The nervous trunk above is, in general, slightly enlarged, sometimes has a tortuous course; and in some instances the neurilemmal bloodvessels are considerably increased in size.
When the bloodvessels of the uvula are in a state of chronic enlargement, scarification is also employed with advantage.
The bloodvessels may enter this new growth by a narrow pedicle; or it may be of such a form as to present an extensive surface, by which it communicates with the surrounding parts, receiving vascular ramifications from them.
The bloodvessels are so torn and twisted as to permit the spontaneous and temporary suppression of hemorrhage to occur almost immediately; and the larger arteries may escape entirely, owing to their elasticity.
When incited action of the bloodvessels occurs in the harder textures, sensibility is roused to an exquisite degree, and the healthy and perverted processes often advance with great vigour and amazing rapidity.
The head and neck of the bone are not so well supplied with bloodvessels as the other parts; those arteries which pass along the ligamentum teres are the chief support.
The investing periosteum is much thickened, and its bloodvessels are enlarged.
In what manner are the dilated bloodvessels and connective-tissue hypertrophy to be treated?
According to recent investigations, the infiltrations of lupus are due chiefly to cell-proliferation and outgrowth from the protoplasmic walls and adventitia of the bloodvessels and lymphatics.
How, then, could this second tooth transmitbloodvessels and nerves into the cavity of the first?
In the ox the penetration of bloodvessels into the roots of the teeth can be more readily ascertained than in man.
Again, how could the continuity of thesebloodvessels and nerves with their respective branches be possible, if an imperforate body, such as the crown of the permanent tooth, were really interposed?
In the former the author undertakes especially to examine the opinions of Galen on dental bloodvessels and nerves, and discusses whether it were known to him that these vessels and nerves penetrate into the internal part of the teeth.
This is not all; the lower part of the temporary tooth is perforated, and receives in its interior bloodvessels and nerves, whilst the upper part of the permanent tooth is quite massive and imperforated.
Numerous bloodvessels begin to grow and that part of the lining membrane with its numerous bloodvesselsconstitute the placenta, or as it is commonly called afterbirth, because it comes out after the birth of the child.
The blood of the fetus and the blood of the mother do not mix; the bloodvessels are separated by thin walls, and it is through these thin walls that the fetal blood receives the ingredients it needs from the mother's blood.
Every month, for a few days prior to menstruation, the inside lining of the womb (what we call the mucous membrane or endometrium) becomes congested and its bloodvessels become distended with blood.
The nauplius bores through the skin of the worm, casting its cuticle and losing all its appendages in the process, and making its way into one of the bloodvessels in the form of a little oval mass of cells (Fig.
Dissemination of organisms within the tissues occurs either through the lymph channels or the bloodvessels or both.
But the lungs, heart, and bloodvessels being comparatively small, neither is sanguification abundant and perfect nor circulation vigorous.
Their bloodvessels are larger, and their excretions more copious, especially those by the skin and the organ of respiration.
By this means the bloodvessels are dilated or contracted as required,[75] and the consequent supply of blood becomes more or less copious.
It is possible that an active expansion of thebloodvessels does not take place, but only a contraction.
The former breathe air direct from the atmosphere through an aperture on the right side of the body, the air passing into a pulmonary organ or lung, in the walls of which the bloodvessels ramify, and they include all the land snails and slugs.
To the sympathetic chain is delegated much of the routine work of reflex control of the bloodvessels and other viscera, which would otherwise fall upon the spinal cord.
There is a supporting ground mass, or stroma, into which numerous bloodvessels and nerves enter and break up.
Allantoic bloodvessels ramify thickly over its walls, and aeration occurs through the permeable shell.
How much the peripheral bloodvessels are affected can be seen in the tendency to blushing during certain forms of excitement, involving shame or embarrassment; on the contrary, pallor in anger, or indignation, or fright.
These vasomotor nerves, as they have been called, because they preside over the dilatation and contraction of the walls of the bloodvessels (vasa) of the body, are now known to play an important role in every function.
Morgagni understood that the influence of such emotions in especially excitable individuals leads to wear and tear on the bloodvessels and so to a shortening of lives.
The bloodvessels are distended; hence the nerves suffer violence in stretching or from pressure.
A toning up of the entire vascular system, by which a reverse current from the tissues into the bloodvessels is made possible, is the only means for relief.
As the care moves by the power evolved in the dynamo, so do the bloodvessels contract and relax as determined by brain conditions.
The bloodvessels are elastic, and capable of contraction and dilatation, a matter regulated by the brain.
Warmth, as a means of removing local congestion, can only be successful when applied widely round the congested area, and so dilating surrounding bloodvessels and lymphatics.
Numerous bloodvessels ramify in it, and, with their attendant nerves, break up to enter the numberless canals of the Haversian system.
These are simply the vessels (bloodvessels and nerves) which, loosened by the inflammatory exudate, are readily detached and drawn from the Haversian canals into which they normally run.
There can be no doubt that the quantity of fluid brought by the bloodvessels of these papillæ to the foot acts largely as a means of hydraulic protection to the soft structures.
The normal relative anatomy of the bloodvessels is taken by anatomists to be the more frequent disposition of their main trunks and branches, considered per se, and in connexion with neighbouring parts.
The bloodvessels which pass in the neighbourhood of the femoral canal are, 1st.
The visceral system of bloodvessels is moulded upon the organs which they supply.
Even in the limbs the large bloodvessels range alongside the protective shafts of the bones.
The bloodvessels of the axilla follow the motions of the arm; and according to the position assumed by the arm, these vessels describe various curves, and lie more or less removed from the side of the thorax.
All parts excepting the main bloodvesselsin the neighbourhood of the heart are naturally divisible by this line into equals.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "bloodvessels" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.