What's the difference between diaphoresis and dumbels?
Diaphoresis
Definition:
(n.) Perspiration, or an increase of perspiration.
Example Sentences:
(1) After ingesting 3,4-methylene-dioxy-methamphetamine (MDMA) and the monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitor phenelzine, a 50 year old male developed marked hypertension, diaphoresis, altered mental status, and hypertonicity lasting 5-6 hours.
(2) Approximately 75 minutes after ingestion of dipyridamole 300 mg suspension, the patient developed chest pain, hypotension, nausea, and diaphoresis.
(3) The importance of diaphoresis in the treatment of mercury poisoning as well as the status of the use of chelating agents are reviewed.
(4) Other symptoms included palpitations in 57% of patients, chest pain in 27%, dyspnea in 25%, weakness in 6%, nausea or diaphoresis in 3% each and flushing in 2%.
(5) When PGI2 is infused into healthy volunteers it reduces blood pressure only at infusion rates that also cause significant side-effects, primarily, nausea, emesis, flushing, diaphoresis, and restlessness.
(6) The authors present a case of a patient suffering from profuse diaphoresis as the sole manifestation of myocardial ischemia (syndrome x or coronary vasospasm).
(7) Coronary angiography may result in catheter tip occulsion of the ostium with chest pain, dyspnea, diaphoresis, systemic hypotension and abrupt fall in pressure at the catheter tip.
(8) Adverse drug experiences reported by subjects included nausea, dizziness, light-headedness, diaphoresis, costal pain, and perioral numbness.
(9) The most frequent clinical features are changes in mental status, restlessness, myoclonus, hyperreflexia, diaphoresis, shivering, and tremor.
(10) Serious adverse effects, including marked sedation, hallucinations, diaphoresis, and respiratory depression, were recorded in 14 patients.
(11) The anesthetic state was associated with tachypnea, tachycardia, increases in systemic blood pressure, mydriasis, diaphoresis, and at times, clonus and opisthotonus.
(12) Eleven (34%) of these cases were clinically unsuspected exhibiting none of the typical symptoms of palpitation, diaphoresis, or headache, and only five were hypertensive.
(13) Side effects such as hyperkinesias, vivid dreams, dizziness with diaphoresis were frequent.
(14) Symptoms were progressive with congestive failure, diaphoresis, syncope , and angina pectoris.
(15) The major changes in AWS were in blood pressure and pulse, while restlessness or diaphoresis did not show faster normalization with L vs. P. Other ratings of withdrawal intensities and craving by patients were similar in both P and L. There were no differences in the rate of patient completion, or appearance of hallucinations by group.
(16) All subjects developed significant hypoglycemia in response to the insulin and manifested signs of sympathetic activation, including increased heart rate, diaphoresis, and lightheadedness.
(17) Attention is drawn to the often rapid onset and short duration of illness (nearly two-thirds of the patients died within five months of onset) and the frequent early occurrence of symptoms such as asthenia, diaphoresis, and disturbances of sleep and appetite.
(18) A subject participating in a clinical trial employing antipyrine experienced an acute allergic reaction to the drug which was characterized by diaphoresis, flushing, swelling of the throat, difficulty in breathing, vomiting, swelling of the upper lip, and a diffuse urticarial rash.
(19) In the group of patients with lesions showing an ulcer, carcinoma or suspect malignancies, the changes occured in the composition of enzymes such as acid phosphatase, DNP Diaphoresis and nonspecific esterases.
(20) With the use of two distinct activities to produce diaphoresis, we were able to document substantial transient improvements in pure-tone threshold, speech-reception threshold, and speech discrimination concurrent with a decrease in tinnitus and fullness in two patients with unilateral Meniere's disease that had been diagnosed previously by the glycerin test.
Dumbels
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) There is a high incidence of dumbell tumours in the neurinomas.
(2) Evidence that variola virus, the causative agent of smallpox, might be readily derived from monkeypox virus was presented [S. S. Marennikova and E. M. Shelukhina, Nature (London) 276:291-292, 1978; S. S. Marennikova, E. M. Shelukhina, N. N. Maltseva, and G. R. Matsevich Intervirology 11:333-340, 1979], but this was not confirmed [K. R. Dumbell and L. C. Archard, Nature (London) 286:29-32, 1980] and was subsequently discounted (J. J. Esposito, J. H. Nakano, and J. F. Obijeski, Bull.
(3) It increased in size rapidly within a period of 5 weeks and clinically presented as a dumbell-shaped neck swelling over the thyroid alae.
(4) Since effects of duplex to single strands dissociation do not contribute to melting of the circular molecules (dumbells), these DNAs present a realistic experimental model for examining local thermal stability in DNA.
(5) The enzyme molecules appeared dumbell-shaped ((11.0-11.5) X (5.0-5.5)nm) and were separated from the liposomal membrane by a stain-filled gap of about 2.5 nm, representing the 'junctional segment'.
(6) The length distribution function for the complex is more symmetric than that for uncomplexed Ca2+.calmodulin, indicating that more of the mass is distributed toward the center of mass for the complex, compared with the dumbell-shaped Ca2+.calmodulin.
(7) The correlation time is compared to the theory describing the rotational diffusion of a dumbell.
(8) A CT scan disclosed a dumbell shaped jugular foramen neurinoma and noncommunicating hydrocephalus.
(9) It is characterised by having symmetrical dumbell-shaped testes, and vitellaria as a single ventral band in the hindbody.
(10) This protein, called "desmoyokin" (from the English, yoke) here, showed no binding ability with keratin filaments in vitro, and its molecule had a characteristic dumbell shape approximately 170 nm in length.
(11) Although enough difference between the genomes of monkeypox and variola viruses to rule out a simple interconversion has been demonstrated [K. R. Dumbell and L. C. Archard, Nature (London) 286:29-32, 1980; J. J. Esposito and J. C. Knight, Virology 143:230-251, 1985; J. J. Esposito, J. H. Nakano, and J. F. Obijeski, Bull.
(12) Five patients, two with large pelvic dumbell tumors, two with large intrathoracic tumors, and one with a seemingly unresectable large right adrenal tumor (crossing the midline with extensive aortocaval nodal involvement) had total or near-total resection accomplished using the CUSA.