(a.) Pertaining to, or corresponding with, the palm of the hand.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the under side of the wings of birds.
Example Sentences:
(1) Anxiety conditions were measured by monitoring palmar skin resistance with a psychogalvanometer.
(2) In the 18 month-old a more mature grasp and forearm combination, mainly palmar grasp with or without stablizing index finger + overpronated forearm, was found.
(3) Bifid uvula, preauricular pits, and abnormal palmar creases were also slightly more common in the patients, but the differences were not statistically significant.
(4) Because of the compensatory collateral circulation, no permanent symptoms of ischaemia occur despite the partial resection of both palmar digital arteries.
(5) Painful palmar and plantar erythema is an uncommon systemic complication of chemotherapy and has been reported in association with methotrexate, cystosine arabinoside, doxorubicin, and 5-fluorouracil.
(6) As in previous studies, the sites predominantly affected were the foot and the hand, mainly on the plantar and palmar surfaces.
(7) No significant difference is observed when single localizations (dorsal or palmar) are considered.
(8) The palmar digital nerves to the thumb were constant in position and course, with a short lateral cutaneous branch from the radial palmar digital nerve in 30 per cent of cases.
(9) The diagnostic criteria of median nerve compression (carpal tunnel syndrome) include morphological and signal changes in the nerve, abnormal palmar convexity of the flexor retinaculum and signs of tenosynovitis of the intracarpal flexor tendons.
(10) A worrisome lesion in a 62-year-old black man prompted a review of the differential diagnosis of pigmented lesions involving palmar skin.
(11) The tendon is threaded through a hole in the distal phalanx from the dorsal to the palmar side and impacted like a cork to create an immediate strong fixation.
(12) The locomotor function tests included a power grip and two precision grips; dermatoglyphic features were represented by finger and palmar pattern intensities and ridge counts, and body structure by 35 head, face, trunk, and limb anthropometric measurements.
(13) Finger pulse amplitude (PA), finger blood content (BC), heart rate (HR), and palmar skin potential reflex (SPR) were recorded simultaneously.
(14) It is however restricted by its medial tendon which runs into the palmar aponeurosis.
(15) Evaluation of the palmar surface of the superficial digital flexor tendon was limited by the midline attachment of the tendon sheath, otherwise the surfaces of the tendons and tendon sheath could be examined with 25 degrees and 70 degrees arthroscopes.
(16) It is characterized by nodular growth and proliferation of collagen in the palmar and plantar fascias.
(17) Open reduction should be performed through a palmar incision.
(18) The clinical results suggest that BSTS is the technique of choice for one-stage transaxillary sympathectomy in the treatment of palmar hyperhidrosis.
(19) Iontophoresis is a suitable alternative to long-term drug therapy and should be offered to patients for the control of palmar hyperhidrosis prior to surgical intervention.
(20) The major sources of the sensory fibres of the palmar digital nerves appeared to be the ganglia of the C8 and T1 spinal segments which contained more than 90 per cent of all labelled neurons.
Palmary
Definition:
(a.) Palmar.
(a.) Worthy of the palm; palmy; preeminent; superior; principal; chief; as, palmary work.
Example Sentences:
(1) Porokeratosis palmaris et plantaris disseminata, like other forms of porokeratosis, exhibits abnormal DNA ploidy in lesional epidermis.
(2) Since 1970, when the flexor tendon gliding mechanism of the finger has been damaged in the area of "no man's land" and conditions are less than optimal for conventional tendon grafting, the authors have attempted to graft a fascial tube including tendon and paratenon of the palmaris longus.
(3) Herein we report a case occurring as pustulosis palmaris, that has been identified as an occupational allergic contact dermatitis to black rubber.
(4) In view of the uniform histology, the unknown etiology and the uncertain clinical classification, the authors prefer the clearly descriptive term pustulosis palmaris et plantaris.
(5) A 47-year-old male patient with tuberous xanthomas, xanthochromia striata palmaris, hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia, chylomicronemia and a "broad-beta" band on agarose gel electrophoresis is the subject of this report.
(6) Like the rheumatism of acne conglobata, the spondylitis of pustulosis palmaris et plantaris is one of the causes of sterno-costo-clavicular hyperostosis.
(7) We describe a patient with porokeratosis palmaris et plantaris disseminata in whom abnormal DNA ploidy was found in lesional epidermis with the use of flow cytometry.
(8) Pustulosis palmaris et plantaris may be associated with a number of articular diseases.
(9) A cases of punctate and striated keratodermia palmaris et planataris is described.
(10) Submerged mycelia of a strain of Cladosporium werneckii isolated from tinea nigra palmaris, when cultured on enriched corn-meal agar media, developed fruiting bodies resembling perithecia.
(11) A 62-year-old woman, who had suffered from putsulosis palmaris et plantaris for about two years, was admitted to our hospital due to lumbago, sweating and palpitation.
(12) The names that have been used for this type of dermatosis most commonly incorporate the term porokeratosis; for example, "porokeratosis palmaris et plantaris," or "punctuate porokeratotic keratoderma."
(13) These observations, as well as the fact that the palmar aponeurosis has never been reported to be absent, support the view of Kaplan that the palmar aponeurosis and the palmaris longus tendon are separate anatomic structures, which develop independently and are associated only by anatomic proximity.
(14) Free transplantation of palmaris longus muscle has not proven to be of functional advantage.
(15) This study demonstrated that absence of the palmaris longus tendon in North American Caucasians was considerably lower than reported by Thompson in his report in 1921.
(16) This study randomly evaluated 200 Caucasian patients (100 of each sex), seen in an office or hospital setting, for the presence of the palmaris longus tendon.
(17) The palmaris longus tendon was reported absent in North American Caucasians 24.4% of the time in one or both arms, by Thompson in 1921.
(18) Progressive resistance exercise was used to induce hypertrophy in the right palmaris longus muscle (PLM) of 16 cats.
(19) It was an accessory muscle of the M. palmaris longus that initially created difficulties in diagnosis.
(20) An unusual and unrecorded variation in palmaris longus muscle is described.