What's the difference between calyx and crinoid?

Calyx


Definition:

  • (n.) The covering of a flower. See Flower.
  • (n.) A cuplike division of the pelvis of the kidney, which surrounds one or more of the renal papillae.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) These results, together with information from the amino acid sequences, infer that the native carotenoid, astaxanthin, is bound to each apoprotein within an internal hydrophobic pocket, or calyx.
  • (2) The involved calyx is punctured directly and dilatation performed to the stone without negotiating a wire into the renal pelvis.
  • (3) The host cannot encapsulate the parasitoid egg owing to the suppressive effect of the polydnavirus-laden calyx fluid injected by the female parasitoid during oviposition.
  • (4) A small population of nonadrenergic, VIPI nerves innervates the renal calyx.
  • (5) Flexible ureterorenoscopy is valuable for diagnosis of filling defects in the lower calyx and for treatment of stones in the upper and middle ureter.
  • (6) A sparse plexus of VIPI nerves innervates the rat renal calyx.
  • (7) Two antimicrobial fractions were obtained from the sponge Calyx podatypa from the Bahamas.
  • (8) The optimum photographing time was 15 minutes in the upper urinary tract (nephrogram, calyx, pelvis, upper ureter) and 20 minutes in the lower urinary tract (lower ureter, urinary bladder).
  • (9) It could be shown that nucleus and calyx may have a monomineral as well as a polymineral structure.
  • (10) A dense plexus of SPI nerves innervates the rat renal calyx.
  • (11) For example, in the cerebellum it recognizes myelinated axons and the calyx formed by basket cell axon collaterals.
  • (12) The smooth muscle and myofibroblast-like cells presumably assist expression of urine from the papilla and calyx, and possibly participate as pacemakers for the urinary tract.
  • (13) From September 1988 to April 1989, 400 patients with stones in the calyx (40%), in the renal pelvis (45%), in the ureter (15%) and with staghorn calculi (5%) underwent shock wave treatment.
  • (14) The rhabdom of isolated small photoreceptors is surrounded by a calyx originating from the soma, so that it appears to be located internally.
  • (15) The vestibular sensory epithelia contain two main types of hair cell innervation; bouton-innervated hair cells and calyceal hair cells characterized by a surrounding nerve calyx.
  • (16) The importance of selective arteriography and the interpretation of the "naked calyx" sign in the diagnosis of supernumerary renal arteries has been emphasized.
  • (17) If a fine deformity of calyx is shown on intravenous pyelogram, magnetic resonance imaging demonstrates renal scarring.
  • (18) Proper placement of the percutaneous nephrostomy tract through a posterior middle calyx and of a guidewire across the ureteropelvic junction is necessary in order to gain access to the narrowed area with a rigid cutting instrument.
  • (19) Subsequent to the elaboration of the activation calyx, the contents of cortical granules are released (cortical reaction) into the perivitelline space.
  • (20) Surrounding baculovirus occlusion bodies is an electron-dense layer reported to be composed of carbohydrate which we term calyx.

Crinoid


Definition:

  • (a.) Crinoidal.
  • (n.) One of the Crinoidea.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) At 5 hr, gastrulation has occurred in the absence of any structure comparable to the echinoid hyaline layer; therefore, at least one important mechanism proposed for echinoid gastrulation cannot occur in this crinoid.
  • (2) This is done from a comparative perspective, with reference to members of the five extant echinoderm classes; crinoids, holothurians, asteroids, ophiuroids, and echinoids.
  • (3) Several species of fish are deterred from eating food by the inclusion in it of these sulphates at the concentration found in crinoids.
  • (4) We report the results of cutting experiments on embryos of the crinoid Florometra serratissima, which produce, in the doliolaria stage, a striped pattern of ciliary bands.
  • (5) We have examined echinoderms from the five existing classes (echinoids, asteroids, ophiuroids, holothurians and crinoids) for the expression of these specific phosphagen kinases in different tissues.
  • (6) The range of (presumed) polyketide constituents in comatalid crinoids has been extended to include bianthronyls, meso-naphthodianthrones and sulphate esters of various of the polyketides.
  • (7) In contrast, the obliquely striated fibres of crinoids show markedly continuous and homogeneous oblique Z-lines; such a structure is not compatible with 'super-performances' like sliding and shearing of the sarcomere elements, but instead could allow functions comparable to those characteristic of a cross-striated muscle (quick, short movements, mechanically amplifiable by bone levers).