What's the difference between hydric and hydrogen?

Hydric


Definition:

  • (a.) Pertaining to, or containing, hydrogen; as, hydric oxide.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) 6) The renine-angiotensine-aldrosterone system, the problems of hypertension and preservation of the hydric compartments.
  • (2) Traditionally it has been assumed that hydric anademia explains, for the most part, the paths taken by the disease and its varying intensity, but the importance of direct interhuman contamination is demonstrated by the similitude between the ways gone along by the propagation and these of the circulation of men and goods.
  • (3) Closer studies must be conducted on the hydric balance to adequately demonstrate if the new ORS-60 induces lesser losses through vomiting and feces when compared to the ORS-90 recommended by the WHO.
  • (4) The V(MAX) is diversely influenced by the states of digestion: hydric diet increases the V(MAX) in animals fed on sucrose diet when intestinal repletion has the same effect in animals receiving glucose diet.
  • (5) Nicotinate derivatives were applied to the structural determination of glycerol ethers for the first time and shown to reveal the position of methyl branch points in an analogous manner to that previously shown for mono- and di-hydric alcohols.
  • (6) In the first one, a patient in cardiogenic shock had a good evolution because he suffered a biventricular infarction that responsed well to hydric overcharge.
  • (7) The origin of the exposure, known in 20 patients, was either hydric (endemic or sporadic) or industrial, or in a few cases iatrogenic.
  • (8) The results showed that the hydric ingestion was the same in both groups, the body weight of the E group was significant smaller than P group, the villus cell population from the jejunum of the E group was statistically smaller than P group and the contrary happened with ileum samples, wherein the E group was statistically larger than P. The jejunum villus height from E group was similar with P group, but in the ileum of the E group was larger than P. The depth, the cell population and cell production rate of crypt of E group were larger than P, in the jejunum and in the ileum.
  • (9) Since a reversibility of radiological alterations was considered a favourable reply to bleeding and diuretic acute and long term therapy the Authors suggest that these patterns should be related to a different distribution of hydric and haematic masses with a decreasing of interstitial pulmonary oedema which contributes to a full interlobar septa like "D" lines shadows, according to Kreel, (1975).
  • (10) Hypertonic saline and hydric restriction did not alter the AVP basal values, which were, instead, stimulated with orthostatism.
  • (11) In all these cases, clinical parameters, general analysis, hydric metabolism (static and dinamic), are studied.
  • (12) Following IV injection in the anaesthetized Dog, the para-aminoclonidine induces an essentially hydric diuresis which is independet of its hypertensive action.
  • (13) Eggs in the first experiment were incubated in different hydric environments to induce different patterns of net water exchange between the eggs and their surroundings.
  • (14) egg shedding rates increased with the proportion of hydric clays present, adjusted for slope and major hydrologic features.
  • (15) The effects of mono- and poly-hydric alcohols in the presence of KCl on the intrinsic stability of collagen molecules in dilute acid solution were compared with corresponding solvent and salt effects on the increased stability of the aggregated molecules in salt-precipitated fibrils.
  • (16) The referring liver volume was determined by measure of its hydric shift.
  • (17) The theoretical foundations of the invariants proposed are stated and a description is given of the operational method for evaluating students' case discussions by using a measuring scale in a surgical patient with hydric, electrolytical and acid-basic unbalance.
  • (18) This does not support the hypothesis that a pancreatic deficiency (of the kind which could be identified with the methods used) is associated with chronic urticaria in patients in whom improvement of urticaria occurs under a hydric or low antigenic diet.
  • (19) The clinical, epidemiological and laboratory investigations established the hydric origin of the dysentery due to Shigella flexneri 3 a, caused by the illicit communication of the drinking water and industrial water mains.
  • (20) Electrical impedance measure seems to be a simple and reliable method to assess the hydric state of patients.

