The notorious acid flashback happens when the body uses some of these fat reserves, thus releasing L.S.D. into the bloodstream. |
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The disease involves scarring of the lung, which causes an irreversible loss of the tissue's ability to transfer oxygen into the bloodstream. |
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They solubilize dietary lipids facilitating their hydrolysis by lipases and their absorption into the bloodstream. |
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But milk appeared to inhibit the antioxidant potential of the flavonoids, reducing their absorption into the bloodstream. |
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The relatively quick absorption into the bloodstream enables a rapid headache response. |
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It may be a tonic for treating hypoglycemia and Addison's disease and in purifying the liver and bloodstream. |
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Stomach juices must break them into small pieces before they can be absorbed through the stomach wall and enter the bloodstream, Phillips says. |
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Chemicals such as adrenaline, noradrenaline and cortisol are pumped into the bloodstream. |
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Depending on how tobacco is taken, nicotine can reach peak levels in the bloodstream and brain rapidly. |
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So they swallow this stuff that gets into the bloodstream and goes to those nerve endings that control the central nervous system. |
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Lymph vessels recycle the interstitial fluid and return it to the bloodstream in the circulatory system. |
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He breathalyses her which suggests she has twice the legal limit of alcohol in her bloodstream. |
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Normally, immune complexes are rapidly removed from the bloodstream by macrophages in the spleen, and Kupffer cells in the liver. |
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The antihistamine drug also gets into your bloodstream and travels through the blood to your brain. |
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Citrus fruits, vinegar, and vitamins such as ascorbic acid or folic acid do not change the acidity of your stomach or your bloodstream. |
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Without receiving proper directions, the cells cannot assimilate the glucose, which then remains in the bloodstream. |
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Large numbers of immature, abnormal lymphocytes called lymphoblasts are produced and released into the bloodstream. |
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These infections may be mild such as pimples or boils or serious, for example infection of the bloodstream, bones or joints. |
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Sucrose is not digested in the mouth or stomach but passes directly to the lower intestines and thence to the bloodstream and the brain. |
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An embolism can happen when something solid, semi-solid or gaseous is travelling in your bloodstream and gets stuck. |
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This blood test measures the amount of iron bound to transferrin, an iron-carrying protein in your bloodstream. |
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Creatine monohydrate is known to have poor bioavailability, which means not much of what you take actually makes it into your bloodstream. |
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The larvae migrate to the mosquito's mouth, and, when it bites another human, they enter the bloodstream. |
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Red blood cells are produced in the bone marrow and circulate in the bloodstream before they are broken down in the spleen. |
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From here, the oxygen in the air can be absorbed into the bloodstream and taken to the rest of the body. |
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It can also travel to other parts of the body through the bloodstream and lymph system. |
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A special dye is injected into the bloodstream which shows up when the x-ray is taken. |
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While cholesterol in the bloodstream has a reputation for clogging the body's arteries, it's not all bad. |
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When they dive, muscles close the blowhole and their ribcage collapses to keep air bubbles from forming in the bloodstream. |
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Last year, an estimated 240 people died from the most severe strain of the superbug, which occurs when the infection enters the bloodstream. |
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Pain shot through my arm, quickly dampened by drugs sliding into my bloodstream. |
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Once in a child's bloodstream the lead travels to the brain, soft tissue and bones. |
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For any recovering alcoholic, one of the biggest lessons of their sobriety is to learn how to have fun without alcohol in the bloodstream. |
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During digestion, carbohydrates break down into sugar and enter the bloodstream in the form of glucose, a simple sugar. |
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The fat-soluble neurotoxins solanine and chaconine are present in potatoes and can be detected in the bloodstream of all potato eaters. |
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I understand these results are based on the amount of nicotine found in the bloodstream. |
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Sporozoites, the product of sporogony, migrate to the salivary glands and are injected into the bloodstream when a mosquito bites a person. |
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Fungi such as candida can also cause brain infections if they get into the brain or bloodstream. |
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When we eat carbs, the glucose released into our bloodstream raises our blood-sugar, and sometimes gives us a blood-sugar rush. |
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Free radicals careen through your bloodstream and indiscriminately plunder unpaired electrons from unsuspecting molecules. |
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One of the main sources of nosocomial bloodstream infections is intravascular catheters. |
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There, hormones called prolactin and oxytocin are released into the bloodstream. |
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Today one can just use a needle and syringe to inject a drug into the bloodstream, but other means were needed in the days before hypodermics. |
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Suddenly I felt a coldness against my neck and the brief pinch that usually meant someone had just punched a hypospray into my bloodstream. |
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They are high in fibre and a substance called pectin, both of which may help to control cholesterol levels in the bloodstream. |
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They spit saliva into your bloodstream to stop the blood coagulating and keep it flowing. |
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Anyone found with illegal substances in their bloodstream will face prosecution. |
