「Spinal」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Spinal

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該当件数:374件

  • peared in twenty six first team games before a spinal ailment curtailed his career.
  • nt with dental caries, mandibular prognathism, spinal alignment, and disproportionate limb lengtheni
  • ch surgery and because of a failure during the spinal anaesthesia he had to be treated in a medical
  • immoveable (synarthrodial) joints, such as the spinal and sutural joints, respectively.
  • Kennedy's disease (KD) or X-linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA) or spinobul
  • apists; disability agencies; consultants; GPs; spinal and other rehabilitation units.
  • ract, sciatic nerve, cardiac outflow tract and spinal and sympathetic ganglia.
  • He was the first to use spinal anesthesia in the United States, the developer
  • It is a type of degenerative spinal arthritis found in the elderly.
  • uicide (during a period of failing health from spinal arthritis) in 1957.
  • it-tongue light is coiling serpant is steaming spinal avec ray gun
  • aplegia (SPG39), in which distal parts of long spinal axons degenerate leading to limb weakness and
  • For regional anesthesia, methods like spinal blocking are more difficult where scoliosis is
  • brownii based on holotype BMNH R1625, limb and spinal bones found by Alfred Brown in 1863.
  • posterior vertebral muscles, and sends a small spinal branch through the corresponding intervertebra
  • tin prevents buckling of the ligament into the spinal canal during extension, which would cause cana
  • and can also decrease the hole in the cervical spinal canal.
  • r epidural space, in the outermost part of the spinal canal.
  • owing an injury, revealed that he had a narrow spinal canal.
  • Sadly, Cinci developed spinal cancer in 2008.
  • n Virginia on May 5, 1999 after suffering from spinal cancer.
  • He is suffering from renal and spinal cancer.
  • ears of their marriage, she was diagnosed with spinal cancer.
  • After the war, he became ill with spinal caries, and it was "while he was bedridden wit
  • reated with BMP4 growth factor seem to improve spinal cell repair and regeneration when injected int
  • ina is a structure within the lower end of the spinal column of most vertebrates, that consists of n
  • It originates from the spinal column from above the cervical vertebra 7 (C7)
  • It originates from the spinal column from above the cervical vertebra 2 (C2)
  • It originates from the spinal column from above the cervical vertebra 5 (C5)
  • It originates from the spinal column from above the cervical vertebra 3 (C3)
  • accident fractured Scherbakov's skull and his spinal column in three places.
  • ly, the hole at the base of the skull over the spinal column (the foramen magnum) indicating a human
  • d the two almond sized hearts located near the spinal column close to the hip joint are thought to b
  • It originates from the spinal column from above the cervical vertebra 6 (C6)
  • ial bones, into the neck, where it entered the spinal column and severed the spinal cord.
  • placed in balance and alignment such that the spinal column supports it with minimal muscular effor
  • llar bones, the 3rd vertebra (key stone of the spinal column), the upper arm, the wrist (knife hand
  • as well as vertebrae from all sections of the spinal column, ribs, and bones from the shoulder, pel
  • inus the mandible, or lower jaw), parts of the spinal column, hands, and forelimbs, a nearly complet
  • the jaw bone and neck and came to rest by the spinal column.
  • cervical vertebra 5 (C5) is a vertebra of the spinal column.
  • cervical vertebra 3 (C3) is a vertebra of the spinal column.
  • long bones and the intervertebral discs of the spinal column.
  • at the base of the skull which connects to the spinal column.
  • f gray matter found in Rexed lamina VII of the spinal column.
  • injury to her neck muscles and had bruised her spinal column.The Russian news agency Interfax report
  • really be a further joint or more short on the spinal column; that is to say there should be a hollo
  • She was crippled by a spinal condition in 1869.
  • s daughter Naieya (b.2005), who suffers from a spinal condition and grade issues forced him to atten
  • mination, doctors diagnosed Yang's injury as a spinal contusion.
  • a half years old when he learned he suffered a spinal cord injury and would be a paraplegic.
  • Since the bullet had ricocheted off his spinal cord after striking his neck, he suffered perm
  • by JCAHO, and has 343 hospital beds, a 40-bed Spinal Cord Injury Center, and a 120-bed transitional
  • Strength training results are seen in the spinal cord well before any physiological muscular ad
  • f the second cervical vertebra, which leads to spinal cord damage.
  • which are present at the junction between the spinal cord and the medulla oblongata.
  • the neurology research program fourth, and the spinal cord research program 10th in NIH funding.
  • air Transportation Safety, Telerehabilitation, Spinal Cord Injury, and Wheeled Mobility.
  • o alleviate and repair damage to the brain and spinal cord which results from injury or neurodegener
  • It has been proposed for spinal cord injury; because it improves axonal rewiri
  • uch as cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, and spinal cord disease.
  • rather than from the brain) travel back to the spinal cord where they form synapses in its dorsal ho
  • The anterior median fissure of the spinal cord has an average depth of about 3 mm, but t
  • The size and shape of spinal cord at different levels are normal but anteri
  • γ-motoneurons are located in the brainstem and spinal cord and are smaller than their α-motoneuron c
  • of serial-section portrayal (thin slicing) of spinal cord specimens for histological study.
