Aside from mild gastrointestinal distress and allergic reactions, side effects are rare, and serious toxicity rarely has been reported. |
|
The men were frantically waving their arms around to indicate they were in distress. |
|
On that bus, dignity masks the distress of financial hardship and failing hope. |
|
Lactose is the milk sugar that can cause intestinal distress in people lacking the enzyme lactase, which is necessary for its digestion. |
|
It happens on a daily basis, much to the distress of people who transact business there. |
|
But, at least a couple of them lost control over their emotions and let their distress reflect in their choked voices and misty eyes. |
|
The police mistreat people, and we don't condemn them too seriously for that, if it's in the distress of a riot situation. |
|
Both these parasitical forms of life are causing distress and hardship to average, hard-working Bermudians. |
|
The only indication of her emotional distress was the tint of her bloodshot eyes. |
|
The trust deeply regrets the unattributable injuries to the patients on Rowan Ward and the distress caused to the relatives. |
|
Although I was particularly careful not to name any person, I regret any distress or undue concern that might have been caused to any person. |
|
Just as the Missouri left Earth orbit a top order distress signal came through. |
|
He is beset both by theological doubts and by distress at the narrowness and hypocrisy of his colleagues and congregations. |
|
He, with his usual unreserve, made his past distress a subject of amusement to his friends. |
|
Agatha gave a little squeak of distress and pulled the computer's electrical cable out of the plug socket. |
|
Primary endpoints were neonatal respiratory distress syndrome and perinatal death. |
|
Administration of surfactant in neonates with infant respiratory distress syndrome has led to improved survival rates. |
|
If there had been any upset or distress they could have left and gone home at any point. |
|
An upstanding member of the community who has been deeply involved in prison matters for many years called me in distress just a month or so ago. |
|
None of the animals developed hypoxemia, hemoptysis, bronchospasm, or respiratory distress either during or after treatment. |
|
|
The Committee recognise that by admitting all the heads of charge, you have spared Mrs. A the further distress of appearing before the Committee. |
|
The infant developed mild respiratory distress at delivery that resolved with bulb and orogastric suction and administration of free-flow oxygen. |
|
I have gone through financial ruin, personal vilification, the distress and dismay of my family. |
|
The very minute she awoke she would begin this relentless spine-chilling howling, her wordless distress all too apparent. |
|
Because there was no temperature control in the vivarium the animal would have suffered distress as its body heat decreased. |
|
The creak of a loose floorboard made her turn in distress to see the man not ten feet from her. |
|
After extubation, patients were monitored for respiratory distress and hemodynamic stability up to 24 hours. |
|
Correlations between moral distress scores and years of nursing experience were calculated by using the Pearson product moment correlation. |
|
Plagued by demons of hate and angels of mercy, she had become his damsel in distress needing permanent rescuing. |
|
After the fifth capsize, I climbed out on deck, fully intended to set off my distress beacon to ask for help. |
|
Somatic symptoms in those cases are accepted ways of expressing distress and getting help in a less stigmatic way than usual psychiatric care. |
|
Captain Smith ordered the Marconi operators to send out a distress call that the ship was sinking by the head. |
|
In some severe cases, diffuse opacification suggestive of acute respiratory distress syndrome develops despite intensive treatment. |
|
Bodies speak their distress in physical ill health, mental distress, and self-destructive behaviour. |
|
He was quite simply helping out people he both knew and liked in a time of great distress and heartbreak. |
|
And how much distress will it cause to the many children who will be heartbroken if this shameful act is carried out? |
|
They ran into stormy seas and started their emergency distress beacon late on Friday night. |
|
The distress of patients dying from heart failure was identified almost 40 years ago. |
|
The prime minister opined that banks should come forward to help the farmers who are in distress in some form other other. |
|
Traditionally, gold has been coveted as a safe harbor in times of distress and a hedge against inflation. |
|
|
This was causing everyone a lot of distress and I thought it had gone on long enough. |
|
They agreed to this, obviously noting my distress and changing the subject to the dance. |
|
For Maud Martha, the house serves dual roles as the site of both her distress and her succor. |
|
This sultry goddess of a tow-truck driver has been rescuing autos in distress for almost five years. |
|
