Special articulating instruments and access ports make it unnecessary to place trocars externally for triangulation, thus allowing the creation of a small, solitary portal of entry into the abdomen.
12.
Special articulating instruments and access ports eliminate the need to place trochars externally for triangulation, thus allowing the creation of a small, solitary portal of entry into the abdomen.
13.
The clinical presentations of anaerobic bacteremia are not different from those observed in aerobic bacteremia, except for the infection's signs observed at the portal of entry of the infection.
14.
During a brief period of independence in 1918 1921 Poti was Georgia s principal window to Europe, also serving as the portal of entry for successive German and British expeditionary forces.
15.
And the germs associated with excrement and urine are harmless unless they enter the body through one of the main " portals of entry, " the mouth, nose or eyes, Watkins said.
16.
Lesions produced by Xcc may serve as portals of entry for other soft-rot pathogens such as " Pectobacterium carotovorum " ( formerly " Erwinia " " carotovora " ) and " Pseudomonas marginalis ".
17.
The main portal of entry for human infection of " S . bovis " bacteremia is the gastrointestinal tract, but in some cases, entry is through the urinary tract, the hepatobiliary tree, or the oropharynx.
18.
One is that an STD increases the shedding of HIV cells in genital fluids as much as tenfold; also, some STDs cause a breakdown of the skin cell membranes, creating a portal of entry for HIV.
19.
"The reality is that the seat on the board is considered a portal of entry through which the investment banker obtains business for its firm, " said John Coffee, a professor of securities law at Columbia University.
20.
I know that oral antibiotics are often the way to go; nowadays, the most likely bacteria are the bugs that live on your skin, like staphylococci, or streptococci, especially if there's a history of some kind of injury-- a mosquito bite on the eyelid, say, or a basketball in the eye, which may have provided the bacteria with a portal of entry into the skin.