Đặt câu với từ "aplasia"

1. Existem diversos tipos de Aplasias, tais como aplasia medular, aplasia arterial e aplasia óssea

2. How to say Aplasia in English? Pronunciation of Aplasia with 1 audio pronunciation, 2 synonyms, 5 translations and more for Aplasia.

3. Membranous Aplasia cutis is a …

4. Existen numerosos tipos de Aplasias, entre los cuales la aplasia medular que alcanza la médula ósea, la aplasia arterial y la aplasia ósea

5. Due to drugs - D60.9 Acquired pure red cell Aplasia, unspecified; adult - D60.9 Acquired pure red cell Aplasia, unspecified; chronic - D60.0 Chronic acquired pure red cell Aplasia

6. 1 word related to Aplasia: dysplasia

7. Synonyms for Aplasia in Free Thesaurus

8. What does Aplasias mean? Plural form of aplasia

9. Hypoplasia is a see also of Aplasia

10. Aplasia, “a” means “no” and “plasia” means development

11. It is usually unilateral, as bilateral pulmonary Aplasia

12. Acquired - D60.9 Acquired pure red cell Aplasia, unspecified

13. Michel Aplasia, also known as complete labyrinthine Aplasia (CLA), is a congenital abnormality of the inner ear.It is characterized by the bilateral absence of differentiated inner ear structures and results in complete deafness ().Michel Aplasia should not be confused with …

14. Aplasia is a condition in which an organ, limb, or other body part does not develop. In most cases, Aplasia is obvious at birth

15. Without the radius bone, individuals with radial Aplasia are born

16. Aplasia of the proximal phalanges of the toes; Recent clinical studies

17. Aplasia cutis congenita is a congenital disorder seen in newborns

18. Aplasia cutis congenita may be due to a mutation of certain genes

19. Retrocochlear anakusis is rarely caused by aplasia or atrophia of the cochlear nerv.

20. Red cell (with thymoma) - D60.9 Acquired pure red cell Aplasia, unspecified

21. Medical definition of Aplasia: incomplete or faulty development of an organ or part.

22. So Aplasia means “no development”, and “hypo” means “under” so hypoplasia is “under formation”

23. 1993 52 26 Testicular atrophy Rat 50 25 Tubular germinal aplasia Lee et al.

24. Aplasia Cutis Congenita is a rare disorder with a complicated pattern of inheritance

25. Listen Pure red cell Aplasia (PRCA) is a rare condition that affects the bone marrow

26. Müllerian Aplasia and hyperandrogenism is a condition that affects the reproductive system in females

27. Müllerian Aplasia and hyperandrogenism is a condition that affects the reproductive system in females

28. Aplasia cutis congenita (ACC) refers to any case in which there is congenital absence of skin at birth

29. ENT findings in the syndrome include profound bilateral hearing loss, aplasia of the alae nasi and dental malformations.

30. ‘Patients undergoing such treatment are at high risk for bone marrow Aplasia.’ ‘Further tests, including a bone marrow sample for leukaemia, failed to confirm a diagnosis but the illness was linked to a rare from of pure red blood cell Aplasia.’

31. While most people with aplasia Cutis congenita have no other abnormalities, some people have congenital malformations involving the

32. As nouns the difference between Aplasia and agenesis is that Aplasia is (pathology) a condition marked by the incomplete development, or absence, of an organ or tissue while agenesis is any imperfect development of the body, or any anomaly of organization.

33. Agenesis or Aplasia of the kidney is an anatomical quantitative anomaly, in which the agenesis of the kidney is the complete absence of an organ, and the term Aplasia implies that the organ is represented by an undeveloped bud, lacking a normal renal structure.

34. What is complex cutis Aplasia Complex cutis Aplasia is a rare disorder characterized by the absence of a portion of the skin on the scalp. In most cases, the disorder occurs as a solitary defect, but it can also appear as multiple lesions.