The mobile phone is certainly a must for pedestrians as in times of distress they can summon immediate help. |
|
People who suffer emotional distress can turn to food to suppress their feelings, only exacerbating the problem. |
|
Particularly I'm going to switch off or stop reading when I recognise signs of distress in myself. |
|
Acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome are clinical syndromes that are characterized by extreme hypoxemia and high mortality. |
|
With employment, for example, there is a level of distress that hurts demand. |
|
The distress off camera contributed to the tenor of Taylor's scenes, especially the halting monologue that climaxes the film. |
|
She was experiencing significant distress due to hot flashes and was referred by her oncologist for hypnotherapy. |
|
But, despite traversing steep alpine regions, he did not pack crampons, an ice axe or an emergency distress beacon. |
|
At the seaside, the coastguard reported a number of false alarms when ships mistook fireworks for distress flares. |
|
Prime Minister Tony Blair spoke of his distress and the Prince of Wales wrote personal letters of condolence to both families. |
|
There are many items of personal property whose loss causes emotional distress that far outweighs their market value. |
|
He looked unkempt and in some distress as he stepped delicately from his car wearing blue pyjama bottoms, slippers and a collarless white shirt. |
|
These are false economies, fuelled by the crisis in social services, and will only serve to cause harm and distress to many. |
|
One of its benefits will be anyone sending distress signals from land or sea will know immediately if their signal has been picked up. |
|
Thomas had come home, to a Bolton where the pillory was still a force, where unrest and distress were still to be overcome. |
|
I have discovered to my distress and inconvenience, that nowhere in the Middle East do they sell Swan Slim Line filter tips. |
|
|
The aging fireboat has responded to thousands of distress calls in its half-century of service. |
|
He identified it as consonant with his team's research results on the nature of distress in close relationships. |
|
These powers must be exercised on consideration of the likelihood of damage or distress caused by the contravention of the Act. |
|
If I have caused any embarrassment or distress to the parties concerned I unreservedly, sincerely and contritely apologise. |
|
But the government also promised to consider controls on air guns, blamed for causing injuries and distress to humans and animals. |
|
Our Plutonian scanners are picking up a distress signal in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. |
|
Agnes was an inveterate correspondent and a great supporter of people in distress and need. |
|
There are numerous studies that have found that marital distress tends to co-occur with a wide range of psychiatric symptoms and syndromes. |
|
The weapons, imported from eastern Europe, have been adapted from a miniature distress flare gun and can hold two bullets. |
|
Mr Long said in the past refuse collectors had found live gun cartridges and a distress flare among rubbish left out for them. |
|
However, cryptogenic organizing pneumonia can occasionally present as acute respiratory distress syndrome and respiratory failure. |
|
Accordingly, the plaintiff's claim for damages for mental distress is dismissed. |
|
Oates stars as a bounty hunter who is persuaded to lead an unnamed and demanding damsel in distress across the desert on horseback. |
|
Jessica says women who play the damsel in distress to attract men make her mad. |
|
In 1992, 43 tons of chlorine gas were released in Henderson, Nevada, causing distress to hundreds of people. |
|
Many people die with a minimum of discomfort and distress due to present-day medication and expert care services. |
|
Sorry to a bit all over the place but I am feeling genuine distress and anger at all of this. |
|
The emotional distress cause of action was demurrable on other grounds, but leave to amend should have been granted. |
|
Therefore, chronic marital distress may be a more salient psychosocial risk factor for women than for men. |
|
My periods of distress and elation and my innumerable naps follow the pattern of jet lag, except I'm at home. |
|
|
Feelings of expectation, embarrassment, distress and emotional harm vary according to the individual. |
|
He was taken to the emergency room in severe respiratory distress and ended up on a ventilator. |
|
A lack of close friends and a dearth of broader social contact generally bring the emotional discomfort or distress known as loneliness. |
|
It is a modern, mass movement originating in the social distress and dislocation created by capitalist crisis. |
|
Not surprisingly, his journal entries during this period indicate real emotional distress and disorientation about the direction of his life. |
|
Many may have developed explicit systems which seek to alleviate human distress by eliminative procedures. |
|
Benzodiazepines can relieve the distress associated with agoraphobia but have only a temporary effect. |
|
