What's the difference between afterbirth and heam?
Afterbirth
Definition:
(n.) The placenta and membranes with which the fetus is connected, and which come away after delivery.
Example Sentences:
(1) The author's own investigations of such alterations to afterbirths from high-risk pregnancies as well as to a consecutive series of newborns without increased risk have shown for either group that no statistical relationship existed between high-risk factors of asphyxia prior to or during labour, on the one hand, and such asphyxial infiltrates, on the other, not even in cases of prolonged labour.
(2) In the terminal crypts of the placentome in cross sections obtained from cows which expelled the placenta in time after natural and induced parturitions, the number of binuclear cells of the fetal syncytium and of cells of the dam epithelium (P less than 0.001) was found to be significantly lower than in the cases of afterbirth retention (1.2 and 3.9; 6.4 and 18.5).
(3) The frequency of retained placenta in animals with mastitis was significantly higher (p less than 0.01) than that in animals without mastitis influenced the loosening process of the afterbirth.
(4) New-born cynomolgus monkeys were sucessfully reared by artificial nursing that was started just afterbirth with a 12% solution of a commercially prepared powdered-milk (Yukijirushi, P 7a) containing 13.3g of protein per 100g.
(5) In a series of 29 experiments with extracorporeal perfusion of the fetal part of the placental from spontaneous labours after physiological pregnancy it was observed that the medicament given in one dose reduced the vascular resistance in the afterbirth.
(6) 49 babies were followed longtermly and the results were correlated partly with the risk factors partly with the duration of afterbirth CNS lesion symptoms.
(7) Both agents could be detected by microscopic investigation of smears from afterbirths by Giménez staining and by a capture enzyme-linked immunofluorescence assay (Capture ELIFA).
(8) It is shown that in 57.8% of cases mortinatality is associated with placental insufficiency, the reason for which can be found out by the pathoanatomical study of the afterbirth.
(9) The presence of the various categories of follicles (less than 0.05; 0.5-1.0; 1.0-1.5; less than 1.5 cm) in the ovaries was examined by palpation, endoscopically and post mortem in cows with a physiological puerperium (n = 5), with puerperal endometritis (n = 5), and with retention of afterbirth (RS, n = 5) from the second to the 20th day post partum (p.p.).
(10) However, pain resulting from internal structures, i.e., deep pain, afterbirth pain (due to uterine contractions), and the somatic pain associated with decreased peristalsis (gas pains) were not amenable to TENS.
(11) in cows with afterbirth retention (n = 5), with developing puerperal endometritis (n = 5), and with a physiological course of puerperium (n = 5).
(12) There was no significant increase of afterbirth complications following abruptio placentae and abortus, whereas there are partly statistically significant differences in the incidence of surgery reauired in children of normal weight of underweight.
(13) Practical problems (with possible medicolegal implications) regarding the interpretation of the completeness of the afterbirth are discussed.
(14) The present studies further tested the generalizability of the POEF effect: they examined sex specificity of the mechanism; whether POEF activity exists in afterbirth material of species other than the rat; whether POEF activity exists in tissue other than afterbirth material; whether POEF activity could be demonstrated after injection rather than ingestion of afterbirth material; and whether POEF enhances all opioid-mediated phenomena.
(15) Suspensions were prepared from the four samples of material, obtained either from the placentae and afterbirths of the aborting ewes or from the tissues of the aborted foetuses.
(16) 2176 vaginal deliveries at Jena University Hospital were selected at random to check whether in these patients it is possible to establish the connection postulated by some authors between preceding premature termination of pregnancy and the mass incidence of afterbirth haemorrhages, as well as of necessary surgery in the afterbirth phase.
(17) Membrane-associated proteins (MPs) of the human term placenta (afterbirth) were obtained by extracting the insoluble part of the tissue with solubilizing agents, after the soluble material had been removed by washing with saline.
(18) Two major consequences of placentophagia, the ingestion of afterbirth materials that occurs usually during mammalian parturition, have been uncovered in the past several years.
(19) Grewia bicolor is a small tree, parts of which are used in Sudanese traditional medicine for treating pustulent skin lesions, internally on indication of a delayed afterbirth and sometimes as a tranquilizer.
(20) In the group of newborns with leucocytic infiltrations present in the afterbirth, bacteraemia, left-shift of the differential white blood cell count, and decreased platelet count were more frequent.
Heam
Definition:
(n.) The afterbirth or secundines of a beast.
Example Sentences:
(1) Microscopically the non-heam iron appears to be found predominantly in glial cells as fine cytoplasmic granules which in heavily stained areas coalesce to fill the entire cell.
(2) At Shoreham we have always taken those safety arrangements very seriously.” It confirmed that Hill was not originally meant to pilot the plane but stressed that both he and Heames were highly experienced pilots who would often swap positions.
(3) The room-temperature studies show the presence of a low-spin ferrous haem together with a low-spin ferric haem, which we attribute to heams a3 and a respectively.
(4) Individual display pilots are only granted approval following a thorough test of their abilities.” Facebook Twitter Pinterest Crane starts moving wreckage at Shoreham plane crash site It emerged that Hill, known as Andy, was selected to fly the plane last month and a fellow pilot, Chris Heames, had been originally listed in the airshow’s programme.
(5) When the results of total non-heam liver iron measurements are expressed properly (amount of iron per amount of homogenized liver protein), the distribution of iron is found to be homogeneous in both normal and pathological liver tissues.
(6) A significant enhancement of turbidity is observed on heating from 30 to 50 degrees C, with an apparent transition temperature at 43 degrees C. The change of turbidity and the nonlinear behaviour of spin label mobility are being ascribed to denaturation of non-heam-containing subunits followed by an aggregation of the enzyme.
(7) The guiding points for the direction of the X-ray heam are: the lateral border of the superciliary arch, the midpoint between the lateral border of the superciciliary arch and the external acoustic meatus, the midpoint between the external acoustic meatus and the external occipital protuberance.