However, this parasitoid was completely absent from all sampled gall beetle populations. |
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Gallstones are hard pieces of stone-like material, round, oval, or faceted, commonly occurring in the gall bladder or the bile duct. |
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This time it was in four parts of my liver, the gall bladder and the bile duct. |
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Adding insult to injury, the banks have the gall to say that consumers are to blame. |
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A bedeguar gall is not the product of a single larva but a group of larvae, each residing in their own chamber within the gall. |
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Pam walked the course in about an hour using a stick for support because just a week ago she underwent an operation to remove her gall bladder. |
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Since blueberries are grown on acid soils and the crown gall bacterium does not grow well in an acid situation, the disease is uncommon. |
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The female gall fly lays her eggs in young buds, causing the plant to form galls. |
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Complications can occur if infection supervenes leading to an inflammation of the gall bladder. |
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The optimal treatment is to remove the stones in both the common bile duct and the gall bladder. |
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So the bile, or gall, drains from the liver through bile ducts, collects in your gall bladder, and the gall bladder squirts it out on request. |
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She actually had the gall to wear board shorts instead of the bikini standard at the time, and influenced an entire generation of wahine surfers. |
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They even had the gall to chew open the fishfood container and eat the food! |
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Usually it is associated with gall stones and may be discovered incidentally at operation. |
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Injuries occur most often during gall bladder operations, with exploratory laparoscopy coming second. |
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In paedogenetic gall midges, if fungal food resources remain plentiful, the larvae will repeat the paedogenetic life cycle. |
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Ultrasonography has replaced cholecystography as the diagnostic test for gall stones. |
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A colony is initiated by a single female who induces gall formation on a growing phyllode of a host Acacia tree. |
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Subsequent inflammation may result in a fistula between these structures and the passage of a gall stone into the bowel. |
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Several species in the genus Agrobacterium cause plant disorders such as crown gall and hairy roots. |
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The manuscripts were written in iron gall ink and decorated with watercolor paints and sometimes embellished by cutwork. |
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Rats have no gall bladder, whereas in humans the gall bladder stores bile which is released into the small intestine and aids digestion. |
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In this country, all we know how to do is cut out gall bladders, instead of make them better. |
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Every time you eat, your gall bladder releases its reserve of bile through ducts into the digestive tract. |
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We find organs that have adhered to each other, usually the gall bladder and liver stuck together with scar tissue. |
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A shipment of 173 black bear gall bladders from Canada was confiscated at the Anchorage international airport. |
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You may have to have part of your stomach, gall bladder and duodenum removed too. |
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The main function of the gall bladder is storing and excreting the bile produced by the liver. |
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The laser proved to work well with narrow grasping tools and scissors to dissect the gall bladder from the liver bed. |
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Wild bear gall bladders are widely believed to be of much higher quality when compared to farmed bile. |
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According to our information, runners for the network carried the gall bladders to predetermined locations for resale. |
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The digestion of fat also requires bile salts, delivered to the duodenum in bile from the liver, via the gall bladder. |
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Unlike gall midges, thrips have a wide host range, feeding on the flowers of many species of plants. |
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The black currant gall mites are the small white worm-like creatures between the bud tissues. |
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Nevertheless, keep an eye out for fuchsia gall mites, fuchsia rust, whiteflies, and aphids. |
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There are a few pests to watch for that like fuchsias such as spider mites, thrips, whiteflies, aphids, and fuchsia gall mites. |
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Resistance to gall mite has been a breeding objective in most blackcurrant programmes for many years. |
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Little is known about the mites that occur on black walnut, but the velvet gall mite is common in some areas. |
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Two to three glasses a day of unsweetened apple cider can help treat kidney and gall bladder stones. |
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However, crown gall of vines lives inside the vine itself and so is spread at planting. |
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The concept alone is offensive in at least half a dozen different ways, so you have to admire the sheer gall of the Media Lunch team. |
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Spiny brown growths resembling hollow cones that form at branch tips on Colorado spruce are caused by an insect called Cooley spruce gall aphid. |
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Acute cholecystitis may cause the gall bladder to adhere to the adjacent jejunum or duodenum. |
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There are no current chemical control recommendations for crown gall on grapes. |
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After infection by Agrobacterium tumefaciens or A. rhizogenes, transformed cells develop either a crown gall or a hairy root, respectively. |
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When it precipitates in the gall bladder it forms crystalline solids called gallstones. |
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Bile acids and other constituents of bile produced in the liver are carried to the gall bladder via the hepatic and cystic ducts. |