Only then will we avoid causing distress to our elderly by nursing home closures. |
|
Complex social institutions have developed in response to pressures to alleviate the distress which behavior patterns can produce. |
|
Considerable social stigma is associated with infection, which may cause psychological distress in the sufferer. |
|
The causative role of that trauma in patients' subsequent distress becomes clear. |
|
Fourthly, patients' distress and their vulnerability to anxiety and depression are lessened. |
|
The treatment of choice for co-occurring marital distress and depression appears to be behavioral marital therapy. |
|
Caring for people experiencing mental distress is often complex and challenging. |
|
They can be enforced whenever youths are harassing or causing distress to residents or businesses. |
|
Several qualified female staff expressed intense feelings of distress associated with restraining patients. |
|
Family members and friends can lessen the patient's distress by avoiding disagreements in front of the patient. |
|
Others, however, suffer great emotional distress associated with a lack of self-confidence and sometimes depression. |
|
And next time there is a ship in distress in Norwegian waters, let's hope there is an Australian vessel nearby. |
|
The flight crew made a distress call and the aircraft landed safely on one engine around 14 minutes after take-off. |
|
|
Unwaveringly these incredibly brave volunteers get in the chopper and answer the distress call. |
|
Wasn't the closest port in Indonesia when the ship received a distress call? |
|
Three Kingfisher pilots searching for ships in distress radioed they had spotted life rafts in the stormy Atlantic. |
|
The Navy has made a valiant, but ultimately doomed, attempt to rescue a fellow seafarer in distress at Fleet Base West. |
|
It would continue to befriend foreign sailors in distress but would destroy any foreign ships that threatened its rulers or were violent. |
|
Spanish ships in distress were to be permitted to seek refuge in English ports. |
|
Farmers are subject to major disruption and families can suffer serious distress and financial loss. |
|
Many have been separated from their families and loved ones for months on end, enduring great personal distress and financial loss. |
|
As a councillor, I witness at first hand the needless hardship and distress caused to, mainly young, families waiting years to be housed. |
|
Meanwhile, the money is rolling in for the relief of distress among the victims of this appalling apocalyptic tragedy. |
|
A National Grid spokesman said today that the company did not wish to cause any distress or financial hardship to Mrs Craven. |
|
By one estimate, medical expenses are the primary cause of financial distress for 40 percent of those struggling to hold on to their homes. |
|
A charity for the homeless is marking ten years of relieving poverty and distress in the Chorley area. |
|
He told planners he could get into financial distress if expansion proposals for the business weren't agreed soon. |
|
Many of the suicides in the countryside were triggered by the financial distress caused by the low rubber prices. |
|
It also noted that another operational consequence of BWIA's financial distress was the long delay in regaining Category 1 status. |
|
She was hospitalized with respiratory distress due to mediastinal masses compressing the airway. |
|
No significant differences between the various groups were found when the incidence of acute fetal distress was analyzed. |
|
As in other causes of acute respiratory distress syndrome, the mortality is high. |
|
Payments were not made under the LO and bailiffs were instructed to levy distress but were unsuccessful. |
|
|
It might distress people considerably, but no moral judgment can be applied because you have a totally wild encounter. |
|
He had done every possible act to bother and distress her, including his attempt of a confession of love to her. |
|
Though these behaviors might distress people, they serve turkey vultures well. |
|
I use anything that is available to create a texture, make a mark, reflect light, distress the surface, etc. |
|
I've managed to rebuild everything, but as I got the ship up and running it sent out the distress signal. |
|
The ferry had sent out a distress signal after a blaze started between two engines and the funnel on Friday night. |
|
The distress signal you send up when you find yourself separated from the cover boat may look impressive from your viewpoint at wave level. |
|
If I screw up, I want you to send a distress signal and evacuate this ship. |
|
He used the keyboard in the wall to send out an emergency distress signal to all ILPM ships. |
|
After receiving a distress signal from a distant mining colony, the Nightingale dimension jumps and comes to the rescue of a lone survivor. |
|
The distress signal was rigged to a hyperspace relay, so they know the colony is, or rather was, under attack. |
|
Send a distress signal to the Green Pastures MSS, and start monitoring broadcasts from that ship below us. |
|
