Together, these objects not only attest to Golub's incisive perspective on the catastrophes that
afflict human civilization but also demonstrate his sustained critique of brutality and belligerent masculinity.
Going even further, he says that «the primary source of our fears, and all evil and
meanness afflicting the human spirit... was death all the time, and nothing else.»
Veterinarian Linda A. Detwiler helps to ensure that a fatal brain disease that can
afflict humans doesn't appear in U.S. cattle.
In afflicted humans, red blood cells become curved and can't easily flow through blood vessels.
Future plans are to utilize a similar model to investigate other common laryngeal diseases that
afflict the human population, including Reinke's edema and vocal fold paralysis.
The serious chronic complications that
afflict humans with diabetes mellitus are uncommon in diabetic cats.
Together, these paintings attest to Golub's incisive perspective on the catastrophes than
afflict human civilization and his critique of brutality and belligerent masculinity.
That approach both expresses and encourages an attitude that opposes not disease and disorder but the diseased and
afflicted human being.
The project's initial goal was to study hereditary diseases in domestic cats, which are similar in some cases to those that
afflict humans, including neurological disorders, and infectious and metabolic diseases.
Many deadly diseases that
afflict humans were originally acquired through contact with animals.
OK, so maybe not the cause of ALL illness, but I would argue that this problem is the root of the majority of the chronic diseases that
afflict humans and domesticated animals alike in our modern society.
Not only can mosquitoes carry diseases that
afflict humans, but they also can transmit several diseases and parasites that dogs and horses are very susceptible to.
The common cold is not communicable between species, and dogs suffer from a different type of cold that the kind that
afflicts humans, so your dog can't catch a cold from you — or vice versa.