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The piece is written with an almost amused incredulity at the sheer gall of the scheme. |
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To legislate for artistic imagination is an intellectual conceit that for sheer gall takes the breath away. |
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And then, somebody had the unmitigated gall to shop those tapes around to media outlets in order to sell them to the highest bidder. |
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I can't believe we have such ungrateful whiners in this place that have the hide and gall to call themselves Aussies. |
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I think we should have an awed silence in honour of the sheer unbelievable gall of that one. |
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The defendant then has the unmitigated gall to blame his recent bankruptcy on these court proceedings. |
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Raphael helped him to catch a fish, the heart, liver and gall of which were used by Tobias to drive away a demon and cure his father's blindness. |
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Dried and sold as an aphrodisiac and cure-all in Asia, Russia, and North America, bear gall has long been treasure for poachers. |
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The midge is an ephemeral 2-3 mm insect whose larva induces a gall on young unfurled S. viminalis leaves. |
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The physically anchored genetic map is the first of any gall midge species. |
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The Cape ivy gall fly, Parafreutreta regalis, lays eggs in the tips of stems, where vines and leaves would normally develop. |
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If so, gall flies attacking S. canadensis may be under selection for earlier emergence. |
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The stem gall nematode, Anguina pacificae, is presently the most devastating pest of Poa annua putting greens in California. |
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More recently, the gall midge has moved into the Houston area and become a cause of bud drop. |
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She wants to gall her rival and does it with malicious and practised expertise. |
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There are at least two different families of gall wasps which come in lay their eggs and that eats the maggot. |
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Perhaps his background as a specialist on gall wasps wasn't the best start for the study of human relations. |
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Prune gall wasp out of citrus trees before September to prevent eggs from hatching. |
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Two or more years are required for gall wasps that develop in woody twig galls to reach maturity. |
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He immerses himself in the study of the gall wasp, whose North American varieties were almost completely unresearched. |
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Even still, there are other perils awaiting the defenseless gall wasps inside their papery galls. |
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Each species of oak gall wasp attacks one to several host species, but none attack both white oaks and red oaks. |
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Aphids, grasshoppers, and gall wasps appear in the Cretaceous, as well as termites and ants in the later part of this period. |
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Female gall wasps emit chemical pheromones into the plant stem to attract males in the spring. |
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Specifically, the researchers found that male gall wasps respond to uneven chemical ratios in the plants. |
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Just how the different gall wasps stimulate oaks to form a specific kind of gall is not completely understood. |
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Socially inept, the young entymologist is delighted when he meets Clara, the only girl on campus as interested in gall wasps as he is. |
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The gall wasp, a native of Korea and Japan, entered this country in Georgia in 1974 from Asia. |
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Here he abandoned religion, raised a family, and won a reputation as a respected teacher and preeminent authority on gall wasps. |
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Only a few species are known from South America and Africa and there are no native gall wasps in Australia. |
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The stems are slightly swollen and if the gall wasps have emerged, their emergence holes are also noticeable. |
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It is all very well to sign these deeds of settlements but we need Governments with the gall to implement them. |
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Since asymptomatic gall stones and dyspepsia are so common in the general population, they often coexist. |
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Then in 1997, when she was midway through a psychology degree and seriously ill with gall stones, she was elected, and has not looked back. |
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In the Book of Venoms, he listed arsenic, aconite, hellebore, laurel, opium, bryony, mandrake, leopard's gall, and menstrual blood. |
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In Montana, gall flies released to limit knapweed turn out to provide a food bonanza for white-footed mice. |
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The Aleppo gall has been used since the time of the Greeks as a nonfading ink. |
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In an alternation of generations the other phase produces a brownish gall on cedars. |
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Stagnation of heat in the liver and gall bladder affects the stomach, causing retching. |
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Unless the gall bladder is calcified or the patient has other risk factors, asymptomatic gallstones may be managed expectantly. |
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Divi-divi pods are used in the tanning industry as a substitute for sumac and oak gall apples. |
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Since asymptomatic gall stones and dyspepsia are so common in the general populations, they often coexist. |
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The gall bladder stores and secretes bile, which includes salts used to break down food. |
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The gall bladder receives bile from the liver, stores and concentrates it, and delivers it to the intestine as required. |
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The gall bladder acts as a regulator of bile from the liver, increasing or decreasing it to suit, depending on your diet. |
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The gall bladder and the liver are internally-externally related organs. |
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The unmitigated gall Kennedy displays in defaming the hard work of dedicated researchers is bad enough. |