The warships had received the distress signal from their scout ships the moment the Large Human warship had arrived. |
|
First, authorities will not only receive your distress signal, but they should receive your exact GPS coordinates. |
|
It sends out a distress signal but few vessels have the ability to read this information. |
|
Sleep may be another intervention domain to target, especially since disturbed sleep can negatively impact distress levels. |
|
Parents indicated that disturbed sleep and episodes of distress were more relevant outcomes. |
|
There was no distress call from the plane which circled the airport twice before ditching into the sea. |
|
Even the family pet let loose in the countryside can cause great distress to sheep, including pregnant ewes and lambs. |
|
It would neither distress the condemned person, nor the executioner on the other side as he pulled the trigger. |
|
|
A signal of distress is accentuated by making it into a weft, which is done by knotting it in the middle. |
|
Demolition was deliberately timed to coincide with the English school holidays to minimise the distress to youngsters. |
|
There has been a letter from the warden of Morley College blaming Moloko's for distress to their residents. |
|
There is no waspish remark to follow and I am sorry if this outbreak of sincerity causes any distress. |
|
The most common signs are muscle wastage, diarrhoea and respiratory distress in pigs aged between six and 14 weeks. |
|
Immigration and acculturative stresses also may have a combined effect, placing them at greater risk for psychological distress. |
|
She had the respiratory distress and metabolic acidosis of severe malaria, and needed blood urgently. |
|
It caused severe distress to a crew member and forced the jettison of all sonobuoys. |
|
Indian companies have been acquiring assets of foreign telecom companies that had been in distress. |
|
It provides an opportunity for people to acquire skills and confidence in devising their own responses to distress. |
|
Bravo to the captain of the ship for acting on his good conscience when his distress signals fell on deaf ears. |
|
The number is programmed into the radio and identifies the caller, which should eventually cut down on hoax distress calls. |
|
Later, the child appears acutely ill with fever, upper airway compromise, and respiratory distress. |
|
Only generalised distress, they assert, represents a failure to respond adaptively to social challenge. |
|
She said the letter had caused her additional hurt and distress at a very difficult time. |
|
It speaks of jousts, tournaments, wizards, falconry, enchantresses, damsels in distress, wars, quests, and the code of chivalry. |
|
Gyan et al. found a positive correlation between pediatric hospital admissions for respiratory distress in Trinidad and African dust events. |
|
There can be sudden choking with acute respiratory distress, or there can be delayed symptoms with cough, wheezing, and hemoptysis. |
|
Respiratory distress immediately after birth is common and has various aetiologies. |
|
To her distress, the person persisted, the door shaking and rattling with his knocks. |
|
|
Dorothy tells us that what is called madness is really immense mental distress, inability to cope. |
|
Beefeater also submits that no damages should be paid to the plaintiff for mental distress, or for punitive or aggravated damages. |
|
But on top of the injury comes the aggravation and distress of legal battles over and above the medical battles. |
|
The theory of reparation grew from clinical observations of children's distress at their own aggressiveness. |
|
In the emergency department, the patient was agitated, diaphoretic, and in extreme respiratory distress. |
|
There is no doubt that this full exposure to experience incorporates involvement with pain, suffering, hardship, distress and agonised emotions. |
|
I explained to him that I needed to turn around and fly a reciprocal course to re-establish communication with a soldier in distress. |
|
The eight warriors must battle witches, monsters, evil spirits, and vats of bubbling poison if they are to rescue the damsel in distress. |
|
The ancient Kyrgyz were part of strong nomadic tribal unions, which proved to be a serious distress to China. |
|
Unlike many would-be damsels in distress, I never imagined myself being rescued by a knight in shining armor. |
|
With a top speed of 38 knots, they were capable of quickly getting to ships in distress. |
|
No recondite phrase or pleasing neologism, it is a wordless summons like that made by the infant in distress. |
|
The room and pillar mine workings are stable with no signs of salt movement or rock distress. |
|
A man's concern, even his despair, over the worthwhileness of life is an existential distress but by no means a mental disease. |
|
In this village, distress and despair are writ large on the faces of nearly 100 widows and their 350 orphan children. |
|
He also claimed damages for wrongful dismissal, mental distress and punitive damages. |
|
It says that cerebral palsy is almost never caused by fetal distress in labor. |
|