35. Anaemia, neutropenia Thrombocytopenia, lymphadenopathy, lymphopenia Aplastic anaemia* Pure red cell aplasia, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura

36. Pure red cell Aplasia (PRCA) is a rare disorder that presents with anemia secondary to the failure of erythropoiesis

37. Nonsyndromic Aplasia cutis congenita is a condition in which babies are born with localized areas of missing skin (lesions)

38. Objective To identify factors predicting performance outcomes following cochlear implantation in patients with cochlear nerve Aplasia or hypoplasia

39. The symptoms concerned were agenesia, displaced tooth buds, rotated or tilted incisors, aplasia and microdontia of lateral incisors.

40. ‘Patients undergoing such treatment are at high risk for bone marrow Aplasia.’ ‘Further tests, including a bone marrow sample for leukaemia, failed to confirm a diagnosis but the illness was linked to a rare from of pure red blood cell Aplasia.’

41. Aplasia of the cervical canal with the functioning uterus is the most favorable option in terms of the possibility of

42. Other acquired pure red cell Aplasias: D609: Acquired pure red cell aplasia, unspecified: D6101: Constitutional (pure) red blood cell aplasia: D6109: Other constitutional aplastic anemia: D611: Drug-induced aplastic anemia: D612: Aplastic anemia due to other external agents: D613: Idiopathic aplastic anemia: D61810: Antineoplastic chemotherapy

43. Aplasia cutis may partially heal before delivery and appear as a hairless, atrophic, membranous, parchmentlike or fibrotic scar

44. Pulmonary Aplasia is a rare congenital pathology in which there is unilateral or bilateral absence of lung tissue

45. In a handful of cases, a woman with vaginal aplasia has received a successful vagina transplant donated by her mother.

46. Complex Cutis aplasia is a rare disorder characterized by the absence of a portion of the skin on the scalp

47. Aplasia cutis congenita is a skin disorder which causes children to be born with a missing patch of skin

48. Other acquired pure red cell Aplasias: D609: Acquired pure red cell aplasia, unspecified: D6101: Constitutional (pure) red blood cell aplasia: D6109: Other constitutional aplastic anemia: D611: Drug-induced aplastic anemia: D612: Aplastic anemia due to other external agents: D613: Idiopathic aplastic anemia: D61810: Antineoplastic chemotherapy

49. It is distinguished from pulmonary agenesis, although similar, the main difference being that there is a short-blind ending bronchus in Aplasia 3.

50. Aplasia cutis congenita (ACC) is a rare, heterogeneous group of congenital disorders characterized by focal or widespread absence of the skin [ 1,2 ]

51. Aplasia (countable and uncountable, plural Aplasias) (pathology) A condition marked by the incomplete development, or entire absence, of an organ or tissue.

52. Ureteral Aplasia (agenesis) is the lack of formation of a recognizable ureter, and hypoplasia is the presence of a notably small-diameter ureter

53. Diamond-Blackfan anemia is an autosomal recessive cause of pure red cell Aplasia that is often associated with other abnormalities; the anemia becomes

54. As nouns the difference between hypoplasia and Aplasia is that hypoplasia is underdevelopment or incomplete development of a tissue or organ, especially when caused by an inadequate or below-normal number of cells while Aplasia is (pathology) a condition marked by the incomplete development, or absence, of an organ or tissue.

55. In two female patients with adrenogenital syndrome (AGS) construction of the distal vagina was necessary. Four patients had vaginal aplasia and needed a complete neovagina.

56. Aplasia cutis congenita may occur by itself or as a symptom of other disorders such as Johanson-Blizzard syndrome and Adams-Oliver syndrome.

57. Aplasia (plural: Aplasias) refers to the absence of development of an organ or structure in the body, despite the presence of the anlage

58. Introduction: Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser (MRKH) syndrome is a congenital disorder clinically defined by primary amenorrhea and infertility, congenital aplasia of the uterus and upper vagina.

