Blood
in sentence
3423 examples of Blood in a sentence
It substantially raises the probability of diseases, like diabetes, heart disease, stroke, high
blood
pressure, and cancer.
It's all job, all work, all reality, all blood, all sweat, no tears.
Hormonal methods in particular can cause symptoms like headaches, nausea, and high
blood
pressure, but they vary from woman to woman.
Since
blood
vessels and nerves in our teeth are enclosed deep within, at this stage, the expanding cavity doesn't hurt.
Those are the vessels that supply oxygenated
blood
to the heart.
If one of the plaques ruptures or cracks, a
blood
clot will form around it in minutes, and a partially closed artery can become completely blocked.
Blood
flow is cut off to the cardiac muscle and the oxygen-starved cells start to die within several minutes.
The injured muscle may not be able to pump
blood
as well, and its rhythm might be thrown off.
Taking aspirin, which thins the blood, and nitroglycerin, which opens up the artery, can help keep the heart attack from getting worse.
They commonly use an electrocardiogram to measure the heart's electrical activity and a
blood
test to assess heart muscle damage.
Using a piece of vein or artery from another part of the body, heart surgeons can reroute
blood
flow around the blockage.
And drugs that help manage risk factors, like high
blood
pressure, cholesterol, and diabetes, will make heart attacks less likely, too.
When a mosquito bites you, it releases a compound into your body called an anticoagulant that prevents your
blood
from clotting.
This enables increased
blood
flow, which helpfully accelerates the body's immune response to this perceived threat.
That includes warm blood, body hair or fur, the ability to breathe using lungs, and nourishing their young with milk.
Directly connected to the mother's
blood
supply, it funnels nutrients and oxygen straight into the calf's body via the umbilical cord, and also exports its waste.
They donated their own
blood
for his operation.
The answer is that it hitches a ride in your circulatory
blood
stream, cycling through your body in a race to do its job before it's snared by organs and molecules designed to neutralize and expel foreign substances.
The dissolved ibuprofen travels into the small intestine and then across the intestinal wall into a network of
blood
vessels.
These
blood
vessels feed into a vein, which carries the blood, and anything in it, to the liver.
As the
blood
and the drug molecules in it travel through liver
blood
vessels, enzymes attempt to react with the ibuprofen molecules to neutralize them.
Half an hour after you swallow the pill, some of the dose has already made it into the circulatory
blood
stream.
This
blood
loop travels through every limb and organ, including the heart, brain, kidneys, and back through the liver.
Then the body starts efficiently eliminating ibuprofen, with the
blood
dose decreasing by half every two hours on average.
When the ibuprofen molecules detach from their targets, the systemic
blood
stream carries them away again.
The loop from liver to body to kidneys continues at a rate of about one
blood
cycle per minute, with a little more of the drug neutralized and filtered out in each cycle.
These basic steps are the same for any drug that you take orally, but the speed of the process and the amount of medicine that makes it into your
blood
stream varies based on drug, person, and how it gets into the body.
In humans, lead is directly absorbed into the body and distributed to the blood, soft tissues, and mineralized tissues.
Once in the nervous system, lead mimics and disrupts the normal functions of calcium, causing damages ranging from learning disabilities to high
blood
pressure.
The immune system relies on millions of defensive white
blood
cells, also known as leukocytes, that originate in our bone marrow.
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