Not exact matches
Push in firmly
against your breast
tissue while at the same time pulling your thumbs away from each other.
The challenge is to press the catheter firmly enough
against the wall of the heart so that sufficient
tissue is destroyed, without
pushing so hard that the catheter punches a hole in the heart.
Cellulite happens when fat
pushes up
against the connective
tissues that hold the skin to the muscles underneath, giving your flesh that dimply look.
Cellulite is a type of fatty deposit under the skin that
pushes up
against the
tissues, creating a dimpled, lumpy appearance.
When fat cells
push up
against the skin surface, the fibrous
tissue that connects skin to muscle pulls down, which causes the appearance of dimpled skin.
There is a fibrous
tissue which thins, widens and stretches around a women's growing belly in response to the uterus
pushing against the abdominal wall.
When fat cells increase in size, they
push up
against the connective
tissue, making the fat cells bulge out through honeycomb, giving that dreaded dimpled appearance.
The fat appears bumpy because it
pushes against connective
tissue, causing the skin above to appear dimpled.