Acute coronary events occur as a result of rupture of an unstable atheromatous plaque. |
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If they rupture it can cause a haemorrhage, an escape of blood within the brain. |
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At very high concentrations of poly-L-lysine and a large number of attached cells, the membranes rupture due to the adhesion-induced tension. |
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Very rarely, an enlarged spleen can rupture, which may require urgent surgery. |
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In portal hypertensive gastropathy, the mucosa is friable and bleeding occurs when the ectatic vessels rupture and manifest as mucosal oozing. |
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These acne cysts can rupture, spreading the infection into nearby skin tissue. |
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Too much pressure can rupture the catheter or force a clot into the blood stream. |
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Ford engineers discovered in preproduction crash tests that rear-end collisions would rupture the Pinto's fuel system extremely easily. |
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Last May, he died suddenly from an aortic rupture at the age of 44, leaving a wife and young children. |
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A powerful burst of rupture energy is seen 80 seconds later as the quake progresses northwest. |
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This could have been due to a sudden rupture of the membrane that covers the hole that was made during the operation. |
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He suffered a double leg break, cruciate ligament damage and a total rupture of the ankle. |
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Second, the successive rupture of these multiple contacts during protein detachment slows the unbinding velocity. |
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Neither of them had had pain before the initial rupture of the second rupture. |
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They represent the rupture of subepidermal connective tissue as a result of abdominal distension, either recent or remote. |
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The child also can slip under the lap belt, and this can lead to abdominal injuries such as liver laceration or splenic rupture. |
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In the present study, no significant sarcolemmal rupture was noted in EMP-sham animals. |
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Most preterm births follow spontaneous, unexplained preterm labor, or spontaneous preterm prelabour rupture of the amniotic membranes. |
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The rupture of the laticifers stops the flow of latex to the margin of the leaf that is subsequently consumed by these beetles. |
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Skin lesions present initially as bullae, which then rupture, leaving slow-healing erosions and crusted lesions. |
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It's this rupture of the irrational, captured in the very term prose poem, that is the source of energy in the prose poem. |
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Impetigo is characterized by red macules and vesicles that can rupture with purulent exudates. |
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In our retrospective long-term study, the area of partial rupture did not require reinforcement in most cases. |
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The initial structural analysis suggests a detailed rupture mechanism in the aqueous solution. |
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Most episodes are due to urinary tract infections and renal cyst rupture that relate to the underlying anatomical abnormalities. |
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We report two cases of splenic rupture causing life threatening haemorrhage. |
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A less common source of hemorrhage is the rupture of an aneurysm of traumatic or infectious origin or rupture of an arteriovenous malformation. |
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If the spleen is enlarged, your child may be prohibited from playing contact sports because of the risk of rupture and hemorrhage. |
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Delay in diagnosis increases the risk of rupture, intra-abdominal hemorrhage, blood transfusion, need for operative intervention and death. |
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If tendinitis is severe and leads to the rupture of a tendon, you may need surgical repair. |
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They can be shorted by contact with metal objects and leak or rupture and may cause personal injury. |
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I'm expecting Jason to rupture a blood vessel over the missing apostrophe there. |
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At higher T, it takes less time for thermal fluctuations to induce rupture under an applied bias force. |
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It is this moment of rupture which carries the denouement of the film into relatively unexplored territory in Australian landscape cinema. |
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These plaques can rupture, releasing substances that cause blood flowing in the coronary artery to clot. |
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The rupture involved all layers of the aortic wall, but the mediastinal pleura remained intact. |
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In patients without subarachnoid hemorrhage from a separate aneurysm, larger aneurysms also were more likely to rupture. |
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Subarachnoid hemorrhage associated with aneurysmal rupture is a potentially lethal event with a mortality rate as high as 50 percent. |
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Several cardiovascular problems may be caused by electrical injury, including vessel rupture, cardiac arrest and cardiac arrhythmias. |
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The patient had an excellent clinical result after the first surgery and requested operative repair of this rupture. |
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Pregnant women at term with rupture of membranes before labour are subjected to routine induction of labour. |
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Aneurysms located at the basilar apex carry a relatively high risk of rupture. |
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A small rupture was found and there was a small amount of blood in her abdomen. |
