human knee การใช้
- The term is derived from the association with the vertical location of the human knee.
- Human knees adapt to changes in speed and terrain by bending at varying rates and stopping at different angles.
- Taylor invented a method for rebuilding joints employing Gore-Tex prostheses, similar to human knee replacement surgery.
- This is derived from the fact that the shape of the top of the mountain bears some resemblance to a human knee.
- Recently, there have been several published case reports of successful cartilage growth in human knees using autologous cultured mesenchymal stem cells.
- They reported a case study in which a full-thickness defect in the articular cartilage of a human knee was successfully repaired.
- In a bizarre experiment, scientists shined a bright light onto the backs of human knees and re-set the master biological clock inside the human brain.
- Standing in the charred remains of the family's living room, she pointed out what appeared to be a charred human knee joint lying on the floor.
- Ward explained after the race that Monarchos has problems with his hocks, located on the back legs and comparable to the human knee, but they can be treated.
- It's time for some genius in a garage or a lab to combine This, That and The Other Thing and create something to take the place of human knee ligaments.
- Twist and Shout : Story of the Anterior Cruciate Ligament _ Fans are jostled about during a ride through a giant mockup of the human knee that is torqued by a mockup of a giant defensive lineman.
- In an experiment from the strange but possibly true category, scientists have shone a bright light on the backs of human knees and, in some mysterious way, reset the master biological clock in the human brain.
- And in San Francisco, surgeons have been grinding up cows'Achilles'tendons to make a scaffold they insert into a human knee, hoping it will encourage damaged meniscus to grow around it much the way rosebushes do around a trellis.
- Skeletal muscle burns 90 mg ( 0.5 mmol ) of glucose each minute during continuous activity ( such as when repetitively extending the human knee ), generating H " 24 W of mechanical energy, and since muscle energy conversion is only 22 26 % efficient, H " 76 W of heat energy.