The crew made a distress call after their 47 foot yacht started dragging its anchor and was in danger of going ashore onto the rocks. |
|
Yet, the experts believe that family ties still play a major role in ameliorating the potential social distress caused by unemployment. |
|
I am appealing to all mums and dads, please sit your children down and explain what distress and anguish they cause with their pranks. |
|
|
Our epoch is characterized by startling advances on the one hand and conditions of extreme socioeconomic retrogression and distress on the other. |
|
In the worst cases, it left legacies of personal pain and distress that continue to reverberate in Aboriginal communities to this day. |
|
Symptoms include lethargy and disorientation, as well as life-threatening seizures and respiratory distress. |
|
For all the upbeat luster of their imagery and rhymes, his poems are often confessions of loneriness and distress. |
|
The lifeboat was launched after Fife coastguards received a distress call from the grounded vessel. |
|
Withdrawn children also exhibit signs of emotional distress such as anxiousness, and display less positive expressions. |
|
We would like to apologise to Mr Murphy for any distress that this failure has caused. |
|
We have been bounced from pillar to post over the past few weeks and this has caused a lot of distress for my family. |
|
But on Sunday he displayed no obvious signs of distress and bowled quite comfortably. |
|
We also discuss the role of attribution theory in understanding the marital distress of these couples. |
|
On her second hospital day she developed fever, tachycardia and tachypnea, progressive respiratory distress, and hypotension. |
|
Urania visits her father, and talks at him, unravelling her anger and distress, not at all sure whether he understands. |
|
Psychiatry has provided fertile soil for endless theories about distress and madness. |
|
They believe, however, that people should be allowed to determine when they die so as to avoid excessive pain or distress for their relatives. |
|
She was better than any baby monitor available as she would come find us at the first sign of stirring and distress. |
|
As Alex falls to his knees, tearing his hair out in distress, the questions still remain. |
|
Acute respiratory distress syndrome is the clinical manifestation of severe, acute lung injury. |
|
For example, I was in a great deal of confusion, distress and pain over the weekend. |
|
But forcing everyone to take part in research would bring substantial pain and distress for some people. |
|
This vandalism has caused much distress and pain to the families of those whose graves were destroyed. |
|
|
The family is in pain or in distress, and the therapist is called upon to help them and to find a way out of their dilemma. |
|
Even if some materialists swim through life with little distress, consumerism carries larger costs that are worth worrying about. |
|
Born of all the distress of that situation came the one thing that I was truly unprepared for. |
|
The radio operator sent a Mayday distress call, which was logged by the local Coastguard station at 12.06 am. |
|
It answered a midnight Mayday from a yacht in distress and altered course to make a mercy dash off the Dorset coast. |
|
Securely attached children appear to be able to seek and receive comfort from their parents when faced with emotional distress. |
|
When activated, the beacon sends an encoded distress message to a series of satellites orbiting the Earth. |
|
An orbiting satellite picked up a distress signal from the ship's emergency beacon, standard equipment on all modern boats. |
|
In all instances, the irregular women reported more menstrual distress than did the regular women. |
|
Appealing to one's rational sense in their moment of deep anguish and distress is indeed a difficult task. |
|
The person in distress was an Army sergeant who had been on land-navigation and survival training in the mountains of West Virginia. |
|
A significant cause of death in premature infants and, on occasion, in full term infants is respiratory distress syndrome or hyaline membrane disease. |
|
Its protagonist, an earnest but questioning clergyman, resigns his orders for a life of social service in the East End, to the distress of his devout wife Catherine. |
|
The first tool in any soap actor's armoury is the facepalm which can be used to express anything from a mild headache to the sudden return of lost memory to distress over a bad makeover. |
|
But it only barely makes up for the distress of watching the season of piling on. |
|
But by midweek, rogue Mercury gets you thinking that perhaps the distress call is indeed coming from inside the house. |
|
If a distress flare is inadvertently set off, please let the emergency services know by informing the coastguard and so avoiding an unnecessary lifeboat launch. |
|
Giving opioids to supplement analgesia, followed by conversion to general anaesthesia, was a perfectly reasonable response by the anaesthetist to Weir's distress at delivery. |
|
He had a hunched nervous appearance and the distress showed clearly in his voice as he told her what had happened after he'd left her the previous day. |