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Early and accurate diagnosis of cornual ectopic pregnancy is critical, since rupture can cause sudden catastrophic bleeding. |
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In a patient with an Achilles rupture, only a flicker of movement on the pressure gauge is discernible with dorsiflexion. |
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The blast caused a seismic rupture that split off a sizable part of Canada and created what we now know as Vancouver Island. |
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The diaphragm is the component that needs the most attention, as it hardens with age and could rupture. |
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Documents released to the public on Wednesday indicate about 93 percent of silicone breast implants rupture within 10 years. |
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However, the FDA is more concerned about what happens when the implants rupture. |
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The first U.S. mad cow was a downer animal, not able to walk due to a uterine rupture while calving. |
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It is she who provokes the rupture between Freud and Jung which enabled the latter to venture deeper into the unconscious. |
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Episodes of giving way are consistent with some degree of knee instability and may indicate patellar subluxation or ligamentous rupture. |
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Side effects are few, but may include tendon rupture, infection, steroid flare, hypopigmentation, and soft tissue atrophy. |
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Perforation and rupture are indicated by darkly pigmented uveal tissue presenting through a laceration. |
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By its support of the capillaries, vitamin P helps to prevent hemorrhage and rupture of these tiny vessels, which could lead to easy bruising. |
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The point on the fault plane where the earthquake rupture is initiated is called the focus or hypocentre. |
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The sheer magnitude of the force behind Joren's leg was enough rupture the man's innards and send him flying off into a tree. |
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Two cases of spontaneous rupture of mucocoeles intracranially have been previously reported. |
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Bulimics can rot their teeth, tear their oesophagus and rupture their stomach. |
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Their cell membranes rupture and the released hemoglobin is phagocytized by reticuloendothelial cells throughout the body. |
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Most plant cells rupture when jagged ice crystals form inside them, and if enough damage takes place, plants die. |
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Bond lifetimes were measured directly, and rupture force calculated from the trap stiffness. |
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Two patients died later from disseminated aspergillosis on Day 10 and from splenic rupture on Day 57, respectively. |
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We need not worry about the disappearance of this space because its elasticity prevents true rupture or breakage. |
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In the cases described in this article, the patients sought medical attention owing to symptoms caused by atraumatic splenic rupture. |
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Ankle and ligament damage is also common, as well as Achilles tendon rupture and calf tendon tears. |
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At the end of the two weeks he sustained a full rupture of both Achilles tendons when he crouched down to put a video in his machine. |
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This is especially true if the rupture is in the Achilles tendon, the tendon just above the heel. |
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There was rupture at the site of the anterior fontanel with extrusion of intracranial contents. |
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Cicadas start to shrill, building to a crescendo that threatens to rupture eardrums. |
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They carry very real risks of hypertensive crises, seizures, strokes, and uterine rupture. |
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The rate of uterine rupture for repeat cesarean deliveries without labor for women having a previous C-section was 1.6 per 1,000 women. |
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The furuncle either remains deep and reabsorbs or it will rupture through to the surface of the skin. |
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Helmont saw the cosmos as a living, spiritual organism with no rupture between heaven and earth. |
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Subsequently, the muscle is also more vulnerable to rupture during an eccentric contraction. |
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Eggs are released by disintegration or rupture of ripened proglottids. |
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There was one patellar fracture and one patellar tendon rupture. |
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Many mechanisms of atraumatic splenic rupture have been postulated. |
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As soon as they have thawed in the morning they are trodden with bare feet so that the skin remains intact but the fluid resulting from cell rupture is extruded. |
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By doing so, he positions himself within the borderlands he studies, and as an actor and enunciator of narratives that rupture colonialist forces at work under new guises. |
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The compressive strength of a material is calculated as the pounds per square inch required to rupture the specimen or deform it to a given percentage of its height. |
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Amniotomy was performed if membranes did not rupture within 24 hours. |
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If this happens the tube may rupture, causing further symptoms. |
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Complications of these aneurysms include thrombosis with embolization, rupture, and erosion into the cardiac chamber with resulting fistula and hemothorax. |
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Diffuse fluorescent uptake of procion orange in the cytoplasm of diaphragm muscle fibers identifies sarcolemmal rupture of those individual fibers. |
