Information om | Engelska ordet DYSTROPHIC


DYSTROPHIC

Antal bokstäver

10

Är palindrom

Nej

20
DY
HI
HIC
IC
OP
PH
PHI

4

14

18

CD
CDI
CDO
CDP
CDR


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Exempel på hur man kan använda DYSTROPHIC i en mening

  • Calcium phosphate is the usual constitution of microcalcifications of the breast, particularly dystrophic calcifications.
  • Five kinds of the condition are typically distinguished: calciphylaxis, idiopathic calcification, iatrogenic calcification, dystrophic calcification, and metastatic calcification.
  • Although the backronym of Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa Research Association has been used by DEBRA UK in the past, the organisation provides information, research funding and support for all forms of EB, not just dystrophic, which is one of three main sub-types of the condition; the others being EB simplex and junctional EB.
  • It is used to treat two types of epidermolysis bullosa, dystrophic and junctional, targeting partial-thickness skin wounds.
  • Jonathan "Jonny" Kennedy (4 November 1966 – 26 September 2003) was a British man who had a rare inherited condition known as dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (EB or DEB).
  • Yellow nail syndrome, also known as "primary lymphedema associated with yellow nails and pleural effusion", is a very rare medical syndrome that includes pleural effusions, lymphedema (due to under development of the lymphatic vessels) and yellow dystrophic nails.
  • When consisting of calcium phosphate, they are usually dystrophic calcifications (occurring in degenerated or necrotic tissue).
  • Jonathan Pitre (2000–2018), Canadian sufferer, and awareness champion, of the rare condition recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB).
  • A peripheral ossifying fibroma, also known as ossifying fibrous epulis, is “a gingival nodule which is composed of a cellular fibroblastic connective tissue stroma which is associated with the formation of randomly dispersed foci of mineralised products, which consists of bone, cementum-like tissue, or a dystrophic calcification.
  • The mouse strain DBA/2 is known for its proneness to calcify damaged tissues, a process called "dystrophic calcification".
  • In a classic paper, Raymond Lindeman outlined a hypothetical developmental sequence, with lakes progressively developing through oligotrophic, mesotrophic, and eutrophic stages, before senescing to a dystrophic stage and then filling completely with sediment.
  • Like most microtubule-associated proteins, tau is normally regulated by phosphorylation; however, in Alzheimer's disease, hyperphosphorylated tau accumulates as paired helical filaments that in turn aggregate into masses inside nerve cell bodies known as neurofibrillary tangles and as dystrophic neurites associated with amyloid plaques.
  • Perhaps counter-intuitively, it is this low nutritive, dystrophic content of the soil that is largely responsible for the extremely high biodiversity that characterises the Waterberg plateau.
  • Epidermolysis bullosa dystrophica or dystrophic EB (DEB) is an inherited disease affecting the skin and other organs.
  • Dominant dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa is most often caused by missense mutations, especially glycine substitutions in the collagenous domain.
  • Naumann is also widely known for his contributions to lake typology, and specifically for introducing the terms oligotrophic, eutrophic and dystrophic lake to our modern lake classification.
  • Bart syndrome, also known as aplasia cutis congenita type VI, is a rare genetic disorder characterized by the association of congenital localized absence of skin, mucocutaneous blistering and absent and dystrophic nails.
  • miR-31 is part of the circuit controlling late muscle differentiation by repression of dystrophin synthesis, and its expression is localised specifically to regenerating myoblasts of dystrophic muscles.
  • The word neuroinflammation has come to stand for chronic, central nervous system (CNS) specific, inflammation-like glial responses that may produce neurodegenerative symptoms such as plaque formation, dystrophic neurite growth, and excessive tau phosphorylation.
  • Beginning with the study of lithology of gravels from the bottom of Wigry, with time, the scope of research was extended to geology, hydrochemistry, hydrobiology, sediment dating and study of the evolution of the Wigry lake environment and neighbouring lakes (mainly dystrophic ones, called “suchar”).


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