|
It resembled a Very light used as a distress signal by Royal Air. |
|
|
We must feel our need, the distress that drives and impels us to cry out. |
|
For members of AI, the debate is triggered by distress at the suffering in states torn apart by armed conict or by the collapse of governmental structures. |
|
They could not sue for emotional distress, damages for which can only be won in a wrongful life suit. |
|
The physical examination reveals the patient is in minimal distress with right lower quadrant pain and rebound tenderness and guarding on palpation. |
|
They were vilified in this book so their distress was multiplied 100 times. |
|
Last year he was severely criticized for his handling of a land deal with a neighbor in financial distress. |
|
It is set in a fictitious women's college in a wholly real Oxford, where a poison pen is causing increasing alarm and distress among students and staff. |
|
We collected some money so that when we found instances of real distress over matters other than food we had a fund that we were able to divide up. |
|
Fetal distress was more common among instrumental deliveries. |
|
The firm I worked for went through financial distress before lay-offs. |
|
The occasional yellow or red was acceptable, but the suggestion of a blue dress was met with distress, and brown was anathema. |
|
This financial distress is creating serious health problems too. |
|
The plaintiff claims damages including damages for loss of remuneration, damages for mental distress and exemplary, aggravated and punitive damages. |
|
Recently, a white knight rode in to rescue the damsel in distress. |
|
I inherited the Arnold Family Thunder ThighsTM, which was a source of frequent teasing and distress for me as a child. |
|
Not only, in the rarest of cases, where there a female lead in a blockbuster action movie, but the damsel in distress was a dude. |
|
Of the two cloned Afghan hound male puppies, one survived, the other suffered respiratory distress and succumbed to aspiration pneumonia at three weeks of age. |
|
It is also required that involuntary voiding occur at least twice a week for at least three consecutive months and that it be a source of considerable distress for the child. |
|
By this time, I was bleeding at both knees, my head had become a swollen grenade of aching, pulsating annoyance, and my forearms were wrought with lactic distress. |
|
I sighed seeing the distress in my brother, cut up over a girl. |
|
|
We regret this implication and apologise to NCB for any distress caused. |
|
We tell the solstice story in our own lives as we identify the polarities, the conflicting needs and desires, that give rise to our own distress and dis-ease. |
|
But the distress caused by my dull outfit was short-lived as I grew confident that my appearance would not be my main concern when I was free-falling at 180 miles per hour. |
|
I never saw such a picture of forlorn affliction and distress of mind. |
|
But Hofer's studies also found that specific interventions helped with their separation distress. |
|
Wray's career has been forever remembered for her screams in King Kong, a damsel in distress in the grasp of a giant gorilla atop the Empire State Builing. |
|
This weekend pits two damsels in distress against one another at the multiplex. |
|
His two friends had located him and had enlisted the services of a young girl to pose as a damsel in distress to lure Don Quixote into their hands. |
|
As in previous research, for the purpose of data analyses, subjects were dichotomized in terms of intimate abusiveness and level of distress in their current relationship. |
|
The fun then moved to the pageant meadow behind the Abbey where around 1,000 people watched St George valiantly rescue a damsel in distress and kill the dragon. |
|
He would turn up at private views with distress flares and sticks of dynamite and stuff. |
|
Geller reported a case of acute leukemia presenting as respiratory distress in a patient with leukemic pulmonary infiltration diagnosed at autopsy. |
|
A distress beacon flashes over the snow-covered surroundings. |
|
The degree of distress experienced varies according to what people expect. |
|
He is also prohibited from being under the influence of alcohol or any other drug in public and must not harass, cause alarm or distress to anyone in a public place. |
|
Indeed, who wants to exude innocence in these times of economic upheaval, violence in Syria, and political distress? |
|
By some estimates, half of the patients doctors see for various common body aches are actually expressing psychological distress through physical pain. |
|
There is also one scene that will distress tender-hearted viewers. |
|
Physical examination revealed an afebrile woman in no acute distress. |
|
After all, what says Christmas more than obligations, gastrointestinal distress, and insane dining companions? |
|
|
However, we are at least satisfied that the distress was not simulated. |
|
This regimen nut only encumbers the clinician, but it can also further distress the patient, especially at night when sleep may be interrupted for dressing care. |
