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Example sentences for "bronchi"

Lexicographically close words:
bromid; bromide; bromides; bromine; bronc; bronchial; bronchitic; bronchitis; broncho; bronchos
  1. As the chill passes off a smarting in the throat and a feeling as though the lungs and bronchi would close up, making breathing very difficult; chill lasted until 1 P.

  2. Hard breathing, as though lungs and bronchi were closing as the chill passes off.

  3. In the larynx and the bronchi tubercles may vegetate upon the mucous membrane, and ulcers may result from their breaking down.

  4. The larger bronchi may be sacculated, owing to the distention produced by the cheesy contents.

  5. At the union of the bronchi with the trachea is a small expansion with cartilaginous walls, within which are stretched small bands of muscles.

  6. Air is taken in through the nostrils or mouth and carried through the windpipe (trachea) and a pair of bronchi to the lungs, where it gives up its oxygen to the blood, from which it takes up carbonic-acid gas in turn.

  7. By squeezing the lung between the fingers an inflammation of the smaller bronchi (bronchitis) can be recognized by the purulent fluid which will exude at different points.

  8. The larynx, trachea, and bronchi had regular congestion and scarlet ecchymoses in one case characteristic of asphyxia, and there was muddy water in the stomach.

  9. In no case were the muscles of the neck, the larynx, trachea, or large bronchi injured, and in none was there subcutaneous hemorrhage or blister.

  10. Next open the large bronchi with a blunt-pointed scissors, and prolong the incision into the pulmonary substance along the minute bronchi.

  11. The lungs are removed by lifting them from the pleural cavity and cutting through the vessels and bronchi at their base.

  12. Frothy mucus tinged with blood in trachea and bronchi; bronchi congested.

  13. Direct examination of the trachea and larger bronchi may be carried out in a similar way, by passing through the mouth and larynx metal tubes, after the method devised by Killian.

  14. Hæmoptysis is seldom of laryngeal origin, and unless the bleeding spot is visible in the mirror, the source of the bleeding is much more likely to be in the bronchi or lungs.

  15. Parts of the lungs have been removed to show the branching of the air tubes or bronchi which pass into them.

  16. Suppuration at times takes place in the bronchi and may extend to the lung tissue.

  17. The presence of vomited matters in the trachea and bronchi is a valuable sign of drowning.

  18. If the smoke is inhaled more deeply, the vaporized nicotine is still more readily absorbed and may thus produce greater irritation in the bronchi and lungs.

  19. The bronchi within the lungs break up into a great number of smaller tubes, the bronchial tubes, which divide somewhat like the small branches of a tree.

  20. The bronchi end in very minute air sacs, little pouches having elastic walls, into which air is taken when we inspire, or take a deep breath.

  21. The upper lobe was divided into a variety of cysts, filled with carbonaceous matter in a fluid state, into which many of the smaller bronchi opened, and through which various blood-vessels passed uninjured.

  22. Their size varies with that of the bronchi in which they are formed.

  23. Cylindric cells from the nose, trachea, and bronchi (Fig.

  24. One of the main bronchi in the lungs of birds.

  25. One of the dorsal branches of the main bronchi in the lungs of birds.

  26. But the mucous membrane of the trachea and bronchi is more apt to submit to such liquefying and macerating treatment than the vocal cords.

  27. It may happen that the trachea and bronchi may become affected, although diphtheria of the fauces does not exist.

  28. This same punctate reddening has been demonstrated in the epiglottis, larynx, and trachea (Gerhardt), and upon the bronchi and small intestines of children who had died during this stage of the eruption.

  29. As regards the extent of diffusion of the pustular lesions, they occur, according to Wagner, in bronchi of the second and even of the third order, rarely in the stomach and intestines, and in the rectum only in its lowest portion.

  30. If this theory is true, it helps us in explaining why the large, mediate, and smaller bronchi are closed during the expiratory stage of the paroxysmal cough of pertussis.

  31. Dolan believes the phenomena of the cough or kinks to be due, as suggested by Laennec, to a "spasmodic condition of the muscular or contractile fibres of the bronchi and their branches.

  32. The bronchi and pharynx showed no changes, the mucous membrane being pale and thin.

  33. The large blood-vessels and bronchi were normal.

  34. The bronchi were collapsed, and contained mucus.

  35. Bronchi with the rings entire and ossified.

  36. Trachea simple, but divided very high up on the neck, so that the bronchi are of excessive length, with a large pair of inferior laryngeal muscles.

  37. Trachea simple, generally cylindrical, with the bronchi wide, and a single pair of slender inferior laryngeal muscles.

  38. Inflammation of the bronchi and lungs; catarrhal pneumonia.

  39. Belonging to the bronchi and their ramifications in the lungs.

  40. Wymann, “Note on Filaria in the Bronchi of a Sheep,” see Anon.

  41. Thence they will be passively transferred to the stomachs of cetacea, whence they bore their way through the tissues to the bronchi and pulmonary vessels.

  42. The trachea and bronchi are tubes, furnished with cartilaginous rings to keep them from collapsing.

  43. The bronchi give off branches, which in turn divide and subdivide, until they become very fine.

  44. When the inflammation extends into the bronchi and substance of the lungs, laborious breathing and the mucous rattle occur.

  45. The bronchi are obstructed by vitiated mucus, or by lymph, and serum is effused at the base of the brain; and from either or both of these circumstances the patient soon perishes.

  46. It materially diminishes the efficiency of the cough, the secretion from the lungs is apt to accumulate in the bronchi and alveoli, and set up miliary tuberculosis.

  47. In certain locations, one or both points may be turned into branch bronchi as illustrated in Fig.

  48. In cases studied bronchoscopically during an attack, the bronchi were found filled with bubbling secretions and the mucosa was somewhat cyanotic in color.

  49. Of the cases seen in the Bronchoscopic Clinic some showed no abnormality of the bronchi in the intervals between attacks, others a chronic bronchitis.

  50. Acute pulmonary abscess from other causes may require bronchoscopic drainage and gentle dilatation of the swollen and narrowed bronchi leading to it.

  51. A), in order to pipe the air down to one or both bronchi past the projecting neoplasm.

  52. Preparations for bronchoscopy are necessary because the pathological condition may not be found in the larynx, and further search of the trachea or bronchi may be required.

  53. The bronchoscopist must learn to work in spite of the fact that the bronchi dilate, contract, elongate, shorten, kink, and are dinged and pushed this way and that.

  54. While the usually thin, watery esophageal and gastric secretions, if free from food, are readily aspirated through a drainage canal, the secretions of the bronchi are often thick and mucilaginous and aspirated with difficulty.

  55. At other times, pins not dropping so deeply may show the point only during expiration or cough, at which times the bronchi are shortened.

  56. Further-more, bronchial secretions as a rule are not collected in pools, but are distributed over the walls of the larger bronchi and continuously well up from smaller bronchi during cough.

  57. The cartilages of the larynx, the trachea and bronchi 86 18.


  58. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "bronchi" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.