The prodromic neuralgic pain, the appearance of grouped vesicles upon inflammatory bases following the course of a nerve tract, and the limitation of the eruption to one side of the body.
Eosinophile cells have been found both in the vesicles and the blood.
The vesicles of eczema are usually larger, tend to become confluent, and also to rupture and become crusted; there is marked itchiness, and the inflammatory action is usually severe and persistent.
This minute brick-red mite buries itself in the skin, especially about the ankles and feet, giving rise to papules, vesicles and pustules.
One, several or more small pin-head-sized papulo-vesicles or vesicles make their appearance, usually upon the face and fingers.
Vesicles are often intermingled, developing from erythematous and erythemato-papular lesions or arising from apparently normal skin.
The papular lesions are pinkish or reddish, and the vesicles whitish or yellowish, surrounded by inflammatory areola, thus giving the whole eruption a bright red appearance--miliaria rubra.
Herpes zoster is an acute, self-limited, inflammatory disease, characterized by groups of vesicles upon inflammatory bases, situated over or along a nerve tract.
In some cases vesicles and blebs may be present; in other cases the disease seriously involves the deeper parts, and is accompanied by grave constitutional symptoms.
The vesicles were obviously cells which had arisen within the original germ-cell or ovum.
He further pointed out that the vesicles arranged themselves as a layer within the envelope of the egg or zona pellucida, and that the whole embryo was composed of cells filled with the foundations of other cells.
On the fourth day desiccation commences, and the vesicles shrivel and shrink in and form small brownish scabs, which fall about the eighth day.
The vesicles are sometimes small and pointed, sometimes more voluminous and globular in form.
The vesicles leave small reddish spots, which generally disappear gradually, almost always without a scar.
The disease becomes modified when transferred to cattle, producing what is known as cowpox, in which vesiclessimilar to those of smallpox appear on the skin.
In some allied creatures the buoyancy required is secured by little vesicles filled with oil secreted by the animals themselves.
It begins with the appearance of a number of little pigmented elevations on the skin which develop into vesicles and pustules.
This species is nearly allied to the preceding; but its capsules are thicker and shorter, and the oil-vesicles in them are arranged not in a single, but in a double row.
The alveoles, on the other hand, are true vesicles with a thin spherical envelope, enclosing a drop of fluid or jelly.
Often many extracapsular oil-vesicles in the common jelly-body between the central capsules.
Protoplasm of the central capsule contains innumerable very small, hyaline, spherical vesicles of equal size (or vacuoles?
The clear vesicles to which this is due are either spherical, or polyhedral from mutual pressure, and like the similar ones in the central capsule may be divided into membraneless vacuoles and vesicular alveoles.
In the bell-gastrula of the amphioxus and in the hooded gastrula of the lamprey and the frog the germinal layers are found to be closed tubes or vesiclesfrom the first.
Some of these vesicles are situated so near the surface of the ovarium as to be prominent on its surface.
The vesicles here mentioned are the so-called Graafian vesicles, or ovisacs, each of which contains in its interior a little ovum or egg.
The Graafian vesicles are not limited to a certain small number, as was formerly thought, but continue to be formed in the ovaries, and to discharge at intervals mature ova during the whole of the fruitful period.
In those in whom conception has ever taken place, some of these vesiclesare removed, and in their place a cicatrix or scar is formed which continues through life.
The vesicles of Fucaceae and Laminariaceae prevent the sinking of the bulkier forms.
In Fucus vesiculosus they arise in lateral pairs; in Ascophyllum they are single and median; in Macrocystis one vesicle arises at the base of each thallus segment; in Sargassum and Halidrys the vesicles arise on special branches.
The skin acquires a dusky, reddish, and livid appearance, with the formation occasionally of vesicles or blisters.
Unlike most animalcules they are susceptible of being preserved by drying upon glass, and we subjoin a figure from Pritchard, of one thus treated, in which the star-shaped vesicles are clearly seen.
They are furnished with a distinct mouth, and adult specimens exhibit star-shaped contractile vesiclesin great perfection.
In another forty-eight hours the character of the pimples has changed into that of little vesicles or pocks, depressed instead of pointed at their centre, and containing a little watery milky fluid.
So Nature shapes her hyaline vesicles and modifies them to serve the needs of the part where they are found.
Pressure on the seminal vesicles by an over-full bladder, or a distended rectum, leads to the production of nervous stimuli around which the erotic dream-ideas gather.
