(a.) Of or pertaining to tides; caused by tides; having tides; periodically rising and falling, or following and ebbing; as, tidal waters.
Example Sentences:
(1) HFV was delivered at frequencies (f) of 3, 6, and 9 Hz with a ventilator that generated known tidal volumes (VT) independent of respiratory system impedance.
(2) For these augmented breaths, tidal volume, inspiratory time, and expiratory time were not different from the next augmented breath occurring in the same run in the steady state.
(3) Despite end-tidal CO2 monitoring, five children inadvertently developed PaCO2 greater than 50 torr during the study.
(4) As an inspiratory monitor in the curarized patient, the sensor responds quantitatively to persisting spontaneous tidal volumes of 1 ml.
(5) The tidal volume increase under CO2 inhalation was suppressed by the inflation reflex but other afferent vagal nerves seemed to be closely associated with the increased respiratory rate.
(6) Tidal volume increased by 32 percent (P less than 0.03), minute ventilation by 38 percent (P less than 0.02), dynamic compliance by 29 percent (P less than 0.004), and inspiratory flow rates by 54 percent (P less than 0.01).
(7) The relationship between mean pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) and alveolar pressures, at varying tidal volumes and opposing variable pressure to expiratory flow, was studied in 14 healthy dogs at the end of inspiration and at the end of expiration.
(8) A reduction of tidal volume to zero or an increase by 30% led to a corresponding change of mean carotid artery pH level.
(9) We have studied the EEG analysed with the cerebral function analysing monitor (CFAM) during trimetaphan (TMP)-induced hypotension to a mean arterial pressure (MAP) of 40 mm Hg in 20 normocapnic patients anaesthetized with either 1% end-tidal isoflurane or 0.5% halothane.
(10) Bohr's equation (BE); 2. ideal alveolar air equation for O2 (IDO2); 3. end-tidal (ET); 4. by the Rahn's definition of 'mean alveolar gas', i.e., alveolar pressures are defined when instantaneous respiratory exchange ratio (IRQ) equals mean respiratory exchange ratio (MRQ).
(11) The results confirmed that the fall of end tidal carbon dioxide tension (P(ET)CO2) during hyperventilation and rise during recovery was exponential.
(12) After insertion of venous and arterial (radial and pulmonary) catheters, baseline measurements of tidal volume (VT), respiratory rate (RR), ventilatory response to CO2, and arterial and mixed venous blood gases were made.
(13) To test the hypothesis that during unsupported arm exercise (UAE) some of the inspiratory muscles of the rib cage partake in upper torso and arm positioning and thereby decrease their contribution to ventilation, we studied 11 subjects to measure pleural (Ppl) and gastric (Pga) pressures, heart rate, respiratory frequency, O2 uptake (VO2), and tidal volume (VT) during symptom-limited UAE.
(14) This effect increased as lung volume decreased, so that the greatest difference between DLcoSB-3EQ after a deep breath and that after tidal breathing occurred at the lowest lung volume.
(15) On the other hand, because of concomitant compensatory changes in respiratory pattern, evidenced by increases in inspiratory duration with age, the end-inspiratory tidal volume loss in the maturing animal was maintained generally less than 10% at all postnatal ages.
(16) However, the magnitude of the pressure oscillation even at tidal volumes four times normal was always significantly below that observed during spontaneous eupnic respiration.
(17) Tidal shortening will increase the force output of costal while decreasing that of the crural diaphragm.
(18) The dynamic steady-state ventilation image can be analyzed to separate tidally exchanged and resident 81mKr.
(19) In asthmatic patients, minute ventilation and tidal volume increased above that of control subjects following methacholine and exercise, but the rate was no higher than in control subjects.
(20) In nine normal subjects duplicate measurements were made in the erect (seated), supine, and lateral decubitus posture, at a constant tidal volume (700 ml) and frequency (1 Hz) starting from functional residual capacity (FRC).
Tindal
Definition:
(n.) A petty officer among lascars, or native East Indian sailors; a boatswain's mate; a cockswain.
(n.) An attendant on an army.
Example Sentences:
(1) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Zara Tindall kisses her grandfather Prince Philip at Royal Ascot on Tuesday.
(2) Facebook Twitter Pinterest The Queen with her five great-grandchildren and two youngest grandchildren: James, Viscount Severn (L), eight, and Lady Louise (2nd L), 12, the children of the Earl and Countess of Wessex; Mia Tindall (holding the Queen’s handbag), two, daughter of Zara and Mike Tindall; Savannah (3rd R), five, and Isla Phillips (R), three, daughters of Peter and Autumn Phillips; Prince George (2nd R), two, and, in the Queen’s arms, Princess Charlotte (11 months), children of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.
(3) He scored 10 goals for Boro last term and has been watched by Bournemouth boss Eddie Howe and his assistant Jason Tindall for some time.
(4) In a statement Buckingham Palace said: "Mr and Mrs Mike Tindall are very pleased to announce that Zara Tindall is expecting a baby in the new year.
(5) "The Princess Royal and Captain Mark Phillips, Mr Phillip and Mrs Linda Tindall, and members of both families are delighted with the news.
(6) "It is a great honour for us to be able to produce and distribute the address, especially over the next two years in which we will see the marriages of Prince William to Kate Middleton and Zara Phillips to Mike Tindall, the Queen's diamond jubilee and the London 2012 Olympic Games."
(7) By applying the inequality principle (Tindall & Wilson, 1988) it was confirmed with a probability of error of 1 in 10(10) that N. brasiliensis larvae applied to the skin passed through the lungs on their way to the intestine.
(8) Here are Zara Phillips and craggy Mike Tindall, all jeans and grassy banks, watching Prince Harry play polo at Beaufort.
(9) The RAAF bases at Williamtown in New South Wales and Tindal in the Northern Territory will get about $1.6bn in upgrades and new facilities so they can be the home bases for the squadrons.
(10) He was pictured being escorted from his carriage towards the race course by his granddaughter Zara Tindall, who placed her arm affectionately around his shoulder as they walked.
(11) • In a break with tradition, only one of the baby's godparents was from the royal family, Zara Tindall.
(12) It is, however, considerably more difficult to represent systems that are both polydisperse (namely, those that consist of noninteracting species of different molecular weight) and nonideal, although the ideal case has been well described (see, for example, Tindall, S. H., and K. C. Aune, 1982, Anal.
(13) Conversely, absence of parasites judged by sampling at autopsy is positive proof that a site is not a nursery when sampling is timed in relation to reliable estimates of overall kinetics (Tindall & Wilson, 1990), and with control information on the efficiency of sampling.
(14) THIS article attempts to provide answers from a psychiatric viewpoint to the question posed by Tindale (1974) in the opening paragraph of his Aboriginal Tribes of Australia: "What happens when a few small groups of people of family size are wresting a living from a given area of land by searching for food, over whose presence or growth they have no direct control?"
(15) Launching his charity Rugby for Heroes in May 2012, Tindall said: "Obviously we're going to have a family.
(16) The Queen's granddaughter Zara Phillips and her rugby player husband, Mike Tindall, are expecting their first child.
(17) Tindall, 34, whom she married in July 2011, is a former England captain who plays for Gloucester.
(18) Stephen Tindale, executive director of Greenpeace, said: "Blair seems to be falling for the White House's spin operation.
(19) Former Greenpeace UK chief Stephen Tindale , who was working on air pollution in the department of the environment at the time, remembers a battle between environment and air pollution divisions.
(20) We have modified the techniques of Lindstrom and of Tindall to measure serum acetylcholine receptor antibody using human antigen bound to 125I-alpha Bungarotoxin.