Nghĩa của từ amebae bằng Tiếng Việt

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Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "amebae", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Y Khoa Anh - Việt. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ amebae, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ amebae trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Y Khoa Anh - Việt

1. Looking for Amebae? Find out information about Amebae

2. Amebae meaning in the Cambridge English Dictionary Amebae definition: 1

3. Life Cycle (nonpathogenic intestinal Amebae): Entamoeba coli, E

4. Looking for amoebas, amoebae, amebas, Amebae? Find out information about amoebas, amoebae, amebas, Amebae

5. Synonyms for Amebae in Free Thesaurus

6. Infection with any of various Amebae

7. Amebas were previously Explanation of Amebae

8. Amebae meaning: plural of ameba US

9. Once in the brain, the Amebae cause granulomatous amebic encephalitis (GAE)

10. The Amebae – Chapter 7 Old taxonomy: Phylum Sarcomastigophora Subphylum Sarcodina New taxonomy: Phylum Sarcodina or Super-Group Amebozoa Amebae move and feed through the _____ _____ Some Amebae may have a _____as well in their life cycle (indicates evolution from the Mastigophora).

11. The addition of heat-inactivated immune serum did not enable leukocytes to kill Amebae, nor did it protect these host cells from Amebae.

12. Amebicides are agents that destroy or kill Amebae

13. The nonpathogenic intestinal Amebae include several Entamoeba species (E

14. Amebas were previously Explanation of amoebas, amoebae, amebas, Amebae

15. Free-living Amebae cycle between 2 distinct life-states: trophozoites

16. (A) Low-power view of a CNS section showing multitudes of Amebae, H&E stain, X100; (B) Amebae from the same area as in A reacted with rabbit

17. The diagnosis depends on benign histology and the demonstration of amebae.

18. Amoeba vs Amoeban; Amoeban vs amoebean; amoebae vs amebae; amoebal vs amoebae;

19. Access Free-living Amebae infections national notifiable time periods and case definitions

20. Amebae were identified using morphological and physiological criteria, immunohistochemical staining procedures and molecular methods.

21. The prey size of testate Amebae must be limited by the shell aperture size.

22. Amebae are a taxonomically diverse group of phagocytic organisms residing in every major lineage of eukaryotes

23. They are used to eradicate the parasitic species of Amebae in animals or humans.

24. Free-living Amebae (FLA) are microscopic, single-celled, living organisms found worldwide in water and soil

25. In many cases the “Hartmannella” were associated with typical amebae of the genus Entamoeba, but we could see such infections also were the Hartmannella-types, were not mixed with other amebae. In spite of that we found the characteristic amebic alterations of the tissue.

26. A few testate Amebae can be planktonic (e.g., Difflugia), but most live in soils and in Sphagnum bogs

27. FLARP : Several free-living Amebae can infect the central nervous system (CNS) and cause devastating, usually fatal disease

28. Primary Amebic Meningoencephalitis (PAM) is a rare and usually deadly disease caused by infection with a single celled organism (Amebae), Naegleria fowleri, which cause inflammation of the lining of the brain and spinal cord.The Naegleria Amebae is distributed widely around the world

29. Many strains of the complex “Hartmannella-Acanthamoeba” and “Naegleria” amebae could be isolated from cold-blooded vertebrates, especially reptiles.

30. The morphology of the nucleus and the size of these amebae separate them distinctly from the classical genus Entamoeba.

31. Amebae killed neutrophils, PBMC, MC, and MC-derived macrophages (P less than 0.001), without loss of parasite viability

32. The Amebae will feed on bacteria, multiply, and cover the surface of the plates within a few days

33. Purpose of review: Acanthamoeba spp., Balamuthia mandrillaris, and Naegleria fowleri, although free-living Amebae, also cause devastating diseases in humans leading to death

34. At pH 7.0 and at 36°C optimal adhesion rates of the amebae were observed in the range from 80% to 95%.

35. Amebae, which lack microtubules except during mitosis, differentiate into flagellates with a fixed shape and a complex microtubule cytoskeleton in 120 min

36. It is to conclude that these amebae have a pathogenic capability against the reptile tissue. In six cases the brain was also infected.

37. The NLRP3 Inflammasome Is a Pathogen Sensor for Invasive Entamoeba histolytica via Activation of α5β1 Integrin at the Macrophage-Amebae Intercellular Junction

38. Amebae are particularly abundant in soils (10 3 –10 7 per gram dry weight), where together with heterotrophic flagellates they probably control bacterial abundance

39. Infection with any of various Amebae; an asymptomatic carrier state in most individuals, but diseases ranging from chronic, mild diarrhea to fulminant dysentery may occur.

40. Amebae are pervasive in soil and water environments and are recognized for their ability to harbor pathogens that drastically affect ecologic communities (14–19)

41. Fecal leukocytes may be mistaken for Amebae, so fixed and stained fecal smears (iodine, trichrome, iron hematoxylin, or periodic acid-Schiff reaction) may be necessary for identification

42. The genus Acanthamoeba includes several species of opportunistic free-living Amebae that might invade the brain through the blood, probably from a primary infection in the skin (from ulcers or dermatitis) or sinuses