Sentences with phrase «into incurable»

BY a particularly nasty irony, cancers that have been all but eradicated by conventional treatment can often regrow into incurable tumours.
The leadership of the party must take quick measures as to how to curb this canker before it develops into an incurable cancer.
If your child does not get necessary skills to sleep well, he may grow into an incurable adult insomniac, chronically suffering from sleepiness and dependent on sleeping pills.
Last September The War Cry noted that the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) had agreed in principle to allow the mixing of animal and human genetic material for research into incurable diseases and that the resultant 99.9 per cent human mixture would be human bits, not human beings.

Not exact matches

Intrinsically prehensions are not atomic and can be divided into other prehensions and combined into other prehensions, yet «a prehension, considered genetically, can never free itself from the incurable atomicity of the actual entity to which it belongs» (PR 360).
I remember running into a father just a few months before his child died from incurable cancer.
And here is a link to the Help L.R.Knost Fight a Rare, Incurable Cancer & Continue Sharing the Gift of Peaceful Parenting with the World which, in conjunction with YouCaring, is a campaign the positive parenting community is joining together in to raise funds to donate peaceful parenting books and resources to hospitals and crisis family centers and to translate peaceful parenting resources into Spanish and expand distribution internationally along with a fund to help with my medical expenses as I battle neuroendocrine cancer.
He had been amazed by a fossil he had seen in a museum and, being an incurable model builder, had talked the producers of a movie being made about natural and artificial flight into funding his robotic pterodactyl.
Treatment that targets the DNA in HIV - infected cells has been challenging because the persistent, incurable human immunodeficiency virus is able to insert its own DNA into the DNA of any infected cell while disabling that cell's ability to die to save other cells from a viral invasion.
Relief quickly turned into concern when I found out that ulcerative colitis is incurable, and whats more, its associated with a higher risk of colorectal cancer.
It is also worth mentioning that there are plenty of skin specialists (dermatologists) unfortunately with rather inflexible or even «incurable» belief systems when it comes to psoriasis, who play right into the hands of their psoriasis patients by continually prescribing strong drugs for both internal and external use.
It seems like Radiohead wants its listeners to fall into a deep, incurable depression after listening to their albums back to back.
But rather than retreat into a petrified oblivion, Bauby patiently dictated a book, a slim memoir entitled «The Diving Bell and the Butterfly» that deals with his recognition and acceptance of this most likely incurable condition.
Of the 224 animals that were in or take into RAIN in 2016, only one pet was euthanized due to an incurable medical issue that was causing him excruciating pain.
Watching the sun go down on these particular bridges and pondering how so many incredible sights can be squeezed into such a small area is for incurable romantics and the rest alike — there's something for everyone.
She traveled to Ladakh in 2008 and that trip turned her into a hopeless and incurable travel addict.
The story of The Last of Us sees the world overrun by an incurable outbreak that turns people into zombie - like creatures, sending the world into chaos.
(a) they have a serious and incurable illness, disease or disability; (b) they are in an advanced state of irreversible decline in capability; (c) that illness, disease or disability or that state of decline causes them enduring physical or psychological suffering that is intolerable to them and that can not be relieved under conditions that they consider acceptable; and (d) their natural death has become reasonably foreseeable, taking into account all of their medical circumstances, without a prognosis necessarily having been made as to the specific length of time that they have remaining.
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