Sentences with phrase «with human equivalents»

As with the human equivalent, they can cause digestive problems and lead to many digestive tract problems.
Miriam Kool, University of Utrecht, D09CA - 913 Miriam Kool, DVM, has a keen appreciation for dispelling scientific mysteries and bringing veterinary research up to par with its human equivalent.

Not exact matches

In 1990, ground breaking evidence and research on Human Growth Hormone by Daniel Rudman, M.D. shook the medical world (Published in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine) with the announcement that 12 men, aged 61 to 81 had received human growth hormone treatment and had reversed up to the equivalent of 20 years of aging in only six months with human growth hormone injectHuman Growth Hormone by Daniel Rudman, M.D. shook the medical world (Published in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine) with the announcement that 12 men, aged 61 to 81 had received human growth hormone treatment and had reversed up to the equivalent of 20 years of aging in only six months with human growth hormone injecthuman growth hormone treatment and had reversed up to the equivalent of 20 years of aging in only six months with human growth hormone injecthuman growth hormone injections.
These roles and relations are not fundamentally natural phenomena integral to human identity and social welfare but are mere accidents of biology overlaid with social conventions that can be replaced by functionally equivalent roles without loss.
At the same time, however, we must ask: If one believes that 25 million abortions are equivalent to 25 million instances of the taking of innocent human life, does not the analogy with the Holocaust become more appropriate?
Consequently, «salvation» becomes equivalent either with the prolongation of biological human life at all costs or with individual control over the way a particular life ends.
If you are absolutely convinced a fetus is truly the full moral equivalent of an extant human baby, then any political or ideological qualms you have about helping out with things like birth control and child care, or including se - x education in school classrooms.
I spoke with Dr. Danielle Aparecida da Silva of Brazil's Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (equivalent to the Food and Drug Administration in the USA) to learn more about the upcoming «World Day of Human Milk Donation» which will be celebrated on May 19, 2013.
The team found neonatal mice with the mutations had normal - appearing skin, and the dry itchy skin of dermatitis did not develop until the mice were a few months old, the equivalent of a young adult in human years.
That's hard to measure with humans, but in rat studies the benefits of mothering last until the animals reach an age equivalent to age 80 in humans, which I find very encouraging.
Republican Ripples was conceived as a newspaper column equivalent of the musical Lagbaja, a human essence, with no particularistic identity.
TLDR: Theresa May thinks ECHR gives too much human rights so wants to repeal it and replace it with some British equivalent, realised that it was too hard to do straight after Brexit.
«It would take another two years of training to get the equivalent of my first degree in Syria,» says Chalati, who is working on ways to use nanotechnology to deliver drugs into the human body more efficiently and with fewer side effects.
Humans or machines with low serotonin or its equivalent may fail to rewire themselves adequately, getting stuck in the rut that we call depression.
A 3 - year - old Great Dane, born with inherited myopathy of Great Danes, the canine equivalent of centronuclear myopathy in humans.
A comparison of epidermal equivalents generated from iPSC, hESC and primary human keratinocytes (skin cells) from skin biopsies showed no significant difference in their structural or functional properties compared with the outermost layer of normal human skin.
This other toe — which felt every bit as much as its overstuffed human equivalent did, I should add — was attached to a 450 - pound western lowland gorilla, with calcified gums, named King.
The research was conducted with mice, and García - Añoveros believes the pathway has an equivalent in humans.
In Britain, in 1991, researchers led by Jim Stott at the National Institute of Biological Standards and Control in north London, stunned their colleagues by announcing that they had apparently protected monkeys from infection with the monkey virus SIV — the simian equivalent of HIV — with a vaccine based simply on human T cells.
They then tested their system in mice acutely infected with EcoHIV, the mouse equivalent of human HIV - 1.
One approach is to send out the equivalent of a message in a bottle, and indeed the two Voyager spacecraft are headed out to the stars carrying golden disks engraved with rudimentary information about humans and Earth.
Astrocytes in the human cerebral cortex are so big and complex, compared with equivalent cells in other mammals, that some researchers think they may hold a key to our cleverness.
Focusing the machine's full output into a spot of only 100 nanometers in size, the team generated an X-ray beam with intensity equivalent to all of the sun's radiation that is striking Earth's surface but concentrated in an area with the diameter of a human hair.
In some studies reporting a positive effect on learning, drugs were injected at doses equivalent to injecting a human with about 8 grams of the drug.
The experiment's final product is equivalent to the naturally occurring genetic code of M. genitalium, with two minor exceptions: The scientists disabled the gene that gave the bug power to infect human cells, and they added a few «watermarks,» short strips of signature genetic code that identify the product as man - made.
When the research team gave old mice — the equivalent of 70 - to 80 - year - old humans — water containing an antioxidant known as MitoQ for four weeks, their arteries functioned as well as the arteries of mice with an equivalent human age of just 25 to 35 years.
For their analysis, genomicists Kelly Frazer, David Cox, and their colleagues at Perlegen Sciences in Mountain View, California, assessed the resemblance between 27 million bases of the chimp's chromosome 22 and the equivalent human chromosome, 21, using chips densely packed with small pieces of DNA.