If for any reason they become nervous or anxious about their sexual functions, especially at times when they are under much mental strain, these phenomena of emptying the seminal vesicles may occur rather frequently.
After the habit of self-abuse has been conquered the seminal vesicles will have a tendency to evacuate themselves rather more frequently than before and as a consequence they will nag at certain sexual nerve endings.
The weight of a large amount of urine in the bladder pressing down upon the seminal vesicles situated below and behind it causes them to contract rather easily.
Within a day or two these shotlike pimples have grown and pushed themselves beyond the skin into little conical vesicles which soon turn to pus.
These pimples soon became vesicles (small blisters), which in turn quickly become pustular, afterwards drying up with heavy crust formation.
In the most frequent form of eczema the skin becomes red and then there appear tiny vesicles (water blisters) which soon rupture and "weep.
We have seen that the Physophora, the Agalma, and the Apolemia have for the use of the colony a vast number of swimming vesicles and a terminal aërial vesicle.
The supposed auditory apparatus is seated close to these organs; they are small vesicles filled with liquid; the eyes having neither pupil nor cornea, and the ears without opening or arch.
In this family a great number of natatory vesicles are connected with the terminal aërial vesicle, as in Fig.
Here is now established a permanent source of irritation, by which the morbid activity of the testes and seminal vesicles is kept up and continually increased.
If very infrequent, and occurring in a comparatively robust person, after the seminal vesicles have become distended with seminal fluid, the immediate effect of an emission may be a sensation of temporary relief.
From these two sources combined, the vesicles become loaded with seminal fluid, and this condition gives rise to a great increase of sexual excitement.
The causes of these discharges are spasmodic action of the muscles involved in ejaculation, which is occasioned by local irritation, and pressure upon the seminal vesicles by the distended rectum or bladder.
Distention of the seminal vesicles with a superabundance of seminal fluid also acts as a source of irritation.
The testicles form an abnormal amount of spermatozoa; the seminal vesicles secrete their peculiar fluid too freely.
The mammae enlarge, the ovarian vesicles become dilated, and there is established a periodical discharge of one or more ova, accompanied, in most cases, by a sanguineous fluid from the cavity of the uterus.
The polygonal vesicles give a reticulate appearance to the dark-brown patches which ornament the surface of the wall.
It ought to be readily recognized by its yellow plasmodium and the peculiar vesicles adherent to the capillitium.
Such a coating occurs in a few species of Physarum, but here the vesicles of lime attached to the threads distinguish them.
Stipe more or less elongated, the interior containing roundish vesicles which become smaller upward, and gradually pass into the normal spores.
The wall thin; the outer layer not continuous, the irregular brown vesicles disposed in angular patches and elongated bands, which have a somewhat reticulate arrangement.
The wall thin; the vesicleswith a dark polygonal outline, disposed in thin irregular reticulate patches, which are more or less confluent.
Now the sensory nerves passing from the seminal vesicles up to the erection and emission centers are stimulated by any unusual pressure within the vesicles.
On the occasion of the next nocturnal emission the ampullæ will empty along with the seminal vesicles and these spermatozoa pass out.
Remember in this connection that semen is partly from the testes (Spermatozoa) and partly from the vesicles and prostate.
Cases of too frequent nocturnal emissions accompanied by languor and headache are usually caused by irritability or lack of tonicity of the sexual apparatus, particularly of the seminal vesicles and the ducts.
The formation and release of spermatozoa is only slightly modified by the condition of nutrition; while the rate of secretion from the vesicles is greatly modified in quantity.
Unusual pressure may be caused either by distention due to accumulated secretion or by pressure upon the vesicles from over-distended rectum or bladder.
The seminalvesicles are not receptacles for the testicular secretion.
The seminal vesicles possess glandular walls and secrete the substance which they contain, no part of the secretion of the testes normally finding its way into the vesicles.
Let us inquire regarding the function of this alkaline albuminous secretion from the vesicles and prostate.
Is the emptying of the seminal vesicles thru nocturnal emission a universal phenomenon among continent men?
Hence it follows that the exceedingly deep Prussian blue cannot be produced by vesicles of water, but must be caused by reflection from the molecules of air, whose polarizing angle is 45 deg.
Professor Clausius considers the vapours to be vesicles or bladders, and ascribes the blue colour of the first order to reflection from the thin pellicle of water.
As its name imports, it consists of vesicles filled with a gray granular material.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "vesicles" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.