What's the difference between ostent and stent?

Ostent


Definition:

  • (n.) Appearance; air; mien.
  • (n.) Manifestation; token; portent.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) We are supposed to slaver enviously at this ostentation; if we don’t, we condemn ourselves as losers.
  • (2) The company that helped the couple design it said: “They wanted not ostentation but ‘a spirit of home’.” While the yacht was designed primarily for relaxed cruising, Staley has sailed her across the Atlantic to complete one of his “bucket list” life goals.
  • (3) Awopbopaloobop transferred the underworld grit, diamond-studded teeth and overflowing dresses in Cohn’s imagination to the glamour, the ostentation, the ruthlessness and grubbiness of the pop business.
  • (4) Yet it would be wrong to overlook the damage done to the Japanese psyche in the immediate aftermath of the bursting of the bubble in the early 1990s, a decade of excess and ostentation sustained by a shared illusion that the economy would remain for ever on an upward trajectory.
  • (5) Many of those present had travelled for days by bus or plane to see a pope that they admire for his spirituality, lack of ostentation and strong emphasis on the poor.
  • (6) According to Billboard , Daleste was involved in São Paulo's ostentation funk scene, where rappers trade gangster bars over heavily percussive beats.
  • (7) His other great passion is good taste – a quality he credits for distinguishing his family from the tacky ostentation of most Russian oligarchs, who rather embarrass Lebedev.

Stent


Definition:

  • (obs. p. p.) of Stent
  • (v. t.) To keep within limits; to restrain; to cause to stop, or cease; to stint.
  • (v. i.) To stint; to stop; to cease.
  • (n.) An allotted portion; a stint.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) During placement of the Fletcher suit one of the ureters is catheterized by a special stent which appears on the X-rays control used for dosimetry.
  • (2) In one patient with a B-II stomach, the stent could only be inserted by the percutaneous transhepatic route.
  • (3) There were no cases of stent migration or occlusion due to encrustation of bile.
  • (4) Veryan has developed a stent – a metal mesh tube inserted in an artery – that mimics the natural swirl of the blood flow, which researchers have found improves outcomes for patients with circulation problems.
  • (5) The insertion of stent was succeeded in all 4 cases, and the improvement of clinical symptoms and elevation of ankle pressure index were observed.
  • (6) Nine patients had variably significant ductal changes attributable to pancreatic duct stents.
  • (7) Titanium-nickel alloy composed of 50% by weight of each metal has unique thermal shape-memory properties, with a transition temperature of 20 degrees C. Each stent consists of one wire with a diameter of 0.9 mm.
  • (8) Between June 1988 and July 1991, 464 new device interventions (Palmaz-Schatz stent or Simpson directional atherectomy) were performed in 410 patients.
  • (9) The stent was applied without general anesthesia under mild i.v.
  • (10) Clogging of endoscopic stents necessitates their replacement in many patients with malignant obstructive jaundice and limits their use in benign strictures.
  • (11) The stents were inserted by using a 10-12 Fr catheter.
  • (12) Intravascular stenting has been established as a useful treatment in adults with coronary and peripheral vascular disease.
  • (13) A variety of interventional endovascular instruments have been produced and used in a wide field of pathologies: balloons for proximal clamping, distal embolization by particles, arterial desobstruction by seeking devices, propping of vascular lumen by stenting, in situ infusion of drugs (fibrinolysis), filters, foreign body retrieval systems.
  • (14) In spite of the low complication rate, the advisability of clinical application of stents should always be critically considered before the final decision is made.
  • (15) Additionally, there is promise that stents will enhance the percutaneous treatment of renal artery ostial lesions, infrainguinal arterial lesions, and strictures in large veins.
  • (16) The average period of follow-up is 65 days, the longest 105 days (silicone stents) respectively 306 days (metallic stents).
  • (17) We believe that treatment of tracheal stenosis using dilation with stents is a reasonably good alternative in patients whose general condition makes them poor risks for major tracheal surgery.
  • (18) Treatment by either antegrade placement of ureteral stents or abdominal exploration with deligation or ureteroneocystotomy was successful in all cases.
  • (19) Antibiotic suppression and stent changes should not be used routinely but rather they should be individualized.
  • (20) An expandable metal stent inserted via a long term tracheostomy successfully relieved life threatening respiratory obstruction due to benign tracheal stenosis.

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