triradiate การใช้
- Physical signs include deformities like triradiate pelvis and lordosis.
- Triradiate spores with fine surface markings were found.
- Evaluating the position of the triradiate cartilage on an developmental dysplasia of the hip.
- The Y-shaped growth plate that separates them, the triradiate cartilage, is fused definitively at ages 14 16.
- In children, the triradiate cartilage closes at an approximate bone age of 12 years for girls and 14 years for boys.
- HE angle ( hilgenriener epiphyseal angle-angle subtended between a horizontal line connecting the triradiate cartilage and the epiphysisn normal angle is < 30 degrees.
- Preputioplasty can cure BXO more effectively than circumcision, according to a study in which the specific technique involved triradiate preputial incisions and injection of triamcinolone intralesionally.
- TRSV has been shown to prefer the areas of the stylet extension and anterior esophageal lumen, whereas the TomRSV is found mainly in the triradiate lumen of the esophageal bulb.
- The "'triradiate cartilage "'( in Latin cartilago ypsiloformis ) is the'Y'- shaped epiphyseal plate between the pubis to form the acetabulum of the os coxae.
- Erythrosuchids are notable for being the first archosauriforms to have a triradiate pelvic girdle with three projecting areas formed from three bones : an illium and an elongated basal archosauriforms such as proterosuchids lacked these features and probably had a more sprawling posture.
- In the articulations of the heads of the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth ribs, each of which articulates with a single vertebra, the triradiate arrangement does not exist; but the fibers of the ligament in each case are connected to the vertebra above, as well as to that with which the rib articulates.
- In both sexes, the fins are spineless : the single dorsal fin with 5 6 soft rays, the pectoral fins with 14 18, the anal fin with four, and the caudal fin with 19 . There are six branchiostegal rays and 19 vertebrae; the parietal is lacking throughout life, there are no epurals, and the pelvic bone is triradiate.
- Euglenid, with plastids, rigid, flattened cells, most species very flat and leaf-shaped, often with ridges, folds or grooves running helically or longitudinally, giving an irregular or triradiate cross-section; many species with a long posterior spine, many twisted, flagella, eyespot and flagellar swelling as in Euglena; chloroplasts usually small, discoid, numerous, without pyrenoids; a few species ( e . g . " P . splendens " ) have large flat chloroplasts with pyrenoids; paramylon is typically deposited as a few large granules ( often rings ) together with many small ones; canal opening subapical; no cysts palmelloid stages rare; speciose, contemporary studies indicate that the genus is not monophyletic or holophyletic; type species : " P . longicauda " ( Ehrenberg, 1833 ) Dujardin, 1841 ..