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The four-year-old was carried into the hospital in a deep coma, with a high temperature and a high level of malaria parasite in his bloodstream. |
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Any time a child has a surgical procedure, the surgical incision can introduce bacteria into the bloodstream. |
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Aridene screamed in pain as the needle pierced her skin and the chloral hydrate entered her bloodstream. |
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Inhalation enables the oils to pass into the bloodstream via the lungs, and inunction through the skin. |
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Carbonated alcoholic drinks, or spirits mixed with fizzy drinks can also affect how fast alcohol is absorbed into the bloodstream. |
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These enzymes break down proteins into polypeptides and then into amino acids, which are absorbed through the gut wall into the bloodstream. |
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They travel through the bloodstream to the lungs, then they're coughed up, swallowed, and wind up in the small intestine. |
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Conventional wisdom dictates that starchy foods such as potatoes should give up their sugar slowly into the bloodstream. |
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It is going to lead to increases in the appearance, of proteins, such as creatine kinase in the bloodstream. |
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This ensures that creatine and insulin are present in the bloodstream at the same time. |
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Diabetes and prediabetes are measured by the levels of glucose in your bloodstream. |
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If a dart pierces human skin and faecal matter gets into the target's bloodstream, there can be serious health consequences. |
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But when heated to body temperature in a patient's bloodstream, the toxicologists theorized, it gasified, causing a fatal pulmonary embolism. |
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Chemicals from tobacco smoke get into your bloodstream and can damage the delicate blood vessels inside your eye. |
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A part of the blood clot detaches from the lining of the veins and travels up the bloodstream to the pulmonary artery, leading to a block. |
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He added trace amounts of alcohol and an amount of the tranquilliser diazepam were also found in her bloodstream. |
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With age, your kidneys become less efficient in removing waste from your bloodstream. |
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Once a hormone is secreted, it travels from the endocrine gland through the bloodstream to the cells designed to receive its message. |
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Endocrine glands by contrast are ductless, and secrete hormones directly into the bloodstream. |
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Also, the toxins from this excess waste matter can be reabsorbed into the bloodstream and circulated throughout the body, causing many problems. |
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The other is meningococcemia, which occurs when the bacteria enter the bloodstream and cause overwhelming organ failure. |
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Compared to its refined counterpart, wholewheat pasta gives a slower, more sustained release of energy into the bloodstream, is higher in fibre and more nutritious too. |
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Then normal bone marrow cells, donated from a close relative or carefully removed from the person's own bone marrow, are infused into the bloodstream with a drip. |
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As well as the polymorphs and macrophages, there are cells that do not originate in the bone marrow, nor travel in the bloodstream, which can also act as phagocytes. |
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It has entered my bloodstream and is systematically choking me to death. |
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Once inside the stomach, the tapeworm egg hatches, penetrates the intestine, travels through the bloodstream and may develop into cysticerci in the muscles, brain, or eyes. |
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Secretion into the bloodstream is increased by the presence of food, particularly protein, in the stomach, and is also stimulated by neural reflexes. |
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When carbohydrates are digested, they are broken down into sugar molecules, which are then absorbed into the bloodstream, leading to an increase in blood-glucose levels. |
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Alcohol dulls the brain, reduces reaction time and the law says very clearly that drinking and driving with a certain amount of it in your bloodstream is taboo. |
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And I grant you, smoking is a very efficient way to get mind-altering drugs such as nicotine, marijuana, cocaine, or heroin into the bloodstream and hence to the brain. |
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The enzymes lastly help to clean the blood, and get all the gunk and necrotic tissue that the body's trying to get rid of through the bloodstream out. |
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When said light enters your bloodstream only a portion is reflected and returned to the sensor thus giving you your readout. |
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It also lowers the levels of amino acid homocysteine which, when found in high levels in the bloodstream, is linked to an increased risk of heart disease. |
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But some testosterone remains freely circulating in the bloodstream. |
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Agave nectar is a fruit sugar, which absorbs more slowly into the bloodstream and is suitable for diabetics, since it's much lower on the glycemic index. |
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Women also make less of an enzyme called alcohol dehydrogenase, which breaks down alcohol before it hits the bloodstream. |
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Compared with rats fed a control diet, those on the high-fructose diet experienced a rise in uric acid in the bloodstream and developed insulin resistance. |
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Owners neuter male dogs and cats when the flow of testosterone in their bloodstream generates either unmanageable behaviour or unwanted offspring. |
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Our epic finale this season could take place within the bloodstream of a nuclear scientist. |
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An abundance of yeast disturbs your gastrointestinal mucosa, a protective barrier that helps prevent undigested food particles from passing into your bloodstream. |
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Infections can strike joints, airways, the lungs, the brain and the tissues lining the spinal cord, or the bloodstream. |
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In contrast, the actual chicken pox virus long ago exited my bloodstream and is not detectable. |
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However, staph bacteria can also cause serious and sometimes fatal infections, such as bloodstream infections, surgical wound infections and pneumonia. |
