| hypertrophy of the heart |
An enlargement of the heart caused by an increased size of the myocardium. It may be caused by exercise, valvular stenosis, and many other conditions. The myocardium increases in size by enlargement of each cell, not by
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| hypertrophic |
A term when, applied to lakes, indicates a lake highly enriched in nutrients, with low clarity, and a high likelihood of algal blooms. Lakes that become hypertrophic lakes normally become that way because of human land use (and abuse) in the surrounding catchment, with poor riparian management, high run-off, and excessive use of fertilisers. Hypertrophic lakes tend to be unsuitable for any use, from drinking water to contact recreation, and are not conducive to healthy aquatic ecosystems either.
Ãâó: www.nrc.govt.nz/reports.and.news/annual.environmen...
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| hypertrophy |
An increased size in muscle or thickening of muscle tissue in response to increases stress.
Ãâó: www.thebodyworker.com/swedishglossary.htm
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| hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy |
Hypertrophic refers to, on X-ray, the membrane covering the bone is elevated and there appears to be extra growth. The "Osteo" means bone, "arthro" means joints and "pathy" means something is wrong with. Clubbing of ones fingertips is considered a form of HPO.
Ãâó: www.cystic-l.org/handbook/html/glossary.htm
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| hypertrophy |
the muscular enlargement that results from resistance training. Is primarily a result of an increase in the cross-sectional area of the existing fibers. Adaptations create the cumulative effect of enlarging the fiber and the associated muscle or muscle group.
Ãâó: www.gk22.com/resources/glossary.html
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