|
Apparently it causes distress to the animal, which strikes me as blindingly obvious because I too would personally cack myself if dropped into a lions enclosure. |
|
A nearby fishing boat sent a distress signal to the Italian Coast Guard, but not before the boat caught fire from the lighters. |
|
Commonly, these infants need supplemental oxygen treatment for mild respiratory distress syndrome or parenteral nutrition until enteral feeds are established. |
|
The distinction caused Holloway distress and she fidgeted and sniffled through the remainder of her testimony. |
|
Thankfully, Graham was never in any distress from the congestion that quickly cleared from his immediate response to antibiotics. |
|
Was he basing his conclusion on facts or was he being swayed because she was a beautiful young woman in distress that had made a favorable impression. |
|
Surely all this graphic talk of gastrointestinal distress is making you queasy. |
|
So, I hereby grant you permission to paint that table, to distress it, to weather it, to paint it pink and stencil flowers around the edge if that pleases you. |
|
Even if their oxygen masks had deployed, there is a microphone in the masks to enable them to send a distress call. |
|
Along the way, he stops to save a damsel in distress, Megara. |
|
Upon finding out that she was single, the next day there were lots of articles making her out to be a desperate bachelorette, but this woman is no damsel in distress. |
|
Sounding her siren and firing distress rockets the ship tried desperately to make the beach but as the lifeboat crews assembled the steamer gave a final lurch and went down. |
|
Credit card statements often cause distress because of overspending. |
|
However, once he passed the furlong marker he started to send out distress signals and the next rider, sitting on his tail, set about taking advantage. |
|
In her distress she'd rushed into the canteen, throwing herself at his feet and declaring her love while the dumb blonde on his arm looked on in shock. |
|
The owners of leaky homes would be eligible for general damages, including compensation for mental distress and anxiety, under legislation debated by Parliament yesterday. |
|
Leonardo DiCaprio looks amazingly like Hughes and uses his body language to signal Hughes' distress and unease even when he seemed to have the world on a string. |
|
I exclaim, although more out of surprise and distress than with anger. |
|
|
I don't understand how people can be so cruel and unfeeling as to create havoc and distress in another person's life based on nothing but innuendos and rumors. |
|
Ames is in distress because his wife has bolted after learning of his one-night stand with a woman Ames hardly remembers. |
|
To merely contemplate moving human remains will distress some people. |
|
When an armor's owner is killed, it sends out a short distress signal. |
|
Today, in a time of great national distress, Nehru's descendant cannot find the fiber to meet his people. |
|
Physical examination revealed a well developed man in no acute distress. |
|
At the first sign of overdosage, such as tetanic contractions or fetal distress, Pitocin should be discontinued, and the patient treated with symptomatic and support therapy. |
|
One of the captains was able to send out a distress signal, which elicited a response from Thai water police. |
|
This workforce is being legalized at a time of unusual economic distress for the working class. |
|
Is it that the communication of joy has no survival value for us, while the communication of distress has? |
|
Some patients, especially young children, may exhibit signs and symptoms of respiratory distress that are indistinguishable from those of an acute asthma attack. |
|
This case highlights the importance of considering epiglottitis early in the differential diagnosis of a child presenting with upper respiratory distress or stridor. |
|
I'm sure part of this is due to standard male upbringing, which requires you to endure injury without visible distress unless you're a big girl's blouse. |
|
So up I leapt to defend the honour of a mademoiselle in distress. |
|
We therefore explain heterogeneity between trials mainly by changes in the conventional treatment of respiratory distress in premature neonates over time. |
|
She added that the family is living in miserable conditions and there very few people who are willing to help during the time of distress and pain. |
|
If sickness or some of those casualties which are perpetually incident to an active and laborious life, be superadded to these burthens, the distress is yet greater. |
|
Sighing, he strode off homewards, to respond to Anna's distress calls. |
|
Part of the delight of watching her pivot gracefully from steely composure to histrionic distress comes from the feeling of witnessing two bravura performances at once. |
|
It has caused huge upset and distress to communities, deprived landowners of their property and cut people off from facilities provided at great expense from their taxes. |
|