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In turn, CRH acts on the pituitary gland, just beneath the brain, triggering the release of another hormone, adrenocorticotropin into the bloodstream. |
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Pomella is a patented pomegranate extract from Verdure Sciences standardized to punicalagins delivering free ellagic acid in the bloodstream. |
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Smoking is a practice in which a substance is burned and the resulting smoke breathed in to be tasted and absorbed into the bloodstream. |
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Once in the bloodstream, plutonium moves throughout the body and into the bones, liver, or other body organs. |
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This releases alanine and lactate produced from pyruvate into the bloodstream, which can be converted into glucose by the liver. |
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It is very small and can lodge itself within the lungs and enter the bloodstream. |
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But methadone hits the bloodstream within a half-hour of oral ingestion. |
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The body works hard to maintain the crucial alkaline pH in the bloodstream. |
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Both were carbon forms produced in a partial vacuum as to provide a vehicle for carrying the high concentrations of oxygen into the bloodstream. |
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The blood-brain barrier often prevents anticancer agents in the bloodstream from entering the brain to attack tumor cells. |
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These proteins are called kallikreins and are present in the bloodstream, making them suitable for clinical detection. |
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Seasonal variation in the etiology of bloodstream infections in a febrile inpatient population in a developing country. |
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Macrophages may then traffic infection via the bloodstream to the meninges and fetoplacental unit. |
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Phloridzin from apple extract, which inhibits the molecular carriers responsible for transporting sugars from the intestine into the bloodstream. |
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But the poison, a type of protein known as a lectin, must enter the bloodstream to do damage. |
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In the jungle It's caused by uric acid that forms crystals in the bloodstream and it is referred to as a rich man's disease. |
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The virus of Hindu majoritarianism has entered the bloodstream of the Indian nation. |
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A WORKER at a Warwickshire firm was sacked after he was given a drugs test and found to have cannabis in his bloodstream. |
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This opened the blood vessels in his lungs to increase the oxygen being captured in the bloodstream and be distributed to the rest of his body. |
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Many mammals methylate trivalent inorganic arsenic in liver to species that are released into the bloodstream and excreted in urine and feces. |
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The crucial role of catheters in micrococcal bloodstream infections in cancer patients. |
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The destruction of red blood cells releases free hemoglobin into the bloodstream, which can have fatal consequences. |
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The parasite, in a form called the sporozoite, moves with the mosquito's saliva into the human bloodstream. |
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How can Bond travel around the globe unseen when he has nanobots in his bloodstream so MI6 and the enemy can track his movements? |
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The test proved positive for the narcotized substance in the woman's bloodstream. |
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They found that with increased stress, levels of norepinephrine increase in the bloodstream. |
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After three or four days the bacteria enter the bloodstream, and infect organs such as the spleen and the lungs. |
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Cialis, meanwhile, is not ill-affected by food in the stomach, and it can be taken much earlier because it lingers in the bloodstream. |
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Alcohol pours predigested sugar into your bloodstream, so it's not surprising that 1-glutamine works well to reduce sugar cravings in many people, as well. |
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Because of the AMS in the bloodstream, it is believed by some to act as a mosquito repellent, but no clinically reported evidence suggests it is actually effective. |
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Her death was investigated as part of the Hyponatraemia Inquiry, a condition which causes the brain cells to swell because of a low level of sodium in the bloodstream. |
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However, the technique went wrong when the air injected into the knee joint leaked into Mr Belcuore's bloodstream, triggering an embolism that caused a fatal heart attack. |
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Pulmonary embolism is a blockage of the main artery of the lung or one of its branches by a substance that has travelled from elsewhere in the body through the bloodstream. |
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Fevers are caused by chemicals called pyrogens flowing in the bloodstream. |
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Meningococcal disease is a life-threatening illness caused by bacteria that infect the bloodstream and the lining that surrounds the brain and spinal cord. |
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If you were to eat any part of an animal or an animal product such as milk or eggs, some of the animal's cholesterol would make its way into your bloodstream. |
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This limited ability to fully methylate folate results in the occurrence of varying amounts of unmetabolized folic acid in the bloodstream, which cannot be used by the cells. |
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Under normal circumstances, the lining of the small intestine permits only fully digested food molecules to pass into the bloodstream and lymph vessels. |
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This part of the gut absorbs critical nutrients such as protein, carbs and fats through nubby little fingers and sends them into the bloodstream to nourish the body's cells. |
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These changes evidently occur when cruciferous vegetable chemicals known as isothiocyanates interact with signaling protein fragments circulating in the bloodstream. |
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Pharmacologists have now disguised one such drug, called a renin inhibitor, so that it can sneak into the bloodstream and pass through the liver intact. |
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Asparaginase enzymes deplete the level of asparagine in the bloodstream. |
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Embolic particles, which may include thrombus, atheroma and lipids, may become dislodged by surgical or catheter manipulations and enter the bloodstream. |
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