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  • mixed base crude oil
    È¥ÇÕ±â¿øÀ¯(ûèùêÐñ ê«êú).
  • standardization of crude rate
    Á¶À²(Ì¡Ëô)Ç¥ÁØÈ­.
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COR cardiac output recorder; comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation; conditioned orientation reflex; co...
CP candle power; capillary pressure; cardiac pacing; cardiac performance; cardiopulmonary; caudate puta...
TACE chlorotrianicene; teichoic acid crude extract
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DCP digestible crude protein
DF Dietary fibre
FOTI Fibre optic transillumination
NDF Neutral detergent fibre
RF Reissner's fibre
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Rosenthal fibre An oval or elongated eosinophilic mass believed to represent a modified process of an astrocyte; seen in large numbers in certain slowly growing astrocytomas and areas of chronic reactive gliosis.
(05 Mar 2000)
collagen fibre An individual fibre that varies in diameter from less than 1 um to about 12 um and is composed of fibrils; the fibre's, which are usually arranged in bundles, undergo some branching and are of indefinite length; chemically the fibre is a glycoprotein, collagen, which yields gelatin upon boiling; they make up the principal element of irregular connective tissue, tendons, aponeuroses, and most ligaments, and occur in the matrix of cartilage and osseous tissue.
Synonym: white fibre.
(05 Mar 2000)
white fibre White mammalian muscle fibres; larger in diameter than red fibres they have less myoglobin, sarcoplasm, and mitochondria, and contract more quickly.
Synonym: collagen fibre.
(05 Mar 2000)
cone fibre A part of the cone cell of the retina; the inner cone fibre is a slender axon-like part of the cone extending from the cell body to the pedicle located in the outer plexiform layer of the retina; in the outer fovea, where the cones are much elongated, they narrow to an
(05 Mar 2000)
muscle fibre <pathology> Component of a skeletal muscle comprising a single syncytial cell that contains myofibrils.
Any of the cells of skeletal or cardiac muscle tissue. Skeletal muscle fibres are cylindrical multinucleate cells containing contracting myofibrils, across which run transverse striations, enclosed in a sarcolemma. Cardiac muscle fibres contain one or sometimes two nuclei and myofibrils and are separated from one another by an intercalated disk; although striated, cardiac fibres branch to form an interlacing network.
2. fast-twitch muscles. Skeletal muscle fibres having high myofibrillar atpase activity, high glycolytic enzyme activities, and an intermediate glycogen content which produce a fast twitch. There are two types. Fast fatigable fibres, also called white fibres, have a low myoglobin content, and a small mitochondrial content, and fatigue rapidly due to their limited glycogen content and low capacity for oxidative metabolism. Fast fatigue-resistant fibres, also called red fibres, have a large mitochondrial content and a high myoglobin content, related to their resistance to fatigue.
3. slow-twitch muscles. Skeletal muscle fibres having low myofibrillar atpase activity, low glycogen content, and high myoglobin content, high mitochondrial oxidative enzyme activities, and an intermediate mitochondrial content which produce a slow twitch and are fatigue-resistant.
(12 Dec 1998)
pole fibre <cell biology> Microtubules inserted into the pole regions of the mitotic spindle (each pole is the product of the division of the centrioles and constitutes a microtubule organising centre.
(18 Nov 1997)
corticobulbar fibre <physiology> Nerve fibre's projecting from the motor and somatic sensory cortex to the rhombencephalon.
Included in this corticofugal fibre system are corticoreticular fibre's terminating in the reticular formation of the rhombencephalon, and corticonuclear fibre's to the motor nuclei innervating the musculature of the face, tongue, and jaws, and to some fibre's of the rhombencephalic sensory relay nuclei.
They terminate directly on some motor cranial nerve nuclei, in the reticular formation, and on sensory relay nuclei, such as the cuneate nucleus and gracile nucleus and the spinal trigeminal nucleus.
See: corticobulbar tract.
(05 Mar 2000)
myelinated nerve fibre An axon enveloped by a myelin sheath formed by oligodendroglia cells (in brain and spinal cord) or Schwann cells (in peripheral nerves).
Synonym: medullated nerve fibre.
(05 Mar 2000)
corticonuclear fibre <physiology> Descriptive term connotating fibres from a cortical structure (cerebral or cerebellar) passing to subcortical cell groups; fibres comprising the tractus corticobulbaris; cerebellar corticonuclear fibres (Purkinje cell axons to the cerebellar nuclei).
Synonym: fibrae corticonucleares.
(05 Mar 2000)
corticopontine fibre <physiology> The fibres that compose the corticopontine tract.
Synonym: fibrae corticopontinae.
(05 Mar 2000)
corticoreticular fibre <physiology> Corticofugal fibres distributed to the reticular formation of the mesencephalon and rhombencephalon.
See: corticobulbar fibres.
Synonym: fibrae corticoreticulares.
(05 Mar 2000)
corticorubral fibre <physiology> Nerve fibres projecting from the cerebral cortex (primarily precentral and premotor regions) to the red nucleus of the midbrain.
(05 Mar 2000)
cotton-fibre embolism Embolism by cotton fibres from sterile gauze used in intravenous medication or transfusion; may form as foreign body granulomas in small pulmonary arteries.
(05 Mar 2000)
Henle's fibre layer The layer of inner cone fibres in the central area of the retina.
(05 Mar 2000)
high-fibre diet A diet high in the nondigestible part of plants, which is fibre. Fibre is found in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes. Insoluble fibre increases stool bulk, decreases transit time of food in the bowel, and decreases constipation and the risk of colon cancer. Soluble fibre delays absorption of glucose, which helps to control blood sugar in diabetes mellitus, and delays absorption of lipids, which helps to control hyperlipidemia. Recommended in treatment of diverticular disease of the colon.
(05 Mar 2000)
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