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All along the rupture, the seafloor moved vertically about ten metres, which displaced hundreds of kilometres of overlaying water resulting in a massive tsunami. |
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Yet if modern Hebrew is the reincarnation of Yiddish, he must show a relationship rather than what the Hebrew pioneers claim to have achieved, a rupture. |
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The cord complications seen in their study were thrombosis, cord prolapse, umbilical vessel rupture, true knot, and cord encirclement with strangulation. |
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Sonography can be used to distinguish less serious injuries such as scrotal hematomas, hydroceles, and hematoceles from surgical emergencies such as testicular rupture. |
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Fatal termination seems to be the only outcome for rupture of the spleen, regardless of its size or depth, for if hemorrhage does not exsanguinate the poison overwhelms. |
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Obviously some of these men might have died anyway from a sudden rupture, but a clear distinction needs to be made between dying naturally and at the instigation of doctors. |
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While a tank might survive such an overpressurization, repeated overfilling will induce cylinder wall fatigue that could cause a catastrophic rupture. |
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The vesicles rupture, and a painless, ulcerated, black eschar develops. |
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Marfan's syndrome is a connective tissue disorder that increases the probability of a rupture or dissection occurring at smaller diameters than in a normal patient. |
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The prokaryotic cell wall allows the organism to survive in conditions that otherwise might lead to the excessive intake of water and fatal rupture. |
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She believed the rupture happened because of the prolonged dry spell which may have dried the clay out underground, causing it to move and fracture. |
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Similarly, the seismic vibrations produced when the ground suddenly ruptures radiate out through the Earth's interior from the rupture point, called the earthquake focus. |
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Note that the data did not allow the researchers to conclude that the ruptures necessarily caused the deaths, merely that they were associated with rupture. |
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They suggest there is a real risk of a sudden rupture, e.g. a structural change in ocean currents or the melting of the Western Antarctic ice sheet. |
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It more frequently depends, as well as the perforated state of single joints, on the rupture of the ovaries, which leads to the destruction of the central portion of the articulations. |
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Sacculus formation is common, but rupture of a sacculus is very rare. |
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Until rupture occurs, most abdominal aortic aneurysms are asymptomatic. |
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Even if there is a rupture in one of them, the boat will be unaffected. |
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These include arteriovenous shunts, giving rise to congestive heart failure, bleeding diathesis due to platelet consumption, and massive hemoperitoneum resulting in rupture. |
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Degranulation via cytolysis involves eosinophil rupture and exudation of cellular contents, making eosinophils difficult to stain and recognize histologically. |
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Over the next eight years, the rupture would fissure across every state and territory in the Union. |
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The second section, rupture, represents the state between death and rebirth. |
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Blunt injury to the eyeball tends to be less dangerous, but, if severe, may cause rupture and collapse of the globe, loss of contents and detachment of the retina. |
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Now, the venous system routing blood around the scarred parts of my liver is more complex, more liable to rupture. |
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While a normal whitehead would rupture and go away, milia have developed a thin cover of skin cells that causes them to harden and turn into cysts. |
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From historical accounts, the epicenters of the foreshocks were located in central California near the northwestern extent of the main shock fault rupture. |
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Certainly, as a corrective to some of the more po-faced excesses of cool London club culture, rave was a blast of fresh air, an important rupture. |
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These drugs, in turn, can create more aggressive contractions, which increase the risk of uterine rupture. |
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Fundal examination showed a large choroidal rupture of the left macula. |
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It was a rupture in our genealogy that came to serve as a metaphor for larger losses in black history. |
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A recent study indicates that Cytotec labor inductions in women who have had a previous cesarean carry a 28-fold increase in the risk of uterine rupture. |
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This disease is a localized folliculitis, which is an inflammation of the hair follicle, and furunculosis or rupture of the hair follicle restricted to the chin and lips. |
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Similarly noncleavage fracture in thin sheets of engineering materials occurs exclusively by shear rupture and the fracture profile appears similar to the slant fracture. |
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These mechanisms were compared with the rupture of excised walls that occurred by formation and breakage of strands between separating wall layers. |
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The rupture has declared itself in an unmistakable rift observable at the surface, and coseismals are therefore unnecessary for the determination if this important factor. |
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Instead we employ modeling to understand the statistical probability distribution of angles at rupture and its impact on the measured length and force distributions. |
