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Internal Organs       Article     History   Tree Map
  Encyclopedia of Keywords > Sound Waves > Internal Organs   Michael Charnine

Keywords and Sections
LUNGS
ULTRASOUND
BLOODSTREAM
EMBRYO
INCISION
INFECTIONS
GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT
FISH
MOLLUSKS
COMPLICATIONS
SEVERE INTERNAL BLEEDING
KNOCKOUTS
FORMATION
LAB TESTS
DISEASE
URINARY BLADDER
CELLS
SMALL BLOOD VESSELS
DIAGNOSTIC PURPOSES
KILLING WHALES
X-RAY PROCEDURE
DETAIL
IMMUNOHISTOCHEMICALLY
LINE CERTAIN INTERNAL ORGANS
VISCERAL PERITONEUM
INTERNAL ORGANS ROT
LINE VARIOUS BODY CAVITIES
DIFFUSE NEUROPATHY
SERIOUS SYMPTOMS
LAPAROSCOPE
ABDOMINAL WALL
VISCERAL
VISCERA
SOFT INTERNAL ORGANS
LARGE INTERNAL ORGANS
CONTROL INTERNAL ORGANS
HIGH-FREQUENCY SOUND WAVES
COVER INTERNAL ORGANS
VIEW INTERNAL ORGANS
SKELETON
SKULL
SQUID
MOLLUSCS
FORM
SENSATIONS
SENSORY
Review of Short Phrases and Links

    This Review contains major "Internal Organs"- related terms, short phrases and links grouped together in the form of Encyclopedia article. Please click on Move Up to move good phrases up.

Definitions Submit/More Info Add a definition

  1. The internal organs are suspended by ligaments that attach to the spine and pelvis.
  2. Internal organs are palpated, or felt from the outside, to determine if they are enlarged. Move Up
  3. Many internal organs are affected, and the resulting problem depends on which organs are most affected. Move Up

Lungs Submit/More Info Add phrase and link

  1. Ribs surround the chest (Latin thorax) of land vertebrates, and protect the lungs, heart, and other internal organs of the thoracic cavity.
  2. The next twelve pairs (located in the chest area) bring impulses to and from the trunk of the body, including internal organs such as the heart and lungs. Move Up
  3. Protection — Bones can serve to protect internal organs, such as the skull protecting the brain or the ribs protecting the heart and lungs. Move Up

Ultrasound Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. A probe at the end of the endoscope is used to bounce high-energy sound waves (ultrasound) off internal organs to make a picture (sonogram).
  2. In an ultrasound, high-frequency sound waves that humans cannot hear are bounced off tissues and internal organs. Move Up
  3. Ultrasound, a test in which high-frequency sound waves are bounced off internal organs and tissues. Move Up

Bloodstream Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. When this happens your pet will experience pain and will become internally ill from the bacteria spreading to internal organs via the bloodstream.

Embryo Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. By the end of fifth week, the embryo is almost 0.5 inch (about 7 to 9 millimeters) long and has all of its internal organs.

Incision Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Occasionally, it requires an incision from the breastbone to just above the umbilicus in order to gain access to the internal organs.

Infections Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Vaginal infection and infections in urinary tract should not be ignored as they may cause further inflammation in the internal organs.

Gastrointestinal Tract Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Hemorrhage of the gastrointestinal tract, serosal, internal organs and lymph nodes 5.
  2. These are invasive infections of the internal organs with the organism gaining entry by the lungs, gastrointestinal tract or through intravenous lines. Move Up

Fish Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Working in the Netherlands, Clusius admitted that he couldn't dissect the fish to see their internal organs.

Mollusks Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. All mollusks possess a flexible body wall, which surrounds a body cavity containing the internal organs.

Complications Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Adhesion-related twisting and pulling of internal organs can result in complications such as infertility and chronic pelvic pain.

Severe Internal Bleeding Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Damage to the internal organs can cause severe internal bleeding, or hemorrhage.

Knockouts Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Included are separate chapters on knockouts, attacking the internal organs, and dim mak's effects on the heart.

Formation Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. This stage is characterized by the formation of most internal organs and external body structures.

Lab Tests Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Screening may involve a physical exam, lab tests, or procedures to look at internal organs.

Disease Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. A disease that can cause thickening, hardening, or tightening of the skin, blood vessels and internal organs.
  2. In some cases, cancer involves the internal organs, so symptoms often aren't seen until the disease is well advanced and euthanasia is the only alternative. Move Up
  3. Because these tumors arise in internal organs there is often little warning that they are present prior to time they cause severe clinical signs of disease. Move Up

Urinary Bladder Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. This involuntary muscle is found in the walls of internal organs, and in the digestive tract, blood vessels, and urinary bladder.

Cells Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Some of the general front-line immune defences are the skin and various membranes, but a variety of internal organs and cells provide very specific defences.

Small Blood Vessels Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Scleroderma - an activation of immune cells which produces scar tissue in the skin, internal organs, and small blood vessels.

Diagnostic Purposes Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Auscultate: To listen to the sounds made by the internal organs of the body for diagnostic purposes.

Killing Whales Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Moronuki says killing whales allows marine biologists to study their internal organs.