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He attended Harvard and received a Doctor of Science degree in taxonomy, and he devoted no less than 20 years of his life to researching the gall wasp. |
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This lack of fibre contributes directly to the common diseases of gall stones, appendicitis, haemorrhoids, diverticular disease and cancer of the colon. |
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Never once did she remind him that she was his prized assassin, the only female with enough gall to commit repetitive and senseless acts of violence. |
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It is stored and concentrated in the gall bladder and passed into the small intestine through the bile ducts to help with digestion, mainly of fats. |
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The so-called oak apple, a round, spongy, fruitlike object about 2.5 to 5 cm in diameter, is caused by the larvae of the gall wasp Biorhiza pallida. |
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One show I saw involved a woman who'd stiffed an appliance store on a refrigerator and then had the gall to sue it for harassment when it tried to collect. |
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Pests particularly destructive to Norway spruce include gall aphids, white pine weevil, spider mites, Cytospora canker and Rhizosphaera needlecast. |
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In this paper, we report on how the formation of galls by the goldenrod gall fly has promoted a host shift and differentiation of the beetle Mordellistena convicta. |
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The family appears to be a member of the extant group Sciaroidea, which includes fungus gnats and gall midges, though precise relationships remain unclear. |
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He began his career in the 1930s, methodically studying gall wasps. |
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Consequently, there is no need to invoke allopatric conditions to explain the patterns of variation seen in both the gall inducer and its inquiline beetle. |
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Stones may migrate from the gall bladder into the bile duct. |
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When NYC Prep premiered, it got a lot of flak for the sheer gall of its unreality. |
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She is on morphine, walks with a stick and needs a gall bladder operation. |
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Does making these comments take more or less gall than rummy with that tweet this morning? |
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I chose gall insects, made drawings and sent in specimens with my essay. |
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As far as I know, however, only gall managed to find a source to verify this. |
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And you even had the gall to claim to have turned a new leaf in the pinstripes. |
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The drainage tube to the bilary duct, which connected the intestines to the gall bladder, also failed. |
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If a patient keeps going back to a specialist, particularly a surgeon, then hysterectomies, appendectomies and gall bladder operations are carried out unnecessarily. |
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When fatty food passes from the stomach into the intestine, the gall bladder is stimulated to contract by cholecystokinin, a hormone released from the lining of the intestine. |
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Little is recorded about mulga apples beyond the fact that they have a sweet taste and that both the gall itself, and the wasp larva in its centre, are eaten. |
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Its main object is to show stones in the bile ducts and gall bladder. |
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I looked furiously from her to the one who'd had enough gall to do this. |
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I wasn't there fault that they did realize that things had changed not that it didn't keep her from dusting them for sheer gall of trying to attack her. |
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Cantabiran holm oak groves are situated on the dry conditions of the sunny limestone slopes, and between these and the beech groves are the calcicolous gall oak forests. |
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It is said to be the fish with whose gall Tobit recovered his sight, although it seems improbable that a fish of this species should have leapt out of the River Tigris. |
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A palpable gall bladder suggests pancreatic malignancy, but it can be difficult to detect when displaced laterally or covered by an enlarged liver. |
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It's always a bit crushing when you lose something that was yours but there is a special bitter gall when that thing is logging your progress in a 10,000 a day stepathon. |
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But, if his responses to past adversity are an accurate guide, long-term suffering will be felt only by those with gall enough to challenge the depth of his current supremacy. |
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The hedgehog gall wasp can cause leaf galls with orangeish fuzz. |
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Gary Poleynard, with common duct stones and complications due to gall stone disease. |
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Surgeons removed the gall bladder, found it to be filled with mucinous fluid, and diagnosed hydrops of the gall bladder. |
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Improper cooling and a dull milling blade on titanium can gall the surface. |
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Most oak gall wasps have 2 generations per year, with alternating sexual and asexual generations. |
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Oak galls were used for centuries as a main ingredient in iron gall ink, a kind of manuscript ink, harvested at a specific time of year. |
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The date of July 17 planned for removal of the gall bladder seems a long way off. |
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See your doctor for investigation and referral to a specialist for treatment, possibly surgery to remove the gall bladder. |
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My father had gall bladder problems for a few years, but last month he was rushed into hospital with acute pancreatitis. |
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In Florida, there are several overlapping generations of blueberry gall midge each year. |
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Sampson is also looking at ways to control the blueberry gall midge, a fly that attacks the flower and leaf buds of blueberry plants. |
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As a rule more setae and circumfilar loops of gall midges are disposed on the ventral half of the flagellomeres. |
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Hundreds of Chicago area residents have been plagued by the microscopic oak leaf gall mite, also known as the itch mite. |
