
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It is also used to absorb odors and toxins in gases, such as air. |
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Bivalve species differ markedly in their capacity to eliminate PSP toxins, falling into 2 slow or fast detoxifiers based on their detoxification kinetics. |
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Nor did I know or care that such toxins are surprisingly abundant at the ocean's surface, or that they bioaccumulate as they move up the food chain. |
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According to a spokesperson for Duke Energy, the storage caverns at Moss Bluff are salt domes and contain no toxins that could be released into the atmosphere. |
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Other marine animals can be vectors for such toxins, as in the case of ciguatera, where it is typically a predator fish that accumulates the toxin and then poisons humans. |
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The toxins in the oil and dispersants can also kill the larvae. |
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In the late 1950s, the discharge of methane gas in the depths of the river caused the water to bubble, and the toxins wore away at boats' propellers. |
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Hay that was too wet at cutting may develop rot and mold after being baled, creating the potential for toxins to form in the feed, which could make the animals sick. |
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Cassavas grown during drought are especially high in these toxins. |
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Scientologists believe toxins remain in the body for decades and affect both body and soul, and that the Purif can, for example, release anesthesia from a surgery years back. |
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Although the resulting red waves are an unusual sight, they contain toxins that not only affect all marine life in the ocean, but the people who consume them, as well. |
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But, of course, organic sheets won't solve your sleep problems if your mattress and box spring are offgassing toxins from plastic, foam and polyester. |
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Participants in the current study do thirty minutes of aerobic exercise, followed by two to four hours in a sauna and vitamin megadosing to dislodge and release toxins. |
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Many lichens produce secondary compounds, including pigments that reduce harmful amounts of sunlight and powerful toxins that reduce herbivory or kill bacteria. |
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Lizards such as the Gila monster produce toxins with medical applications. |
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Like other roots and tubers, both bitter and sweet varieties of cassava contain antinutritional factors and toxins, with the bitter varieties containing much larger amounts. |
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The Australian blue gum, for example, releases toxins in its leaf litter which prevents other species of plants from growing in the soil surrounding it. |
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Botulinum toxins act by interfering with nerve-muscle communication. |
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Toxins that cause DSP include the okadaic acid group of toxins. |
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However, it's important for coastal managers and public health officials to know that the presence of an algal bloom doesn't necessarily mean toxins are present. |
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