Results 171 to 180 of about 62,615 (227)
Letter to the editor: Celomitis revisited. [PDF]
Baumgartner W, Speer B.
europepmc +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
2023
Viscera is a poetic manuscript thesis presented to the faculty of the University of Virginia in candidacy for the degree of Master of Fine Arts in creative writing. Through its roughly sixty pages of poetry, the work explores questions of mortality, embodiedness, and spirituality through the lens of rural Midwestern masculinity and landscape.
+4 more sources
Viscera is a poetic manuscript thesis presented to the faculty of the University of Virginia in candidacy for the degree of Master of Fine Arts in creative writing. Through its roughly sixty pages of poetry, the work explores questions of mortality, embodiedness, and spirituality through the lens of rural Midwestern masculinity and landscape.
+4 more sources
Transposition of viscera in siblings
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1950Summary Transposition of the viscera has a general incidence of approximately0.014 per cent. Over 1,000 cases have been reported in the literature. Ten per cent of these cases have occurred in families, including thirty-seven sibships in addition to twelve miscellaneous relationships.
C R, LEININGER, S, GIBSON
openaire +2 more sources
Handedness and laterality of the viscera
Neurology, 1997The biological basis of handedness remains to be determined in humans. Hepper et al.1 supported the genetic explanation of handedness by demonstrating a preference for thumb sucking before birth. However, Dryden2 rejected this hypothesis and proposed that handedness was related to neuromuscular development secondary to the oxygen level in the blood ...
T, Matsumoto +9 more
openaire +2 more sources
Radiology, 2006
The dependent viscera sign is seen with diaphragmatic rupture. The absence of posterior support by the diaphragm allows viscera to “fall” against the posterior ribs to a dependent position. On the right side, the upper one-third of the liver typically does not abut the posterior chest wall (ie, the right ribs) when the diaphragm is intact.
openaire +2 more sources
The dependent viscera sign is seen with diaphragmatic rupture. The absence of posterior support by the diaphragm allows viscera to “fall” against the posterior ribs to a dependent position. On the right side, the upper one-third of the liver typically does not abut the posterior chest wall (ie, the right ribs) when the diaphragm is intact.
openaire +2 more sources

