Diseases
in sentence
1608 examples of Diseases in a sentence
This is an avian quarantine facility where all imported birds coming into America are required to undergo a 30-day quarantine, where they are tested for
diseases
including Exotic Newcastle Disease and Avian Influenza.
At Ifakara we wish to expand our knowledge on the biology of the mosquito; to control many other diseases, including, of course, the malaria, but also those other
diseases
that mosquitoes transmit like dengue, Chikungunya and Zika virus.
To try and understand what it is about genetic differences that causes the
diseases.
Because we understand very little about most human
diseases.
The heightened workout a bilingual brain receives throughout its life can also help delay the onset of diseases, like Alzheimer's and dementia by as much as five years.
Every 30 seconds a patient dies from
diseases
that could be treated with tissue regeneration or replacement.
I'd like to show it in real time, now, and I want to do that for all of the
diseases
that we can do that for.
We've made small wins in
diseases
like chronic myelogenous leukemia, where we have a pill that can put 100 percent of people in remission, but in general, we haven't made an impact at all in the war on cancer.
So the
diseases
we have today, which reflect patterns in the system over the last several decades, are going to change dramatically over the next decade or so based on things like this.
Now let's move from sleep to
diseases.
Over 80 major
diseases
have been cracked at the genomic level, but this is quite extraordinary: More has been learned about the underpinnings of disease in the last two and a half years than in the history of man.
So, I hope I've convinced you of this, of the impact on hospital clinic resources is profound and then the impact on
diseases
is equally impressive across all these different
diseases
and more.
We can step back out again and then reorganize the data by cause of death, seeing that circulatory
diseases
and cancer are the usual suspects, but not for everyone.
That's one of the deadliest
diseases
known to humans.
That brings up questions of privacy and insurability and all kinds of stuff, but it also allows us to start going after diseases, because if you run a person who has leukemia through something like this, it turns out that three
diseases
with completely similar clinical syndromes are completely different
diseases.
In the rich world,
diseases
that threatened millions of us just a generation ago no longer exist, hardly.
You take them away, disease comes back, horrible
diseases.
But what we now know, is that for a number of diseases, there are defects in the system, where the body can't prune back extra blood vessels, or can't grow enough new ones in the right place at the right time.
And when angiogenesis is out of balance, a myriad of
diseases
result.
In total, there are more than 70 major
diseases
affecting more than a billion people worldwide, that all look on the surface to be different from one another, but all actually share abnormal angiogenesis as their common denominator.
And this realization is allowing us to re-conceptualize the way that we actually approach these diseases, by controlling angiogenesis.
I hope I've convinced you that for
diseases
like cancer, obesity and other conditions, there may be a great power in attacking their common denominator: angiogenesis.
We see refugees, and we see horrible
diseases.
In the vaccine area, Synthetic Genomics and the Institute are forming a new vaccine company because we think these tools can affect vaccines to
diseases
that haven't been possible to date, things where the viruses rapidly evolve, such with rhinovirus.
The good news is that we're at a moment in time when science, technology, globalization is converging to create an unprecedented possibility: the possibility to make history by preventing infectious
diseases
that still account for one-fifth of all deaths and countless misery on Earth.
Now, it's interesting because there are 30-odd
diseases
that can be treated with vaccines now, but we're still threatened by things like HIV and flu.
But, you know, the research that has occurred from HIV now has really helped with innovation with other
diseases.
New infectious
diseases
appear or reappear every few years.
No longer do the poor and vulnerable need to be threatened by infectious diseases, or indeed, anybody.
Endemic livestock diseases, some of them transmissible to humans, threaten not only livestock producers in those poor countries, but all human health across all countries.
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