Granulflex is a hydrocolloid dressing with a thin polyurethane foam sheet bonded onto a semipermeable film. |
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A semipermeable membrane allows small solvent molecules to pass through, but not the larger solute molecules. |
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Diffusion of water across a semipermeable membrane such as the cell's plasma membrane is known as diffusion. |
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These dressings are semipermeable, vary in size and thickness, and have an adhesive that holds the dressing on the skin. |
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Osmosis is important in food preparation because the cell walls of living organisms are semipermeable membranes. |
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Membranes are semipermeable, highly selective barriers containing ion channels and pumps to modulate and maintain balance as required. |
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This absorbent dressing should be covered with a semipermeable dressing to provide a barrier to the shed virus. |
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The membrane is described as semipermeable because it allows water, but not dissolved substances, to cross it. |
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In addition, the membrane is semipermeable, allowing for fluid and gas exchange. |
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If a U-shaped glass tube were divided in two by a semipermeable membrane and filled with two solutions the osmotic pressure could be shown. |
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The semipermeable membrane at the probe tip allows exchange of soluble molecules between the probe and the surrounding tissue. |
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The particles do not pass through normal filter paper nor do they dialyze through a semipermeable membrane. |
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In the reverse osmosis process, pressure is applied to water to force it through a semipermeable membrane. |
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The vascular endothelium forms a semipermeable membrane that controls blood-tissue exchange. |
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Water has to be pushed through a semipermeable membrane that blocks the salt and other impurities from going through. |
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According to the release, the severe brush-burn feeling can be avoided by using semipermeable dressings, which let moisture and air reach the skin. |
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In dialysis a solution is passed over a semipermeable membrane, allowing solutes up to a certain size to diffuse across the membrane to a second solution. |
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The passive movement of fluid through a semipermeable membrane from a region of lower solute concentration to a region of higher solute concentration. |
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The analogy emerges that some hybrid zones act as semipermeable membranes that provide a conduit for gene flow at some loci and restrict it at others. |
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Respiratory structures typically have an attenuated shape and a semipermeable surface that is large in relation to the volume of the structure. |
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Osmotic pressure can be described as the pressure of a water solution of salts exerted in either direction against a semipermeable membrane. |
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This can be provided by a number of commercially available special dressings, including semipermeable films, foams, hydrocolloids, and calcium alginate swabs. |
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Compared with simple gauze dressings, transparent semipermeable dressings are more expensive but permit easy inspection of the site, stabilization of the catheter, and may offer an advantage for patients who are mobile. |
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Once the Contramid dosage form is in the stomach, gastric fluids turn its surface to gel and the resulting semipermeable membrane stabilizes rapidly. |
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A semipermeable membrane of a homogeneous polymer alloy which comprises a sulfonated, aromatic polyether ketone and at least one completely aromatic polyamide as the main constituents. |
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As every schoolchild should know, water moves from a dilute to a concentrated solution through a semipermeable membrane by a process called osmosis. |
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Several types of synthetic semipermeable membranes can be used to block the flow of particles and molecules while allowing smaller water molecules to pass through under the effect of hydrostatic pressure. |
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Process for desalting aqueous suspensions containing an organic diazonium compound and electrolytes containing sodium ions, characterized in that the aqueous suspension is permeated through a semipermeable membrane. |
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