(1) The results also revealed that stunting, wasting and stunting together and overweight were more common in young workers who were both anaemic and had evidence of parasitic infection than those who were anaemic only or had parasitic infection only.
(2) There was no influence of a difference in 2,3-DPG content of the erythrocytes on the above-metioned parameters during severe anaemic hypoxia.
(3) Nineteen (41%) of 46 anaemic rheumatoid arthritis patients taking non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAID) and three (27%) of 11 patients with unexplained iron deficiency, were found to have small bowel lesions to account for their anaemia.
(4) Out of these 200 girls, 6 were unmarried, 51 were anaemic, 20 had toxaemia of pregnancy.
(5) Figures last week showed the US economy barely grew in the final three months of 2015, rising at an anaemic 0.7% annual rate.
(6) Here, we show that only protein 4.1b is present in the immature reticulocytes of anaemic patients.
(7) It has been recognised for many years that anaemic cancer patients have a particularly poor prognosis (see recent reviews [4,8]).
(8) Adult Xenopus laevis, rendered anaemic by phenylhydrazine injection, have been studied during the recovery from such anaemia.
(9) A third group (G3) had been created from two others with anaemic infants and received daily iron supplementation.
(10) Non-Caucasians (mainly Pakistani) were more commonly anaemic than Caucasians and showed a peak prevalence (31%) in the 3rd, 4th and 5th years.
(11) The iron deficient anaemic children with hypoalbuminaemia had significantly reduced serum and salivary protein (P less than 0.001), but iron concentrations in serum and saliva remained unaltered.
(12) Quantitative information on abnormalities of erythropoiesis and mechanisms of anaemia has been obtained in 136 anaemic patients by means of ferrokinetic studies.
(13) Dialysis therapy in anaemic patients may predispose to and facilitate the detection of myocardial ischemia by the simultaneous interplay of hypotension, hypovolemia, hypoxia and tachycardia.
(14) The findings of our study suggest that conventional indices for iron metabolic disorder in anaemic patients with chronic inflammatic disease should include peripheral microcytosis, transferrin saturation, and RCF content but could neglect plasma ferritin concentrations.
(15) The highest ratio of placental weight to birthweight occurred in the most anaemic women with the largest falls in mean cell volume.
(16) The drug appears useful in the management of anaemic and thrombocytopenic MDS patients.
(17) "The first quarter, however, will be weak and going forward next year we expect anaemic consumer spending growth."
(18) Over three-quarters of these patients were anaemic.
(19) It is considered that storage iron depletion in non-anaemic women is not in the main related to pathological levels of menstrual loss but rather to inadequate dietary iron.
(20) Locomotion in 11 anaemically decerebrated spinal animals (1-3 weeks after transection at T13-L1) was induced by administration of clonidine, L-dopa and nialamide; by administration of the latter two drugs only; or by exteroceptive stimulation in the absence of any drugs.
Chlorotic
Definition:
(a.) Pertaining to, or affected by, chlorosis.
Example Sentences:
(1) The binding of the dye acridine orange to cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) and its purified RNA has been studied to obtain the number of dye-binding sites as a function of pH and, through further analysis, to estimate the degree of RNA secondary structure in situ.
(2) Complete cDNA copies of genomic RNA1, RNA2, and RNA3 of cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) were cloned 1 base downstream from a T7 RNA polymerase promoter.
(3) The methods of fitting the combined logistic-Poisson model are demonstrated by applying it to data for cowpea chlorotic mottle virus.
(4) TpM-34 gave rise to chlorotic lesions which expanded with time, often becoming confluent with adjacent lesions, and developed necrotic margins; the plants became systemically infected.
(5) A technique that 'systemically inoculates' cowpea leaves with cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) is described.
(6) Comparisons of amino acid sequences around these conserved motifs with other RNA viruses revealed that ASGV has extensive similarities with apple chlorotic leaf spot, tymo-, carla-, and potexviruses, and is a member of the sindbis-like supergroup.
(7) In contrast, the secondary chlorotic lesions and systemically infected leaves contained virus molecules of either one or the other type only.
(8) Thus, it resembles RNA 2 of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) strains Q and Fny (62% identical to both), brome mosaic virus (42% identical) and cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (40% identical).
(9) Site-directed mutagenesis of one nucleotide to change the codon for Leu129 in the M-CMV coat protein to Pro129 of Fny-CMV changed the phenotype from chlorotic to green mosaic, whereas the opposite change in phenotype was observed when the Pro129 in the Fny-CMV coat protein was altered to Ser129.
(10) Whereas ordinary strains of CaMV are unable to infect solanaceous species except to replicate locally in inoculated leaves, a new CaMV strain (D4) induces chlorotic local lesions and systemically infects both D. stramonium and N. bigelovii.
(11) Stable hybridoma cell lines secreting antibodies specific for the apple chlorotic leaf spot virus (CLSV) were produced by fusing spleen cells of a Biozzi mouse immunized with CLSV P863 strain, with the non-secretory P3 X63 Ag8.653 myeloma cell line.
(12) Comparisons of the nucleotide sequences of pairs of satellite RNAs inducing the various chlorotic responses suggest that only a few nucleotide changes in specific domains are required for the elicitation of different host responses.
(13) Seedlings exposed to aflatoxin did not become chlorotic.
(14) Extensive sequence similarity was found between the TNV 82-kDa protein and the putative polymerases of TCV, CarMV, cucumber necrosis virus (CNV), maize chlorotic mottle virus (MCMV), red clover necrotic mosaic virus (RCNMV), and barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV).
(15) The genomic sequence of cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) was completed by sequencing biologically active cDNA clones of CCMV RNA2 (2774 bases) and RNA3 (2173 bases).
(16) The first, larger family (I) encompasses the movement proteins of tobamo-, tobra-, caulimo- and comoviruses, apple chlorotic leaf spot virus (ACLSV) and geminiviruses with bipartite genomes.
(17) Surprisingly, analysis of viral DNA in single primary chlorotic lesions revealed the presence of both mutants.
(18) RNAs 1 and 2 of the tripartite cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) genome are sufficient for RNA replication in protoplasts, whereas systemic infection of cowpea plants additionally requires RNA3, which encodes the 3a noncapsid protein and coat protein.
(19) Mild conditions for the in vitro reassembly of cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) from its isolated components have now been described (Adolph & Butler 1975) and the reassembled virus characterized.
(20) Poliovirus and Mengo virus RNA were shown to associate efficiently with cowpea chlorotic mottle virus protein to form pseudovirions.