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You may hate your neighbour's leylandii so much that you will be happy that the cypress gall mite attacks this tree. |
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As if that wasn't bad enough, the doctors also found I had gall stones, so they eventually decided to induce me at 38 weeks. |
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She was diagnosed with gall stones and had an operation to remove them but her symptoms did not ease. |
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By that time she was going into cardiac arrest and struggling to breathe due to a bowel infection caused by gall stones. |
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Fibrotic tissue along with three gall concrements measuring 3-4 mm were removed. |
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The spleen is attached to the gall bladder and pancreas and filters the blood. |
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Parts of their bodies, including fat, gall bladders, meat, paws, spinal cord, blood and bones, are highly demanded in traditional Asian medicine. |
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McKenzie, Osborne, and Xiao have also shown that corn will bank a gall midge that effectively controls the two-spotted spider mite. |
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But no invader plays as dramatic a role in the life of the blueberry plant as the blueberry gall midge. |
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It also helps in arthritis and gall stone conditions, and is a natural hair restorer. |
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A prospective study of gall stone patients before and two years after surgery. |
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He has lived with gall stone pain for two years and uses four boxes of paracetamol a month. |
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First, patients with gall stone disease may present earlier for definitive surgical treatment. |
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She needed a life-saving nine-hour operation to remove her right colon, spleen, appendix, gall bladder, umbilicus, ovaries and Fallopian tubes. |
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Other pest and diseases can gain entry through the physical damage caused by gall formation, leading to rots. |
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It would be in character if, unable to contain her suffering alone, she had vented her gall on her own husband. |
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We expect gall densities to increase and parasitism rates to decrease on Iva with increasing distance from Borrichia. |
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Bartholin mentions a woman whose milk was become absinthiated, and rendered as bitter as gall, by the too liberal use of wormwood. |
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The leaf bud responds by forming a living chamber called a gall around her. |
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From the same lips the honied phrases fall That still are bitter from cascades of gall. |
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Examples are oak artichoke gall, oak marble gall, oak apple gall, knopper gall, and spangle gall. |
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The threads may gall if overtightened or have been corroding in salty air, so a liberal coating of lanolin or a heavy grease is not out of place on any and all threads. |
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As part of their initiation, some African sangomas wear the gall bladders of slaughtered goats on their heads for up to a year, during which time they're never removed. |
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However, there are some commonalities as well, with flies, thrips, chalcid wasps, coccid bugs, and a few beetles and moths inducing gall formation. |
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The arrival in the UK last month of a parasite called a gall mite, which disfigures fuchsias, made a mockery of Britain's plant health defences, he claimed. |
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Paul Walker started complaining of stomach pains in May, and went to Aintree University Hospital where he was told he may have gall stones or pancreatitis. |
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Emergence holes were counted concurrently on both species and classified according to whether they were the result of emerging gall midges or parasitoids. |
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Isinglass, from the gall bladder of a fish, is used to clear Guinness. |
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Metorchis conjunctus, which enters wolves through eating fish, infects the wolf's liver or gall bladder, causing liver disease, inflammation of the pancreas, and emaciation. |
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Riding a horse with bruised or broken skin can cause a gall, which frequently results in the white saddle marks seen on the withers and backs of some horses. |
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Ev'n such as neither wanton seeme, nor waiward, mell, nor gall. |
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Dr Mohammad Naeem Taj has also registered his name in Guinness book of world record in the past by removing the longest gall bladder laparoscopic procedure. |
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Other pests include gypsy moth caterpillars, gall midge, and scale. |
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The twins shared one gall bladder, kidney and a single urinary system. |
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Later the same day the branded ox was ritually medicated for apotropaic reasons with bile from another ox killed by a blow to the head from a stone to obtain its gall bladder. |
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Senator Kirk presented to the hospital on Saturday, December 7, 2013 with abdominal pain which was diagnosed as symptomatic gall stones and inflammation of the gall bladder. |
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Adults lay eggs on margins and veins of new leaves, and after 7 to 9 d, crawlers hatch and initiate gall induction on the adaxial side of the leaves. |
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Only the future that Gall channeled in her album 1968 is more of a retro mishmash here. |
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Gall thought that he was able to correlate certain particular mental faculties to bumps and depressions on the surface of the skull. |
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Gall stones in the Gall bladder, a storehouse for bile secreted by the liver, is a common health problem. |
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The tragic death of Mr. Shane Fitzgerald, from Kilmacleague, Dunmore East, last week was felt all over the barony of Gall Tir including Passage and surrounding areas. |
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In addition to this, Gall suggests that care needs to be taken in criticising sectionalism for he claims it can play a positive role in helping to create solidarity. |
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If the buds on the bushes seemed abnormally large, that would have been caused by the Blackcurrant Gall Mite. |
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