Hydrogen


Definition:

  • (n.) A gaseous element, colorless, tasteless, and odorless, the lightest known substance, being fourteen and a half times lighter than air (hence its use in filling balloons), and over eleven thousand times lighter than water. It is very abundant, being an ingredient of water and of many other substances, especially those of animal or vegetable origin. It may by produced in many ways, but is chiefly obtained by the action of acids (as sulphuric) on metals, as zinc, iron, etc. It is very inflammable, and is an ingredient of coal gas and water gas. It is standard of chemical equivalents or combining weights, and also of valence, being the typical monad. Symbol H. Atomic weight 1.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The hypothesis that proteins are critical targets in free radical mediated cytolysis was tested using U937 mononuclear phagocytes as targets and iron together with hydrogen peroxide to generate radicals.
  • (2) It has been conformed that catalase from bovine liver eliminates only the pro R hydrogen atom from ethanol.
  • (3) We investigated the possible contribution made by oropharyngeal microfloral fermentation of ingested carbohydrate to the generation of the early, transient exhaled breath hydrogen rise seen after carbohydrate ingestion.
  • (4) Hydrogen isotope effects on these mutants indicate that MotA catalyzes proton transfer.
  • (5) Excessive accumulation of hydrogen ions in the brain may play a pivotal role in initiating the necrosis seen in infarction and following hyperglycemic augmentation of ischemic brain damage.
  • (6) Studies were conducted in isolated, buffer-perfused rat lungs to determine if prostaglandin (PG) E1 attenuated pulmonary edema provoked by hydrogen peroxide (H2O2).
  • (7) All N and O atoms except N(3) and O(4') participate in a three-dimensional hydrogen-bonding system.
  • (8) Both adiphenine.HCl and proadifen.HCl form more stable complexes, suggesting that hydrogen bonding to the carbonyl oxygen by the hydroxyl-group on the rim of the CD ring could be an important contributor to the complexation.
  • (9) Control mutant S38N has stability essentially the same as that of wild-type lysozyme but hydrogen bonding similar to that of the stabilizing mutant S38D.
  • (10) High intensity ultrasound also enhances the heterogeneous catalysis of alkene hydrogenation by Ni powders.
  • (11) An atmosphere of hydrogen eliminates this inhibition in the hydrogenase-containing T. foetus but not in E. invadens which lacks the enzyme.
  • (12) Vanadate-dependent oxidation of either pyridine nucleotide was inhibited by the addition of either superoxide dismutase or catalase, indicating that both superoxide and hydrogen peroxide may be intermediates in the process.
  • (13) Our findings suggest that (a) the inclusion of a liquid meal provides a reproducible method of measuring orocaecal transit using the lactulose hydrogen breath test, (b) rapid small bowel transit in thyrotoxicosis may be one factor in the diarrhoea which is a feature of the disease and (c) if altered gut transit is the cause of sluggish bowel habit in hypothyroidism, delay in the colon, and not small bowel, is likely to be responsible.
  • (14) Stepwise hydrogenation of metal tetradehydrocorrin salts (10 double bonds) yields a series of macrocycles containing 9, 8, 7, 6 and 5 double bonds and conditions necessary to obtain corrins have been established.
  • (15) For dipeptides containing the amino terminal residues glycine, alanine and phenylalanine, abstraction of the hydrogen from the carbon adjacent to the peptide nitrogen was the major process leading to the spin-adducts.
  • (16) (7) The first-order radical transformation rates are independent of the (initial) concentration of N3 or peptide and unaffected by urea (as a modifier of hydrogen bond structures).
  • (17) Intermolecular contacts occur in both oligomers in the minor groove: in the B form through twisted guanine-guanine hydrogen bonding, and in the Z form through base-base stacking and the water network.
  • (18) Equilibrium-partitioning measurements indicate that the relative affinities of different probes for PC-rich vesicles, in competition with HODMA or DOTAP vesicles, increase with increasing hydrogen-bonding capacity of the probe headgroup in the order PC less than N,N-dimethyl PE less than N-methyl PE less than PE approximately phosphatidyl-2-amino-1-propanol.
  • (19) When tissue metabolism was irreversibly inhibited by exposure to formaldehyde, hydrogen ion concentration and pCO2 were significantly decreased in the mucosal side of the chamber compared with the viable gall bladder.
  • (20) Based on the refined atomic coordinates of the tRNAphe in the orthorhombic crystal, on the recent advances in the distance dependence of the ring-current magnetic field effects and on the adopted values for the isolated hydrogen-bonded NH resonances, a computed spectrum consisting of 23 protons was constructed.