Suppose that with your symptoms and lab findings, the chances are 80 percent that you've
got disease X, a nuisance in the long run but not catastrophic.
Not exact matches
Drug company A that makes drug
X gives presents to the people who write the guidelines for treating this
disease and suddenly drug
X is the one that
gets a mention in the guidelines.
«If you want to develop a therapy for autoimmune
diseases, the idea is, How do we
get Xist to the inactive
X chromosome and keep it there so we maintain dosage compensation in these B cells.»
Boys
get the
disease because it is on the
X chromosome, and males have only one
X chromosome.
Ideally, with the new quantitative tools being developed at QBI, we will be able to differentiate different
disease states into different subcategories as well as determine that patient A should
get treatment
X, while patient B should
get treatment Y.
A new genetic discovery could help scientists understand exactly how one
X chromosome in each cell of a female's body
gets «silenced» — and perhaps lead to better treatment for
X-linked
diseases.
if «
X» included his wife in term insurance (eg.bajaj allianz offering inclusion of wife) then wife of «
X» died during pregnancy due to some jaundice or any other
disease (in policy tenure of his husband), will «
X»
get sum assured amount?
if «
X» included his wife in joint life term insurance (eg.bajaj allianz offering inclusion of wife) then wife of «
X» died during pregnancy due to some jaundice or any other
disease (in policy tenure of his husband), will «
X»
get sum assured amount?
Although the mode of inheritance is recessive, male dogs born from a carrier female require just one copy of the mutation, the other gene linked to the
X chromosome from which
disease gets its name.
if «
X» included his wife in joint life term insurance (eg.bajaj allianz offering inclusion of wife) then wife of «
X» died during pregnancy due to some jaundice or any other
disease (in policy tenure of his husband), will «
X»
get sum assured amount?