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The traumatic event is an unapprehended, and therefore unrealized moment in the history of the survivor that creates a rupture in the temporal continuity of the self. |
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Over time implants rupture or deflate, requiring additional surgeries. |
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Coil Embolization is a procedure used to occlude the cerebral aneurysm, preventing its rupture. |
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The risk of rupture of small aneurysms is higher in females and in saccular aneurysms. |
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Grade IV injuries consist of multiple ruptures or single rupture combined with lumbrical muscle or collateral ligament trauma. |
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Arabidopsis siliques are dehiscent, meaning that they automatically rupture and release the seed at maturity. |
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The TEE revealed the patient had suffered a papillary muscle rupture requiring surgery. |
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Five out of 15 LAMNs showed gross evidence of rupture with acellular mucin on the serosal surface. |
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Finally, Finley reported a mortality from the rupture of an omental varix in a patient taking Sildenafil citrate. |
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The tendency of different soils for hardsetting and crusting as a result of structural collapse was reflected in the modulus of rupture. |
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The mechanical testing was done to determine the modulus of rupture by three-point bend test. |
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Grammont inverted total shoulder arthroplasty in the treatment of glenohumeral osteoarthritis with massive rupture of the cuff. |
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The consequences of thyroid gland rupture following blunt cervical trauma can be quite grave. |
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Common pathologies that produce CHL include otitis, TM rupture, cholesteatoma and trauma. |
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The execution of King Charles I in 1649 horrified the Presbyterians and led to a serious rupture between them and the Independents. |
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The meronts rupture releasing individual merozoites, which develop into meronts and the cycle repeats in the tissue. |
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If these reflexes have no time to respond, the vibrations will damage the delicate hair cells in the cochlea and can rupture the eardrum. |
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Abdominal pregnancy occurs either as a result of tubal abortion or rupture or rarely as a result of primary peritoneal implantation. |
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Spontaneous pneumothorax occurring in the majority of these patients arises from the rupture of subpleural blebs. |
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Stress rupture data used to develop these shift factors included MDPE, unimodal high-density polyethylene and bimodal HDPE materials. |
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After the earthquake of 2010, there was no evidence of surface rupture and based on seismological, geological and ground deformation data. |
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When Jerome foreswore Origenism, it led to a violent rupture with Rufinus, despite the attempted conciliations by Augustine and Paulinus of Nola. |
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These lesions rapidly enlarge and rupture, releasing large amounts of virus into the saliva. |
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On histopathology, all kites had advanced atherosclerotic lesions, with several birds presenting abdominal hemorrhage and aortic rupture. |
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Use of a semitendinosus tendon autogenous graft for rupture of the patellar ligament after total knee arthroplasty. |
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Avian predators break open the dorsal or ventral surface of the test, or rupture the peristomial membrane and remove Aristotle's lantern. |
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He knew that policy would disincline Napoleon from a rupture with his family. |
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Hydrogen will embrittle the high-strength steel used in such pipelines, however, raising the risk of rupture and explosion of leading hydrogen. |
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The gel cap is mounted between two pins which pull apart, thereby measuring the force required to rupture the cap. |
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Missed diagnosis of limited ascending aortic dissection by multiple imaging modalities leading to fatal cardiac tamponade and aortic rupture. |
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Not everyone accepts the premise of a complete rupture between the two Talibans. |
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Blood containing cholesterol, fibrin, and hemosiderin extravasates from vessels that rupture due to the ischemic condition. |
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Spontaneous carcinomatous bladder rupture is very rare and most reported cases occur in men. |
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The resistance to the French alliance by the moderate regents caused a rupture in the relations with the stadtholder. |
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The historical consciousness that becomes visible in their work is a significant rupture in our thinking about the past. |
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Disorganization in tilacoidal membranes, poorly developed chloroplasts, and rupture of the nuclear membrane, were verified in this progeny. |
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Bleeding from colonic diverticula is caused by rupture of the underlying vas rectum. |
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In spite of the earlier rupture in their relations, Maxentius was eager to present himself as his father's devoted son after his death. |
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Around 1779 Priestley and Shelburne had a rupture, the precise reasons for which remain unclear. |
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Thereafter these schizonts rupture, releasing merozoites into the blood stream, which then infect red blood cells. |
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Such disruptions will derail backchannel negotiations and diplomacy to rupture the confidence of both sides in each other. |
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Was there a rupture in Turkey's traditional culture after the Latinization of the alphabet? |