  • death, his work concerning nerve cells of the spinal cord was edited and published by anatomist Max
  • machandran died after surgery (a tumour in the spinal cord had been removed) at a Thiruvanathapuram
  • e Ca2+-activated K+ channels) in the brain and spinal cord and inhibits them.
  • irst Paralympics in 1960 were all afflicted by spinal cord injuries and required the use of a wheelc
  • o be paralyzed from permanently shattering his spinal cord while trying to save Janie.
  • irm handles include brain injury, burn injury, spinal cord injury, and auto accident injuries, accor
  • and in virtually all neurons in the brain and spinal cord that participate in synaptic transmission
  • animal has after subtracting the weight of the spinal cord from the brain.
  • for British World War II veteran patients with spinal cord injuries.
  • g the game today, Al Lucas suffered a presumed spinal cord injury and was brought to California Hosp
  • r motor neurons are those in the brainstem and spinal cord that directly supply the muscles.
  • nt with minor injuries, Pendergrass suffered a spinal cord injury, leaving him paralyzed from the wa
  • In humans, because the spinal cord stops growing in infancy while the bones
  • Lyndhurst Spinal Cord Centre
  • m the chest down even though X-rays showed his spinal cord to be severely compressed rather than bro
  • tion, which is dedicated to finding a cure for spinal cord injuries.
  • Anterior funiculus of the spinal cord
  • Posterior funiculus of the spinal cord
  • Lateral funiculus of the spinal cord
  • in the Tampa Veterans Administration Hospital spinal cord unit before entering law school, where sh
  • en a fellow medical student at B.U. suffered a spinal cord injury.
  • carotid arteries of both sides but leaving the spinal cord intact.
  • : it increases GABA-induced chloride influx in spinal cord neuron cultures, but has no significant i
  • ebellar granule neurons, inner ear hair cells, spinal cord interneurons, Merkel cells of the skin, a
  • estern University in his search for a cure for spinal cord injuries using embryonic stem cells.
  • he dynamics of neurotransmitter release in the spinal cord at the Miami Project to Cure Paralysis.
  • In his final game, Brown suffered a spinal cord contusion while assisting on a tackle of
  • Member, International Spinal Cord Injury Society, since 2006.
  • n of cells and even recovery of function after spinal cord injury in mice.
  • In the spinal cord is found the anterior white commissure.
  • Conus medullaris, the terminal end of the spinal cord
  • hich treats patients with post-polio symptoms, spinal cord injuries, strokes, and other disabilities
  • National Spinal Cord Injury Association, (NSCIA) Bethesda, MD
  • escape his tormentors; the fall resulted in a spinal cord injury that rendered him a paraplegic.
  • ty of ES-cell derived OPC transplantation into spinal cord injured individuals .
  • lifestyles for young people who have sustained spinal cord injuries.
  • avor are his age, the incomplete nature of the spinal cord injury, his constitution, and exceptional
  • Myoclonic movement originating at the spinal cord level is often a likely mechanism.
  • has used a wheelchair since the 1980s after a spinal cord aneurysm, but still maintains an active l
  • of nerve fibers which cross the midline of the spinal cord just anterior to the gray commissure (Rex
  • Dissection of deep back and spinal cord video: great view of the Cauda Equina
  • s the discovery that placing electrodes in the spinal cord can induce pleasurable feelings leading t
  • as those who have suffered a severe stroke or spinal cord injury, also stand to benefit from implan
  • d in the intermediolateral cell columns of the spinal cord between C8 and T2.
  • LRO helps people with spinal cord injuries get back into an active lifestyl
  • rmit for visualization of neural tracts in the spinal cord and brain via Diffusion Tensor Imaging.
  • The spinal cord is surrounded by a layer of protective pr
  • First person to perform a spinal cord stimulator trial in the People's Republic
  • boat to rock and resulted in her injuring her spinal cord and needing to use a wheelchair.
  • ated within a living organism, but outside the spinal cord and bone marrow.
  • ubstitution of impaired functions of brain and spinal cord by neurosurgical implantation of microele
  • ento, California - (acute burns, orthopaedics, spinal cord injury)
  • izations in the substantia gelatinosa of cat's spinal cord (1977)
  • able work on long term impact of patients with spinal cord injury.
  • In 1998, Betters suffered a spinal cord injury while skiing at Big Mountain in Wh
  • ille, United Kingdom (wheelchair athletes with spinal cord injuries) and in the Mitchel Athletic Com
  • he bedside of the patient W.M. Keck Center for spinal cord injury, the New Jersey Center for biomate
  • vertebrae in his back (L3,L4,S3), damaging his spinal cord in the process, which left him paralyzed
  • Following the spinal cord injury suffered by Marquis Daniels on the
  • istopher Reeve following the actor's notorious spinal cord injury.
  • and (through a central action of apamin on the spinal cord and a peripheral action in the form of me
  • uired for the generation of several classes of spinal cord dorsal interneurons; GDF7 specifically in
  • neuronal) ischemia, traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury.
