What's the difference between tarse and tarsi?

Tarse


Definition:

  • (n.) The male falcon.
  • (n.) tarsus.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) All peripheric joints can be involved, except knees, ankles and tarses.

Tarsi


Definition:

  • (n.) pl. of Tarsus.
  • (pl. ) of Tarsus

Example Sentences:

  • (1) After ingesting even a small amount of sucrose, the fly begins making frequent, tight turns, flexes its front tarsi to bring more chemosensory hairs into contact with the substrate and repeatedly extends and retracts its proboscis.
  • (2) The presence of the stimulant factor was established by forcing gravid females to touch the testing water with tarsi and proboscis.
  • (3) : Congenital deformity of the foot with tarsi-transversa dislocation or subluxation involving mainly the talo-navicular joint.
  • (4) Three-plane kinesiology of hindfoot instability was studied after lesions to the ligamentous structures in the sinus and canalis tarsi in 20 amputation specimens.
  • (5) An arthrogram of the subtalar joint in a patient with a confirmed sinus tarsi syndrome demonstrates a sac-like anterior bulge of the capsule.
  • (6) Parallel studies were carried out to assess the effects of the two drugs on fly feeding behavior, measured as mean acceptance threshold: the minimum sucrose concentration to which the average fly in a population will respond by proboscis extension when its tarsi contact the solution.
  • (7) Both mutant genes are interpreted as reducing longitudinal growth of the proximal tarsi, with joint failure as a consequence, and with alterations of bristle pattern resulting directly from size reduction, or indirectly through joint failure.
  • (8) We describe herein 10 patients for whom a prosthesis was not feasible and who therefore underwent removal of the eye with extirpation of the conjunctiva, tarsi, and lid margins, followed by lid closure.
  • (9) However, in the case presented, talipes equinovarus deformity and sinus tarsi syndrome coexisted.
  • (10) The TSP for ssa-40a overlapped the TSP for homoeotic transformation of aristae into tarsi but did not overlap the TSP for spineless effects.
  • (11) The acids penetrate through the cuticle of the abdomen and tarsi, independently of the amount of distention.
  • (12) The lengths of all tarsomeres of regenerated tarsi were measured together with those of unoperated contralateral tarsomeres, and the ratios of the former to the latter were calculated.
  • (13) A relationship between subtalar joint instability following lesion to the ligamentous structures in the sinus and canalis tarsi, and the sinus tarsi syndrome is discussed.
  • (14) Two lots of 20 young male guinea pigs were inoculated subcutaneously in the tarsi with 10(4) amastigotes of Leishmania braziliensis braziliensis or L. b. guyanensis to study the susceptibility of this Neotropical hystricomorph rodent the autochthonous parasites.
  • (15) When legs were amputated distal to the 3rd tarsomere, the regenerated tarsi had 5 segments.
  • (16) It is recommended that dissection of the subtalar joint, except at the talonavicular joint, be avoided and that extensive lateral ankle dissection, especially when the sinus tarsi is included, should not be performed simultaneously with the medial release unless absolutely necessary to achieve the desired anatomic relationship.
  • (17) The posttraumatic sinus tarsi syndrome is a clinical entity induced by supination trauma of the hindfoot.
  • (18) Changes in the distribution patterns of chondrocytes in the embryonic transitory hyaline cartilage of the tarsus were studied using 56 sagittal section of tarsi from 28 human embryos, with a vertex-foot length from 7.0 to 44.0 cm.
  • (19) In the operation advised the sinus tarsi is exposed and the semilunar fragment is reduced by rotation in the opposite direction and is fixed to the medial fragment (the sustenaculum tali not being displaced) by a transverse Kirschner wire.
  • (20) Opportunistic ectoparasitic aggregates of bacteria, yeast, and fungi on the tarsi of colonized L. longipalpis and P. papatasi hindered their mobility and were associated with reduced colony vigor.

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