Heart
in sentence
6221 examples of Heart in a sentence
Inspire local planners to put the food sites at the
heart
of the town and the city plan, not relegate them to the edges of the settlements that nobody can see.
Put that at the
heart
of your school culture, and you will create a different generation.
You know it wasn't anger that made me stop my
heart
till the hammer fell.
People survive because of the local doctors, nurses and aid workers who are from the very
heart
of the affected community, the people who dare to work where others can't or won't.
In San Ramon, California, they published an iPhone app in which they allow you or me to say we are certified CPR-trained, and then when someone has a
heart
attack, a notification goes out so that you can rush over to the person over here and deliver CPR.
One of the students asked a question that just warmed my
heart.
There's a wonderful drug, and a class of drugs actually, but the particular drug was Vioxx, and for people who were suffering from severe arthritis pain, the drug was an absolute lifesaver, but unfortunately, for another subset of those people, they suffered pretty severe
heart
side effects, and for a subset of those people, the side effects were so severe, the cardiac side effects, that they were fatal.
It has massively parallel processing capability, and it's going to change the way drugs are discovered, we hope, and I think eventually what's going to happen is that we're going to want to re-screen drugs, on arrays like this, that already exist, all of the drugs that currently exist, and in the future, you're going to be taking drugs and treatments that have been tested for side effects on all of the relevant cells, on brain cells and
heart
cells and liver cells.
It's here now, and in our family, my son has type 1 diabetes, which is still an incurable disease, and I lost my parents to
heart
disease and cancer, but I think that my story probably sounds familiar to you, because probably a version of it is your story.
This chart maps the teacher's
heart
rate against the noise level.
Noise goes up,
heart
rate goes up.
To you and me, that's a
heart
attack.
But, having had a father with
heart
disease, and realizing that what our family could afford was not what he should have gotten, and having a good friend step in to help, I really believe that all people deserve access to health at prices they can afford.
So, in addition to learning some useful geometry, the child has been exposed to some pretty sophisticated science strategies, like reduction, which is the art of transforming a complex problem into a simple one, or generalization, which is at the
heart
of any scientific discipline, or the fact that some properties are invariant under some transformations.
Now, this little anecdote gets to the
heart
of why I'm really passionate about collaborative consumption, and why, after I finished my book, I decided I'm going to try and spread this into a global movement.
So in 1980, some researchers did a study on a drug called lorcainide, and this was an anti-arrhythmic drug, a drug that suppresses abnormal
heart
rhythms, and the idea was, after people have had a
heart
attack, they're quite likely to have abnormal
heart
rhythms, so if we give them a drug that suppresses abnormal
heart
rhythms, this will increase the chances of them surviving.
Unfortunately, over the course of the next five, 10 years, other companies had the same idea about drugs that would prevent arrhythmias in people who have had
heart
attacks.
They were prescribed very widely because
heart
attacks are a very common thing, and it took so long for us to find out that these drugs also caused an increased rate of death that before we detected that safety signal, over 100,000 people died unnecessarily in America from the prescription of anti-arrhythmic drugs.
I wanted to blow you all up to try and make a point, but — (Laughter) — TED, for health and safety reasons, have told me I've got to do a countdown, so I feel like a bit of an Irish or Jewish terrorist, sort of a health and safety terrorist, and I — (Laughter) — I've got to count 3, 2, 1, and it's a bit alarming, so thinking of what my motto would be, and it would be, "Body parts, not
heart
attacks."
Whatever the point, it gets to the
heart
of the problem, you're doing it, you're talking to them.
Beyond that, what I found most fascinating was the level of endemic corruption that I saw across all different countries, and particularly centered around the
heart
of power, around public officials who were embezzling the public's money for their own personal enrichment, and allowed to do that because of official secrecy.
I mean, there definitely is progress on the line, but I think what we find is that the closer that we get right into the
heart
of power, the more opaque, closed it becomes.
If you take some
heart
cells from an animal, and put it in a dish, they'll just sit there and beat.
And if we are to move towards our collective bliss ... it's time we shed our focus on the physical and instead embrace the virtues of the
heart.
As you might have guessed, I'm a tissue engineer, and this is a video of some of the beating
heart
that I've engineered in the lab.
Cool thing number two, you can grow any type of tissue out of them: brain, heart, liver, you get the picture, but out of your cells.
So we can make a model of your heart, your brain on a chip.
A drug for the
heart
can get metabolized in the liver, and some of the byproducts may be stored in the fat.
By combining tissue engineering techniques with microfluidics, the field is actually evolving towards just that, a model of the entire ecosystem of the body, complete with multiple organ systems to be able to test how a drug you might take for your blood pressure might affect your liver or an antidepressant might affect your
heart.
We knew more about the surface of the moon than we did about the
heart
of Antarctica.
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