  • f physicians treat patients with brain injury, spinal cord injury, a dual diagnosis of brain and spi
  • teardrop fracture is usually associated with a spinal cord injury, often a result of displacement of
  • Mansfield sustained a spinal cord injury, but remained with his soldiers an
  • esent in the bloodstream before it entered the spinal cord and caused paralysis.
  • the Paralympics in 1972 were all afflicted by spinal cord injuries and required the use of a wheelc
  • In 1985, Bruner suffered a spinal cord injury when he fell down the stairs at hi
  • in kinase is expressed solely in the brain and spinal cord and its localization is restricted to neu
  • He became an expert on spinal cord damage and served as a national consultan
  • e methylation decreases and myelination of the spinal cord is impaired.
  • o Amravathi Jail in Nagpur and was hurt in the spinal cord during the journey.
  • Qureshi S, Hecht AC: Epidemiology of Spinal Cord Injury, Atlas of Spine Trauma: Adult and
  • e periodic health evaluation for veterans with spinal cord injury and disorders".
  • It has no effects on the brain and spinal cord as it cannot diffuse through the blood-br
  • ween tabes dorsalis (nerve degeneration in the spinal cord) and paralysis in the mentally insane.
  • rane that surrounds and protects the brain and spinal cord), and pain caused by compressed or trauma
  • se caused by syphilis damaging the back of the spinal cord).
  • nd activates mu opioid receptors in the brain, spinal cord, stomach and intestine.
  • aw: In complete transverse lesion in the upper spinal cord, the tendon reflexes and muscular tone be
  • spina bifida, a birth defect that affects the spinal cord, and has been in a wheelchair since child
  • a protein enriched in various parts of brain, spinal cord, and testis.
  • GALR1 is widely expressed in the brain and spinal cord, as well as in peripheral sites such as t
  • It involved the spinal cord, medulla oblongata and the basal ganglia,
  • Nervous system: the nerves, brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves
  • sterior column-medial lemniscus pathway of the spinal cord, which also carries the sensations of fin
  • a motoring accident suffering injuries to his spinal cord, and set the end of Cadacross and the car
  • fish, U-II is secreted at the back part of the spinal cord, in a neurosecretory center called uroneu
  • the central nervous system, especially in the spinal cord, as a result of acute or chronic organoph
  • ferring and processing information with brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves and nerves.
  • Kani Basami (scissors), pressure holds to the spinal cord, submissive holds to the legs, the wrist
  • A portion of the spinal cord, showing its right lateral surface.
  • brain and close to the skull exterior), eyes, spinal cord, distal ileum (a part of the small intest
  • ntestines in cattle at all ages; brains, eyes, spinal cord, skull and vertebral column from animals
  • m, ventral neural tube, ependymal layer of the spinal cord, forebrain, midbrain, cerebellum, and in
  • ctical Researches on Diseases of the Brain and Spinal Cord, regarded as the first textbook in neurop
  • The hit compressed Stingley's spinal cord, breaking his fourth and fifth cervical v
  • a virus when he was three, which spread to his spinal cord, causing paralysis.
  • without a brain, but could not work without a spinal cord, and summarized that voluntary behavior w
  • bundle of tentacles connects with the Rykor's spinal cord, allowing the brain of the Kaldane to int
  • ells move dorsally and surround the developing spinal cord, forming the vertebral arch.
  • ily known for his studies of the brain and the spinal cord.
  • ve destruction of nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord.
  • ve destruction of nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord.
  • ld not be removed due to its location near the spinal cord.
  • degeneration of the cerebellum, brain stem and spinal cord.
  • muscle spindles via a reflex arc involving the spinal cord.
  • ulting firm to have a serious problem with his spinal cord.
  • This is an anesthetic injection into the spinal cord.
  • It later becomes sensory axon part of the spinal cord.
  • s and congestion of liver, kidneys, brain, and spinal cord.
  • nd sixth cervical vertebrae and compressed the spinal cord.
  • enters in the lumbar and sacral regions of the spinal cord.
  • ge between CSF and nervous tissue of brain and spinal cord.
  • se drugs have no effect when injected into the spinal cord.
  • matter of brain, nerves, neural tissue, and in spinal cord.
  • the nucleus proprius in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.
  • e bends the neuraxis between the brain and the spinal cord.
  • tia nigra, raphe complex, locus coeruleus, and spinal cord.
  • as in the ventral horn and dorsal horn of the spinal cord.
  • appears to restrict dural movement toward the spinal cord.
  • for his microscopic research of the brain and spinal cord.
  • lateral portion of the dorsal funiculus of the spinal cord.
  • sustained permanent injuries to her brain and spinal cord.
  • surgery to remove a nerve-sheath tumor on his spinal cord.
  • nd physiology of the medulla oblongata and the spinal cord.
  • ons is in segment II of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.
  • to selectively destroy neurons in the brain or spinal cord.
  • ng the ventricular system of the brain and the spinal cord.
  • ed his heart and another partially severed his spinal cord.
  • upper 3 cervical segments, the dura mater, and spinal cord.
  • e hind legs because of the degeneration of the spinal cord.
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