Sentences with phrase «often irreversible»

The Knowledge Every Man Needs for a Successful Divorce Each year 500,000 men will face divorce, and most of them make at least one crucial — and often irreversible — mistake.
However, if she decides to annuitize her contract and commit to a guaranteed stream of income (and this option is often irreversible), then her enhanced rider will pay her a stream of income that is based upon a hypothetical value of approximately $ 643,000 (equal to $ 150,000 growing at 6 % per year for 25 years.)
After the transgression of a tipping point, self - reinforcing mechanisms drive the process without further external influences, and a rapid and often irreversible transition to a new state takes place.
But the organisations say biofuels policies are expanding palm oil plantations, and this has devastating and often irreversible consequences including land grabs, hunger, rising greenhouse gas emissions and deforestation.
When the curator of «Systemic Risk,» Jonathan Durham, speaks of «a transition to a less optimal equilibrium» as «inevitable and often irreversible,» he could be offering a parable about art, life, or the neighborhood.
«Many cats with severe hypertensive ocular damage present with blindness and bilateral mydriasis resulting from complete retinal detachments and / or intraocular haemorrhage; the changes are often irreversible... Lesions that are not associated with an impaired menace response or pupillary light deficits... are much more amenable to anti-hypertensive treatment... highlighting the importance of early diagnosis and management.
But even though they don't show us much in the way of outward symptoms, chronic dental / periodontal disease can cause severe and often irreversible damage to internal organs.
«What is clear is that feral and free - roaming cat populations cause tremendous and often irreversible damage to indigenous wildlife populations in both urban and rural environments around the globe.»
The results of aging are slowly progressive and often irreversible.
Heat stroke is very serious and often irreversible.
The negative impact of summer learning loss — especially for lower - income youth — is devastating and often irreversible.
Research has shown that the impact of summer learning loss, especially for at - risk students, is devastating and often irreversible.
Several hundred studies overwhelmingly conclude soy phyto - toxic causation of an assortment of severe, painful and often irreversible neurological and physiological disorders, and these diseases are more often caused during developmental exposures.
What may be most scary is that the harmful effects of lead exposure are often irreversible.
Typically, the scammers trick people into running pernicious code on their computers that encrypts their contents — a process that is often irreversible, except by way of a special cryptographic key or string of digital bits.

Not exact matches

First, investment projects are often large, require irreversible sunk costs, and take time to build and operate.
Indoctrination often seems irreversible!
They often seem to assume that First World, white, middle - class societies are by definition irredeemable; that they are driven by an irreversible logic of oppression and injustice.
«The majority of trainees will eventually choose to pursue those careers, but only after having made irreversible investments in what is often more than a decade in training for academic jobs that do not exist,» the presidents and chancellors wrote.
During this time, irreversible damage can occur, often resulting in a high prevalence of retinopathy and an increased risk for cardiovascular disease.
Children with measles rapidly use up vitamin A, often resulting in irreversible blindness.
Often the nerve damage caused by high sugar levels and statins are so profound that the condition is regarded as incurable or irreversible.
Vapid, nihilistic exercises in style are often ripe for jeers in a competition as prestigious as this one, and Refn's latest in particular owes a strong stylistic debt to his filmmaking mentor Gaspar Noe (he's thanked in the end credits), himself something of a Cannes - boo specialist after shocking festival - goers with the likes of «Irreversible» and «Enter the Void.»
The downward trend in park and playground provision is happening fast and, in many cases, it will be irreversible; once a community playground or park is lost it is often lost forever.
Left untreated, diabetes progresses quickly and often causes irreversible organ damage that can be life threatening.
Hyperthyroidism often causes irreversible heart, liver, and kidney damage, so early detection is critical.
Cats with hypertension often have irreversible changes in the rear interior portion of their eyes (their retinas) that do effect, or prevent vision.
Besides the endless suffering, puppies of these dogs often end up with serious irreversible health issues that even a miracle healer or vet will not solve.
Arthritis is a very common problem in dogs, but also one that often isn't diagnosed until some irreversible damage is done.
Too often we read of the losing battles: local extinctions and irreversible biodiversity losses, often at the expense of shortsighted exploitation - for - profit schemes.
Often, the harm caused by exposure to toxic chemicals due to oil and gas drilling is irreversible.
Far too often the consequences of the victims are life changing and irreversible; suicide of a young child.
The collateral damage suffered by families involved in estate litigation is often devastating and irreversible.
When a very serious injury is suffered, there will often be irreversible and life changing damage, such as paralysis, severe traumatic brain damage, amputations, severe burns or even death.
Often times these injuries can result in a certain level of irreversible brain damage.
To explain the concept of a blockchain, I often focus heavily on the concept of immutability - the idea that any piece of history recorded on a well - distributed blockchain is in essence irreversible, or permanently engraved in time.
The «tipping point» is the critical point in an evolving situation that leads to a new and irreversible development that is often considered to be a turning point.
In essence the suggestion is — in simple terms — that adults who are brought, perhaps reluctantly, to the point of consulting children are often so impressed by children's responses that there is an irreversible conversion to the practice.
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