Imagine a knife and fork they are really good at their jobs, but with modern humans you -LSB-'ve] got like the equivalent of a whole tool box with spanners and pulleys and weaving and high temperature firing for even making clay statue [ttes]; all of that technology I think, just takes moderns that bit further than Neandertals.
So in this issue Hanson follows that through to a conclusion coming up with tiny insect - like robots with greater than human level intelligence living by the billions in skyscrapers and sort of doing their virtual work at the equivalent of pennies per day and what this leads to, there are two different ideas about what this kind of economic runaway advancement would ultimately lead to.
Scientists report in the May 9 Science Translational Medicine that seven of 12 diabetic mice treated with this combination were cured even after having lost the ability to make insulin for several weeks, the equivalent of a human patient who has needed insulin injections for a couple of years.
Human analysts working with Gorgon Stare would monitor baseline video to discover the equivalent of the jewelry counter.
Jon Hennebold, a researcher at the Oregon National Primate Center, is injecting monkey embryos with CRISPR to breed animals with more genetically precise equivalents of human diseases.
After being injected with a muscle - preserving gene, some of these mighty rodents maintained the muscles of youthful mice, at the human equivalent of age 80, without exercise [source: Cromie].
The significant difference in outcome achieved by transplantation of hGDAsBMP versus hGDAsCNTF demonstrates clearly that not all astrocytes are equivalent in respect to their therapeutic value, and this appears to be the first study demonstrating functional differences between different human astrocyte populations with respect to repairing the adult central nervous system.
For example, silver ion - infused EbNPs with a positive surface charge (Ag - EbNP - PDADMAC) exhibit significantly higher antimicrobial activity, in terms of Ag equivalent, than other silver nanoparticles against the human pathogens E. coli and P. aeruginosa.
With perfect parabolic shapes and a precision equivalent to within a fraction of the thickness of a human hair, this is one of the most precise antennas in the world.
«With the UK's expertise together with Newton Fund, both parties will enjoy the much - sought after cooperative tools for radio astronomy development in Thailand through matching funds, paired human resources or even equivalent coordinating contributions from both parties on an equal footing basis.&raWith the UK's expertise together with Newton Fund, both parties will enjoy the much - sought after cooperative tools for radio astronomy development in Thailand through matching funds, paired human resources or even equivalent coordinating contributions from both parties on an equal footing basis.&rawith Newton Fund, both parties will enjoy the much - sought after cooperative tools for radio astronomy development in Thailand through matching funds, paired human resources or even equivalent coordinating contributions from both parties on an equal footing basis.»
Dr. Reardon, Co-Founder and CEO of FitnessGenes, is a medical doctor with an MBChB (UK's MD equivalent) and a BSc (Bachelors of Science) in Human Anatomy.
In 1990, ground breaking evidence and research on Human Growth Hormone by Daniel Rudman, M.D. shook the medical world (Published in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine) with the announcement that 12 men, aged 61 to 81 had received human growth hormone treatment and had reversed up to the equivalent of 20 years of aging in only six months with human growth hormone injectHuman Growth Hormone by Daniel Rudman, M.D. shook the medical world (Published in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine) with the announcement that 12 men, aged 61 to 81 had received human growth hormone treatment and had reversed up to the equivalent of 20 years of aging in only six months with human growth hormone injecthuman growth hormone treatment and had reversed up to the equivalent of 20 years of aging in only six months with human growth hormone injecthuman growth hormone injections.
The landmark 2013 study by Dr. Sinclair demonstrated that supplementation with NMN increased levels of NAD + and reversed age related degeneration in mice, giving older mice the muscle capacity, endurance and metabolism of much younger mice — the «equivalent of a human 60 year old becoming more like a 20 year old» (24).
Although the animals used in this study had the equivalent of Type 1 diabetes in humans, the researchers are confident that buckwheat will exert similar glucose - lowering effects when given to animals with Type 2 diabetes, which is the next study on their agenda.
It is serving fundamental human needs for friendship and to find marriage partners so what works with one culture in this regard generally works with, or has its equivalent, with another culture.
Unbeknownst to Caleb, he has come to be the human equivalent in a Turing test of Nathan's robotic creation — to meet and interact with Nathan's «Ava» (the truly incredible Alicia Vikander) in an attempt to discern whether or not she has actual artificial intelligence.
Pegg's character remains comic relief, too often his scenes end with the equivalent of a rim shot, but Pegg shows his dramatic chops during a confrontational sequence where he's used as a human bomb.
The core issue is that we have to replace physical actions with digital equivalents — and the companies doing the replacing aren't worried about the future of human knowledge.
Larger dogs require less, with calorie needs not dissimilar to those of humans of equivalent weight and activity.
Compared with human beings, young dogs can be the equivalent of teenagers.
Atopy is the equivalent to human «hay fever,» with dogs reacting to the same things that their owners do.
Senior pets with degenerative joint disease of the spine, hips, or stifles (joints in the legs, equivalent to the knees in humans) may be stiff or in pain when jumping up, and they may cry when picked up.
Intriguingly, an identical homozygous mutation was identified in a human patient with recessive retinitis pigmentosa, the human equivalent of PRA, and established the novel retinal gene, PRCD, as an important gene for the maintenance of rod photoreceptor structure and function across species.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z