(1) The patient is allowed to do functional exercises 24 hours after reduction with the aid of the spring stepping roller, which not only helps dissipate swelling in the early stage but also remold the articular facet.
(2) The forward slipping occurs as a result of forward remolding of the z-a joints secondary to localized degenerative arthritis of these joints.
(3) The histological structure of the glomeruli returned almost to normal 15 weeks after the venom injection, with occasional features of remolded-healing, although a small number of glomeruli still showed persisted mild segmental mesangial proliferation as well as mild increase of PAM-positive substance in the mesangial area.
(4) Then we take a look at how hospitals' technology acquisition strategies--and vendors' research and development plans--are being remolded by the new capital regulation.
(5) Where gross deformity has existed, the use of an "oyster splint" seems to act as a pressure remolding device.
(6) In addition, thermoplastic splints are lightweight, less bulky, more durable, water-resistant, and easily remolded.
(7) Personally, I do not feel that any biological lens, be it a cornea which has had incisions as with radial keratotomy, or a cornea which is remolded in one way or another as with the excimer laser, will produce predictable refractive results to the extent that is required to satisfy the general needs of the myopic population.
(8) A lack of introns has previously been observed for the human leukosialin gene (Shelley, C. S., Remold-O'Donnell, E., Rosen, F. S. and Whitehead, A. S., Biochem.
(9) His answer was remoldable craniomandibular appliances.
(10) These results suggest that TRAP is useful as a marker of bone remolding in children.
(11) Second, we extend the model by allowing a surviving polymer to act upon--to "remold"--its environment; the nature of the environmental action is governed by the "molding" matrix M. When the mold M is the identity matrix, the feedback algorithm reduces to a Hebb learning algorithm form, and a surviving polymer acts to enhance its own survival prospects.
(12) Since considerable remolding of brain structures (e.g., cell death and modifications of neuronal architecture) occurs during development, we ask if these cells are preserved in the adult zebrafish and the extent to which neuronal morphology of the larva is conserved during ontogeny.
(13) The development of a remoldable craniomandibular (RCM) appliance is the result of four years of clinical research.
(14) Generally speaking, we must use all the tools in our armamentarium, including radiation, intra-keloid steroids, surgery and postoperative constant wound pressure in an effort to remold the newly forming collagen.
(15) It could be easily molded and remolded to fit the foot, as well as to adjust the position of the foot and ankle.
(16) Individually fitted plastic helmets, similar in style to football helmets, have been successfully used to remold the deformed heads of four infants.
(17) This report quantitatively compares long-term head remolding achieved by two methods for retarding bone reunion after midline craniectomy for sagittal suture synostosis.
(18) The remoldable craniomandibular appliance is designed as an inexpensive and time efficient method of arriving at a differential diagnosis for some patients with temporomandibular joint related headache.
(19) IL-4 abrogates the IFN-gamma-mediated activation of peripheral blood monocytes (M. Lehn, W. Y. Weiser, S. E. Engelhorn, S. Gillis, and H. G. Remold, 1989, J. Immunol.
Retold
Definition:
() imp. & p. p. of Retell.
Example Sentences:
(1) The children generated three original stories, retold two adventure stories, and then answered two sets of comprehension questions after each retelling.
(2) Four groups of 14-year-olds, differing in reading level, learning disability status, and socioeconomic status, read and retold short problem narratives and answered questions.
(3) Each time the story is retold it changes, with new salacious details about public figures and world leaders.
(4) In all three retellings, both groups of subjects retold information in the same order that it occurred in the stories.
(5) Both aphasic and non-brain-damaged subjects increased the amount of information retold across three retellings, although only the increases from Retelling 1 to Retelling 2 were statistically significant.
(6) Ben Stephenson, controller, BBC drama commissioning, said: "We are proud to bring audiences this beautiful story retold for Christmas 2010 by a master storyteller.
(7) Now it is all set to be an ebook and will be retold in two children's formats.
(8) All the ingredients of the misery memoir are present in these tales, yet none of them are retold to elicit pity or even compassion, at least not for the subjects themselves.
(9) The story of the bank that almost bankrupted Ireland is about to be retold as a stage show, with the villains of the piece – from greedy bankers to politicians such as the former taoiseach Bertie Ahern – played by puppets.
(10) Students read and retold the texts and reported on their use of metacognitive strategies and comprehension monitoring and assessment.
(11) Poems and letters, like the one recovered in Aleppo, shed light on how personal stories of “jihad” are shared, retold, and mythologised on Russian-language websites and social media accounts.
(12) Equally bold was Kalin's Swoon, which retold the true story of Leopold and Loeb, the notorious gay child-killers whose murder of a young boy had already inspired Alfred Hitchcock's Rope and Richard Fleischer's Compulsion.
(13) By contrast, the younger normally achieving children's reading comprehension scores were best accounted for by their sentence completion, the proportion of the stories that they retold, and word retrieval scores.
(14) Each subject read and retold, in either English or ASL, 20 short stories.
(15) The groups also did not differ in their understanding of the factual details of the retold stories, but did differ significantly in their comprehension of the relationships linking the critical parts of the stories together.
(16) The story of how she persuaded them not to take away her children is one that is told and retold in the family.
(17) But what we do know is that their stories will be told and retold with the aid of hundreds of videos, photos, cartoons and graphics all over the world.
(18) Non-brain-damaged subjects consistently retold slightly more information units than aphasic subjects, but the differences were not statistically significant.
(19) The proportion of stories retold and the phonological awareness score of the older normally achieving children best accounted for the variance in their reading scores.
(20) Condition 1 was a vigilance condition, Condition 2 involved listening to a story without an ending that had to be retold, and Condition 3 was an opportunity to rehearse the story mentally and construct an appropriate ending.