Results 221 to 230 of about 3,530 (249)
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Congenital Aural Atresia

Journal of Craniofacial Surgery, 2013
Congenital aural atresia is a spectrum of ear deformities present at birth that involves some degree of failure of the development of the external auditory canal. This malformation may be associated with other congenital anomalies; it occurs as a result of abnormal development of the first and second branchial arches and the first branchial cleft and ...
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Aurality

2015
Abstract Orality—understood as the oral delivery of texts—is often assumed to have given way to literacy—the private reading of texts—over the course of the medieval period. The two entities are mutually exclusive and can be placed in a relationship of evolution that has preoccupied scholars of Middle English literature.
openaire   +1 more source

Aural Schistosomiasis mansoni

The Journal of Laryngology & Otology, 1989
Schistosoma mansoni is common in Nigeria as well as in other countries of West Africa (Edington, 1979). The eggs are laid in the small venules of the submucosal layer of the intestinal wall and pass out usually in the faeces but some may enter the blood stream to be found in any organ of the body (Edington et al., 1975).
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Aural microsuction

BMJ, 2017
Deep, Sarode   +3 more
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Human aural myiasis

Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, 2000
MAGLIULO, Giuseppe   +2 more
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Aural tuberculosis.

The American journal of otology, 1996
Since the advent of antituberculous therapy, tuberculosis of the ear has decreased in incidence; but of late, cases of both pulmonary and otologic tuberculosis are on the rise. In addition, the treatment of aural tuberculosis is now more difficult due to resistance to one or more of the routinely used antituberculous pharmacotherapeutic agents.
B J, Greenfield   +5 more
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Aural myiasis

Medicina Clínica (English Edition), 2018
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Aural Flânerie

2017
This chapter establishes that scholarly approaches to flâneurs have downplayed the broader impact of the urban experience on the senses and underappreciated their aural acuity. From the type's early formulations by Honoré de Balzac, Auguste de Lacroix, and Victor Fournel, the flâneur is attuned to city sounds, and flâneur-writing arranges them to ...
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AURAL EXOSTOSES.

The Lancet, 1885
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