X-Ray Procedure Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. An x-ray procedure that makes it possible to see internal organs in motion.

Detail Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. While much information can be obtained from a standard x-ray, a lot of detail about internal organs and other structures is not available.
  2. Topics such as the delayed death touch, knockouts, and attacking the internal organs are explained in detail using modern medical science. Move Up

Immunohistochemically Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. CYP1A1 expression in epithelia of selected internal organs of beluga whale determined immunohistochemically.

Line Certain Internal Organs Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Cancer that begins in cells that line certain internal organs and that have glandular (secretory) properties.

Visceral Peritoneum Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The inner layer, the visceral peritoneum, is wrapped around the internal organs that are located inside the intraperitoneal cavity.
  2. The visceral peritoneum covers the internal organs and makes up most of the outer layer of the intestinal tract. Move Up

Internal Organs Rot Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. When a Sperm Whale dies, its internal organs rot, until the animal becomes little more than a semi-liquid mass trapped inside the skin.

Line Various Body Cavities Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. They line various body cavities that are exposed to the external environment and internal organs.

Diffuse Neuropathy Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The two categories of diffuse neuropathy are peripheral neuropathy affecting the feet and hands and autonomic neuropathy affecting the internal organs.

Serious Symptoms Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. More serious symptoms include bleeding into joints and internal organs.

Laparoscope Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The laparoscope is then inserted through this incision to look at the internal organs.

Abdominal Wall Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In this test a jelly is applied to the skin and a probe is moved over the abdominal wall to capture images of the internal organs.
  2. This elevates the abdominal wall above the internal organs like a dome to create a working and viewing space. Move Up

Visceral Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Visceral pain is the subtype of nociceptive pain that involves the internal organs.
  2. Chinese-medicine theory assigns areas of the tongue to internal organs, and various lingual conditions to visceral conditions. Move Up

Viscera Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Autonomic neuropathy is also called visceral neuropathy because it affects the viscera (the internal organs).

Soft Internal Organs Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Bones protect soft internal organs from injury.
  2. Because they are scavengers, ostracods were also found in abundance near some of the fish, with their soft internal organs equally well preserved. Move Up

Large Internal Organs Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Other common symptoms are a large tongue, large internal organs, and defects of the abdominal wall near the navel.

Control Internal Organs Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. It most commonly affects the nerves to the feet, but any nerves can be involved including those that control internal organs.

High-Frequency Sound Waves Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Ultrasound (Also called sonography.) - A diagnostic imaging technique which uses high-frequency sound waves to create an image of the internal organs.

Cover Internal Organs Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Carcinoma is cancer that begins in the skin or in tissues that line or cover internal organs.

View Internal Organs Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Ultrasounds are used to view internal organs as they function (in "real time," like a live TV broadcast), and to assess blood flow through various vessels.

Skeleton Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The skeleton is the framework of the human anatomy, supporting the body and protecting its internal organs.

Skull Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Bones such as the skull and rib cage protect internal organs from injury.

Squid Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. A squid has three hearts, one pumps blood to internal organs; two pump blood to the gills in the mantle cavity.
  2. Mercury becomes concentrated in their internal organs when they eat contaminated fish and squid. Move Up

Molluscs Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Like molluscs, brachiopods have a mantle, an epithelium that lines the shell and encloses the internal organs.

Form Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. This form may cause disease that affects multiple internal organs and has a mortality rate that can reach 90-100% often within 48 hours.
  2. According to Chinese medical theory, there are 14 major meridians that form an invisible network connecting the body surface with the internal organs. Move Up

Sensations Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Sensations can also be visual or involve feelings on the skin or in the internal organs.

Sensory Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The vagus, as mentioned above, is both sensory and motor, serving the heart, lungs and other internal organs.

Categories Submit/More Info

  1. Sound Waves
  2. Muscles Move Up
  3. Nervous System > Peripheral Nervous System > Autonomic Nervous System > Autonomic Neuropathy Move Up
  4. Observation > Perception > Senses > Skin Move Up
  5. Neuroanatomy > Nervous System > Peripheral Nervous System > Autonomic Nervous System Move Up

Related Keywords

    * Abdomen * Abdominal Cavity * Autonomic Nervous System * Autonomic Neuropathy * Bile * Bleeding * Blood * Blood Vessels * Body * Body Parts * Bone * Bones * Brain * Central Nervous System * Connective * Ct Scan * Damage * Echoes * Endoderm * Endoscope * Endoscopy * Eyes * Function * Gallbladder * Gangrene * Gastropods * Glands * Gut * Heart * Images * Internal Organ * Intestine * Joints * Kidney * Kidneys * Life Threatening * Ligaments * Lining * Locomotion * Mesoderm * Mucous Membranes * Muscles * Neck * Nerves * Nervous System * Nourishment * Parts * Patient * Peripheral Nervous System * Picture * Procedure * Ribs * Skin * Soft Tissues * Sound Waves * Spinal Cord * Spine * Spleen * Stomach * Surgeon * Thorax * Tissues * Torsion * Toxins * Trauma * Vagus Nerve * X-Ray * X-Rays
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  Short phrases about "Internal Organs"
  Originally created: April 04, 2011.
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