What's the difference between eversion and exstrophy?

Eversion


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of eversing; destruction.
  • (n.) The state of being turned back or outward; as, eversion of eyelids; ectropium.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The eversion technique was unreliable and probably injurious to endothelial cells.
  • (2) One valve displayed a fixed outward eversion of the free margin of two leaflets.
  • (3) This eversion persisted in affected embryos through the time that the posterior neuropore should normally close.
  • (4) A small bladder stone developed in only 1 (3%) of the patients, who was completely dependent on intermittent catheterization, while 4 (13%) required reoperation due to eversion of the nipple.
  • (5) The first case was a premature female infant who developed involuntary twist movements of the left arm, persistent plantar flexion and eversion of the left foot at age of 7 months.
  • (6) Various parts, differing in a number of morphological signs, have been distinguished: coronary sinus, subepicardial veins, paired sinusoid veins, sinusoids of the myocardium and endocardial eversions.
  • (7) A technique of stapled low colorectal or coloanal anastomosis is described, which follows eversion through the anus and stapled closure of the anorectal or anal remnant.
  • (8) Polyethylene glycol (PEG) and sucrose inhibited germination, first by preventing eversion of the filament, and then at higher concentrations by preventing stimulation.
  • (9) Their localization is predominantly in the area of venular, vein, sinusoid bifurcations and endocardial eversions.
  • (10) In normal bowel segment this may not pose a problem, but forceful attempts at eversion in diseased, thickened, and friable bowel may result in damage to the bowel segment.
  • (11) A case of bilateral primary congenital eversion of lids in a newborn black male is described.
  • (12) A muscle, not found in North American cervids, but well developed in muntjacs, is probably responsible for the eversion of muntjacs' preorbital glands.
  • (13) This traditionally has been managed by cup forceps excision or by eversion through the tracheostoma with a skin hook and blind resection.
  • (14) Serine protease inhibitors block disc eversion and inhibit activity of disc proteases.
  • (15) According to the proposed model the myoepithelial cells are the driving force in papillary eversion.
  • (16) The speed of anastomosis is at least as rapid as the posterior wall technique on which it is based, and it has the advantage of having fewer unused penetrations of the vessel wall and better eversion of the edges.
  • (17) Accurate diagnosis requires a thorough physical examination, which should include careful skin inspection underneath all clothing, palpation of all large bones, fluorescein staining of the cornea, eversion of eyelids, rectal examination, retinal examination, and thorough neurologic examination.
  • (18) single inversion (continuous Connell), double inversion (two rows of continuous Cushing), single eversion (continuous everted mattress), double eversion (single eversion reinforced with simple continuous) were used.
  • (19) The punctal stenosis, which is almost always secondary to punctal eversion, is treated by dilatation and a punctal inversion procedure.
  • (20) The results of this form of treatment were highly satisfactory in ten cases of eversion or inversion; there was no loss of function.

Exstrophy


Definition:

  • (n.) The eversion or turning out of any organ, or of its inner surface; as, exstrophy of the eyelid or of the bladder.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) There were 13 patients with bladder exstrophy and 2 with incontinent epispadias.
  • (2) Cloacal exstrophy, centered on the maldevelopment of the primitive streak mesoderm and cloacal membrane, results in bladder and intestinal exstrophy, omphalocele, gender confusion, and hindgut deformity.
  • (3) Of these patients 16 were born with classical bladder exstrophy and 1 with complete epispadias.
  • (4) The goal of the therapy involving the children with exstrophy of bladder must include urinary continence, protection of renal function and a good quality of life.
  • (5) Although the procedure and the exstrophy-epispadias complex present many unresolved of management.
  • (6) In the first, an adenocarcinoma developed at the site of a ureterocolic anastomosis thirty one years after Coffey's operation for bladder exstrophy.
  • (7) Ureterosigmoidostomy with anti-reflux technique (Petit-Leadbetter procedure) was performed in 12 children, mainly after failure to repair an exstrophy.
  • (8) A case of adenocarcinoma development in the trigone 34 years after trigonosigmoidostomy for exstrophy of the bladder is presented.
  • (9) Vesico-intestinal fissure or exstrophy of the cloaca is a rare but serious birth defect of the urogenital tract and distal part of the digestive tract.
  • (10) Cystometry in 21 cases of closed continent bladder exstrophy revealed that 14 patients had a normal reflexic bladder.
  • (11) The underlined diseases were mostly bladder cancer patients; bladder cancer 70, rectal cancer 2, prostatic sarcoma 1, vesical exstrophy 1 and neurogenic bladder 1 case.
  • (12) We have developed a model for cloacal exstrophy in the chick embryo using the Cavitron AO 300 CO2 laser.
  • (13) Although unrecognised in the past, involuntary bladder contractions are a primary cause of urine leakage persisting in children with exstrophy and epispadias after continence surgery.
  • (14) A brief summary is given of the clinical statistical findings in 37 patients with exstrophy of the bladder, most of the whom have been reported in a previous paper.
  • (15) The operation was performed for exstrophy in 35 of these, in whom the resulting tumour at the anastomotic site was malignant in 28 and benign in 7 patients.
  • (16) Cystometrograms performed previously on individuals with successful exstrophy closures demonstrate normal bladder function.
  • (17) The goal of the treatment involving the children with exstrophy of the bladder must include urinary continence, protection of renal function, good reconstruction of the penis and a good quality of life.
  • (18) In the second case a small omphalocele associated with exstrophy of the cloaca was not accompanied by an abnormal AFP increase.
  • (19) A patient with exstrophy of the bladder in whom we performed vulva reconstruction using a tissue-expansion technique and local flaps was presented.
  • (20) Exstrophy of the bladder is often associated with other urological, genital or, on occasion, orthopedic, malformations.

Words possibly related to "eversion"

Words possibly related to "exstrophy"