Sentences with phrase «lack of chemicals needed»

There are many advantages to digital x-rays including a shorter time to take the x-ray, lack of chemicals needed to process an x-ray and less radiation exposure to your pet and veterinarian.

Not exact matches

Those chemicals produce the alert energy necessary to function despite the lack of sleep caused by an infant's need of frequent care and feeding.
During the CSF meeting Dr Joanne (Jo) Lloyd of the Chemical Industries Association outlined some possible work areas for those SMEs which will have to register in 2018 in particular an extension of the REACH navigator tool, the need of a clear registration roadmap and the lack of consistent guidance on how to tackle registration as cost - effectively as possible.
The macho posturing is troubling, as is the lack of a clear plan - but chemical attacks need an international response.
«Right now, we lack the data needed to assess the ecological impacts of most of the synthetic chemicals in use today.
This is why you need to know that a lot of reasons can contribute to a low testosterone level and these are things as simple as diets that won't provide your body with enough material to create testosterone, lack of physical ability or as complex as exposure to chemical estrogens or modern food lacking nutrients.
Not only do we need to take our unique biology into consideration, but external factors as well — elevated stress levels and a lack of sleep are both known to promote weight gain, as does our everyday exposure to unhealthy chemicals.
They are usually caused by malabsorption of certain nutrients, or by the lack of certain enzymes needed to break down certain chemicals in food.
No need, and yes, rather dumb * of me to forget the decay products (* or perhaps just evidence of lack of time on my part), although the broader point I made still stands, which is that some sources of radiation are otherwise chemically benign and others are not, though I admit much ignorance on the relative importance of chemical toxicity and wouldn't be surprised to find out it is generally quite small in such incidents like Fukushima and Chernobyl — but I don't actually know it; I thought perhaps it deserved clarification (and maybe — note that I'm not justifying this — that's why some people may see radiation from a pollutant as worse than radiation from natural source?).
The notion that CO2 is such a driver of climate that the projected growth in ambient levels carries the threat of probable catastrophe is so feeble, so lacking in observational and, indeed, theoretical support that we need other ways to understand the motivations of those who campaign so intemperately against this vital chemical.
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