10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «FIBRILLA» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
fibrilla in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
fibrilla im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
The cyclopædia of anatomy and physiology
To detach a fibrilla entire is to remove a particle from every disc, and to take away
a disc is to abstract a particle of every fibrilla. Thus, every disc consists of a
particle of every fibrilla, and every fibrilla of a particle of every disc. Therefore
every ...
Robert Bentley Todd, 1847
2
The British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review Or ...
A fibrilla thus resembles a row of beads ; each fibrilla is, however, in truth, more
or less cylindrical just as the fasciculi are. When looked at with one focus the
sarcous substance (dark spaces) of the fibrilla appears to be the darker ; but on ...
3
The American journal of science
Again, we have seen no evidence that, as Carpenter and Sharpey have
advanced, the particles or small disc-like bodies composing this fibrilla, are each
a " minute cell."f This is a point that has been particularly looked to, with the use
of the ...
4
A Dictionary of Entomology
Cf. Fibril. Alt. Fiber. 2. General: A slender, elongated solid substance. 3. A leather
-like material made by compressing layers of paper or cloth. FIBRIFORM Adj. (
Latin, fibra I band +forma I shape.) Shaped like a fibre. FIBRIL Noun. (Latin,
fibrilla ...
5
Midline Medical Dictionary
See Fiber. Fibril. See Fibrilla. Fibrilla. A minute fiber or filament; fibril. ^Wd-^
Fibrillage. Plural of Fibrilla. Fibrillar. Fibrillary; relating to a fibril or fibrilla.
Fibrillary. See Fibrillar. Fibrillate. To make or to become fibrillar. d*3<£d;
fibrillated. Fibrillated.
6
Lexicon Orthopaedic Etymology
1t gives the diminutive fibrilla: "small or thin filament, fibril," 1n anatomy, fibra was
used in the sense: 1 . "a part," such as of the liver, by Celsus; 2. "the bowels," after
their shape and arrangement, by the Roman natural philosopher Pliny (Gaius ...
7
Cardiac Electrophysiology: from Cell to Bedside: Expert ...
IntJ Cardiol 2012. 5. Lip GY, Brechin CM, Lane DA: The global burden of atrial
fibrillation and stroke: A system- atic review of the epidemiology of atrial fibrilla-
tion in regions outside North America and Europe. Chest 2012. Benjamin EJ,
Wolf ...
Douglas P. Zipes, Jose Jalife, 2013
8
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London
... arranged vertically to the course of the fasciculi, and each of which is made up
of a single segment of every fibrilla'iz" He seems to have mistaken the normal
appearances of interlacing spirals, for disturbed states of his supposed “ discs.
9
Mosby's Pocket Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing & Health ...
and used in bronchoscopy, endoscopy, and gastroscopy. fibrates /fi'brats/, a
general term for fibric acid derivatives, such as gemfibrozil. fibril /fi'bril/ [L, fibrilla,
small fiber], a small filamentous fiber that often is a component of a cell, as in a ...
10
English Flora: Class 24, Cryptogamia, Pt. 2, comprising the ...
Pileiis $ — 1 inch broad, subcarnose, at first convex, at length expanded, often
umbilicate, rich-umber, or cinnamon when moist, margin transparent, sprinkled
especially towards the margin with white fibrilla; or little branny scales, when dry
...
James Edward Smith, William Jackson Hooker, Miles Joseph Berkeley, 1836
NACHRICHTEN, IN DENEN DER BEGRIFF «FIBRILLA» VORKOMMT
Erfahre, worüber man in den einheimischen und internationalen Medien spricht und wie der Begriff
fibrilla im Kontext der folgenden Nachrichten gebraucht wird.
Hear Sleater-Kinney's Vinyl-Only “Heavy When I Need It” and “The …
... paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia atrial flutter atrial fibrillation AV nodal tachycardia or ventricular VT ventricular fibrilla tion in origin. «Wondering Sound, Jan 15»