59. Click here for Patient Education Acquired pure red blood cell Aplasia is a disorder of erythroid precursors that results in an isolated normocytic anemia

60. Aplasia [ah-pla´zhah] defective development or complete absence of an organ due to failure of development of the embryonic tissues or cells

61. Inherited or Congenital Pure Red Cell Aplasia (Diamond-Blackfan Anemia): Diamond-Blackfan anemia is a genetic condition usually diagnosed during the first two years of life

62. Aplasia Cutis congenita is a condition in which there is congenital (present from birth) absence of skin, with or without the absence of underlying structures such as bone

63. General Discussion Acquired Pure Red Cell Aplasia is a rare bone marrow disorder characterized by an isolated decline of red blood cells (erythrocytes) produced by the bone marrow

64. Aplasia of a single cell line in the bone marrow is less common than are the trilineage Aplasias described earlier, and it may be congenital or acquired

65. Aplasia - failure of some tissue or organ to develop dysplasia - abnormal development (of organs or cells) or an abnormal structure resulting from such growth Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection

66. D60.8 Other acquired pure red cell Aplasias D60.9 Acquired pure red cell aplasia, unspecified Abbreviations used here: NEC Not elsewhere classifiable This abbreviation in the Tabular List represents “other specified”

67. Pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) characterized by complete and selective absence of erythroid precursors was observed in a 60 year old female and unsuccessfully treated with corticosteroids and androgens during 21 months.

68. Acquired pure red cell Aplasia (PRCA) is a rare condition of profound anemia characterized by a very low reticulocyte count and the virtual absence of erythroid precursors in the bone marrow

69. This page includes the following topics and synonyms: Cell-Mediated Immunodeficiency, Cell mediated Immunity Disorder, T-Cell Disorder, Severe Combined Immunodeficiency, SCID, Ataxia Telangiectasia, Wiscott-Aldrich Syndrome, DiGeorge Syndrome, Velocardiofacial Syndrome, Congenital Thymic Aplasia.

70. The first showed a typical aplasia of the right lung, whereby the complete lack of the homolateral pulmonary vessels was confirmed by angiocardiography. Further anomalies were an incomplete cleft lip and a hypospadia.

71. The term was first used by Cushing (1), although the entity was described earlier and has been known by many names: congenital ankylosis, aplasia of the interphalangeal joints, phalangeal Anarthrosis, and hereditary multiple ankylosing arthropathy.

72. Caudal regression syndrome (CRS), also known as Caudal regression sequence, Caudal dysplasia, Caudal aplasia, femoral hypoplasia, phocomelic diabetic embryopathy, or sacral agenesis, is a spectrum of anomalies involving the Caudal end of the trunk

73. Aplasia of the cervix is a frequent pathology that accompanies the underdevelopment of the uterus itself, but the changes are more pronounced in the neck region, which casts doubt on the possibility of any normal pregnancy

74. Pure red cell Aplasia (PRCA) is a rare disorder of blood production in which the bone marrow, the spongy tissue in the center of the bones, fails to function in an adequate manner resulting in anemia

75. Cretin Congenital hypothyroidism Endocrinology A person with defective thyroxine or thyroglobulin synthesis Etiology Goiter, iodine deficiency in the mother while pregnant; thyroid gland defects–aplasia, hypoplasia or dysgenesis Clinical Cold intolerance, serosal effusions, myxedema, ↓ metabolic rate, ↑ cholesterol, profound mental retardation–hypothyroid idiocy, ↓ growth.

76. Aplasia cutis congenita is a condition in which there is congenital (present from birth) absence of skin, with or without the absence of underlying structures such as bone. I It most commonly affects the scalp, but any location of the body can be affected

77. The educational leaflet shall contain the following key elements: That the use of epoetin alfa products can cause immunogenicity which in rare cases may lead to Pure Red Cell Aplasia (PRCA) That with other epoetin products, the risk of immunogenicity in Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) is increased with the subcutaneous (sc) route. There is insufficient data on Abseamed to know the size of any increased immunogenicity risk with subcutaneous use Therefore, the sc route is not recommended for patients with CKD The loss of efficacy or other symptoms of the development of immunogenicity should be investigated Any suspected case of Pure Red Cell Aplasia or development of immunogenicity should be reported to the MAH