What's the difference between cirrhose and tendril?

Cirrhose


Definition:

  • (a.) Same as Cirrose.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Immediate cause for the death in the summed up group cirrhoses is: hepatic coma in 42,2%, acute hemorrhage with or without coma--32,3%, other causes--18,9%.
  • (2) Lymph nodes showed early and progressively immunomorphological reactions with maximum intensity in evolutive stages of certain cirrhoses.
  • (3) The main causes of death were 56 malignant liver tumors, 18 cirrhoses of the liver, 6 blood diseases and 5 cancers of the extrahepatic bile duct.
  • (4) Equally, during some preliminary experimental studies (7) We remarked intense lymph node reactions even in incipient phases of cirrhoses, which fact stirred us up to examine them thoroughly.
  • (5) HBsAg was proved both according to Shikata and immunohistochemically in 4 cirrhoses, two of them were serologically positive, only one known before operation.
  • (6) In 11 liver-transplanted patients (7 primitive biliary cirrhoses, 2 post-hepatic cirrhoses, one bile duct atresia with one antitrypsin deficit) different lymphocyte subpopulations were tested before transplantation and at days 3, 5, 7, 15, 30, 60 and 120 after grafting using OKT3, OKT4, OKT8 (Orthoclone, France).
  • (7) The three-dimensional collagen framework of human liver parenchyma in surgical specimens from patients with chronic active hepatitis (CAH), viral or alcoholic cirrhoses (LC) was observed by scanning electron microscopy after cell-maceration by the method of Ohtani (1988).
  • (8) 231 liver cirrhoses showed elevated values in 28.1%.
  • (9) Positive relationships are present between immunograms and aminotransferases, gamma-GT and AP in the group with fatty livers, and so are other highly significant positive relationships in toxic hepatitis and toxic cirrhoses of the liver.
  • (10) As knowledge of the viral etiology of some cirrhoses has evolved and as methods to detect viruses have developed, the significant association between hepatitis B virus and hepatocellular carcinoma has become clear.
  • (11) Sensitivity for complete cirrhoses was also high (97%), for incomplete cirrhoses however low (47%).
  • (12) A morphometric study was performed on 200 nuclei per case in six well-differentiated hepatocarcinomas and in six cirrhoses with cytologic atypia, using samples obtained by fine needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy of the liver.
  • (13) The increasing number of toxic cirrhoses of the liver and their concomitant diseases demands differentiation in the choice of surgical technique in acute hemorrhage.
  • (14) Principal indications for liver transplantation are endstage chronic liver diseases, namely cirrhoses of various origin, fulminant hepatic failure, metabolic liver disease, and rarely non-resectable malignant tumors of the liver.
  • (15) Only in the plasma of patients with liver cirrhoses with bad prognosis (hepatic coma) similar low levels of total phospholipids were found.
  • (16) In 104 patients with acute virus hepatitis, chronic hepatitides, cirrhoses, fatty livers and biliary diseases with partial and complete obstructive jaundice, respectively, IgG, IgA, IgD, beta1A- and beta1E-globulin, cholinesterase, total protein, and albumin, in 45 of these patients additionally prealbumin, retinol binding protein, thymol turbidity test were determined as well as an electrophoretic separation of the serum was performed.
  • (17) Of particular importance are, apart from this, the influence of the virus hepatitis and the question, how many liver cirrhoses are of hepatitic genesis.
  • (18) Incomplete cirrhoses were distributed in about 50% above and below P = 5 mm Hg, for complete cirrhoses P greater than or equal to 8 mm Hg was found in 97%.
  • (19) Phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylinositol and the total phospholipids were diminished in comparison to patients with liver cirrhoses.
  • (20) The primary biliary cirrhosis with the morphologic findings of a chronically destructing, non-purulent cholangitis is an immunologically conditioned liver diseases of unknown etiology, which in contrast to the autoimmune chronic active hepatitides and liver cirrhoses is not to be influenced in the course by therapeutic measures.

Tendril


Definition:

  • (a.) A slender, leafless portion of a plant by which it becomes attached to a supporting body, after which the tendril usually contracts by coiling spirally.
  • (a.) Clasping; climbing as a tendril.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The buds are transformed into tendrils with swollen extremities.
  • (2) Tendrils were found only in regions which had characteristics of poor fixation.
  • (3) The tendrils could then be seen in all portions of the proximal convoluted tubule and not exclusively in the initial portion as previously reported.
  • (4) Examples of this approach include Alstom who have invested in Brightsource (utility scale solar thermal) and Tidal Generation (tidal power); ABB is working with Aquamarine (wave power) and Trilliant (smart grid); Siemens with Tendril and a number of other smart grid companies; Monsanto with biofuels company Sapphire Energy .
  • (5) Microtubular changes in degenerating CF tendrils were observed.
  • (6) When samples of pea tendril tissue were incubated in the Wachstein-Meisel medium for the demonstration of adenosine triphosphatases, deposits of lead reaction product were localized between the membranes of the chloroplast envelope.
  • (7) In AD, however, increased vascular tendrils in form of endothelial abluminal processes and intraparenchymal abnormalities were evident in cortical and hippocampal regions, predominant in cases with severe pathology.
  • (8) In the granular layer, tendril and glomerular collaterals of climbing fibers were observed.
  • (9) Approaching Istanbul, 435 days after slinking into the sea in Gibraltar, the pair found the city’s tendrils reaching down the Thracian coast.
  • (10) One of the characteristics of Dadd's fairy paintings is the way grasses and tendrils are apparently randomly interposed between the onlooker and the world in the painting.
  • (11) The villi intertwine in different positions; both the villi and their tendrils are covered with dense layers of microvilli.
  • (12) Tendrils have been reported to radiate from luminal surfaces of proximal tubules in rat kidneys by Andrews and Porter ('74) using scanning microscopy, but they were not seen by Bulger et al.
  • (13) The tendril-like processes continued to increase in length until about the end of the second postnatal month.
  • (14) I can imagine him enthroned in his techno-lair in Manhattan, sampling news feeds from the old country, allowing tendrils of moist patriotism to penetrate his otherwise steely alien mind.
  • (15) The climbing fibers formed tendril collaterals and glomeruli.
  • (16) Facebook Twitter Pinterest I would sit next to my mother on these afternoons and inevitably a tendril of tension would start emanating from the screen, and from her.
  • (17) The symptomatic form of livedo racemosa causes circumscribed, asymmetric lesions restricted to one half of the body, while the idiopathic form is characterised by arborization figures and livid tendril-like discolorations.
  • (18) A decade ago, the white tendrils of an iPod's headphones might have marked the wearer out as trendy; nowadays it makes them just one of the crowd, and Apple's in-ear headphones are too common to bother with.
  • (19) At least three types of urinary fibrillar material were observed: 10-12-nm-diameter fibrils similar to amyloid; 7-10-nm-diameter fibrils with characteristics of intracellular tonofibrils; and 15-30-nm-diameter fibrils suggestive of fibrin tendrils.
  • (20) These mixed-use habitats would extend upwards, outwards and deep underground in organic rings and tendrils.

Words possibly related to "cirrhose"