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This is one of the most famous examples of epistemological rupture in physical cosmology. |
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The most common clinical manifestations of pulmonary artery rupture are cough, hemoptysis, hypoxemia, and exsanguination. |
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Cell coalescence refers to the rupture of the cell wall when serious extensional force is applied to it. |
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Barry suffered a rupture of the oesophagus in 1988, following a toxic reaction to a health tonic he had consumed. |
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But they rupture cell membranes in the midguts of caterpillars and other insect pests that chew on Bt-treated plants, causing them to starve and die. |
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Traumatic duodenal rupture and avulsion of the ampulla of vater. |
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As the waves focus on the antipodal position, they put the crust at the focal point under significant stress and are proposed to rupture it, creating antipodal pairs. |
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The composition of atherosclerotic plaques, not just macroscopical lesion size, has been implicated in their susceptibility to rupture and the risk of thrombus formation. |
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Ultimately the spherules rupture and release the endospores, each of which has the ability to develop into a mature spherule, propagating the cycle. |
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The rupture of a large underground pipe created a 10-by-10-foot sink hole at Glenoaks Boulevard and Chevy Chase Drive, forcing the city to turn off water to the area. |
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The virus causes a high fever for approximately two to six days, followed by blisters inside the mouth and on the feet that may rupture and cause lameness. |
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Many times if the rhexis is incomplete, one might have to convert to an extracapsular cataract extraction to prevent a posterior capsular rupture or nucleus drop. |
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Usually, the ventricular septal rupture is a devastating complication of the myocardial infarction, leading to death, in case of the unoperated patient. |
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Prior to the rupture, KMP transported approximately 175,000 bpd with 121,000 bpd from its Los Angeles to Phoenix pipeline and 54,000 bpd on the Tucson to Phoenix pipeline. |
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Bendtsen and Senti found a five-fold increase in MOE and a three-fold increase in modulus of rupture in the first 12 growth rings from the pith in loblolly pine. |
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Part of the communication rupture is because of Xer perceptions. |
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Each sporangium contains up to 20 endospores that are released on rupture. |
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Bats have typical mammalian lungs, which are thought to be more sensitive to sudden air pressure changes than the lungs of birds, making them more liable to fatal rupture. |
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There was no perianeurysmal fluid collection and no evidence of rupture. |
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Final options include C-section delivery, symphysiotomy, or the Zavanelli maneuver, which has been known to rupture cervical vertebrae and cause major intracranial damage. |
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The intervacuum space was monitored continuously, a change in pressure implied to a rupture of the isolation between this volume and either the torus or waveguide vacuums. |
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Bronchogenic cyst presenting subsequent to intrapleural rupture. |
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In accordance with ASME code, a pressure switch, pressure gauge, or vent must be connected to the space between the rupture disc and the connected pressure relief valve. |
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Several studies from SA have reported much higher rates of appendicular rupture, and subsequently much more problematic clinical outcomes than in the developed world. |
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Maternal toxicities include spontaneous abortions, premature labor and delivery, premature rupture of membranes, placenta previa, and abruptio placentae. |
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The explosion under the target's keel would create a detonation shock wave, which could cause a ship's hull to rupture under the concussive water pressure. |
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Blunt trauma to the abdomen is an uncommon cause of duodenal rupture. |
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Macrophages phagocytose the cells during apoptosis before cell membrane rupture, thereby reducing the inflammatory response that occurs due to release of cell contents. |
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Only two cases of spontaneous tracheal rupture are reported, in adults, one due to acquired tracheobronchomalacia and other due to long term steroid use. |
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The rupture of the ethnic Albanian political block will prevent the parties from getting grouped in two fronts to stop the allocation of ethnic Albanian votes, say analysts. |
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This was the immediate cause of the late rupture and present revolution. |
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Spontaneous rupture and emergency repairment of the renal pelvis. |
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Tanis MacDonald's analysis of Dionne Brand's Ossuaries reads poetry as a public archive of mourning and as a prosthetic for the violent rupture of the body and memory. |
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The vesicles then rupture and act as a centre for crystals to grow on. |
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Subcutaneous tendon rupture of the peroneus longus tendon is rare disorder compared with tendinopathy of the peroneus longus tendon in sport activities. |
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The rupture in 119 BC may have been exaggerated after the fact in light of his later and much more serious disagreement with Metellus about Numidia. |
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Operation-related risk factors were emergency surgery, other than isolated coronary surgery, thoracic aorta surgery, and surgery for postinfarct septal rupture. |
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