10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «NONRETRACTILE»
Discover the use of
nonretractile in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
nonretractile and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Clinical Problems in Pediatric Urology
Discussion 1 The foreskin can be best described as a healthy nonretractile
foreskin. On gentle retraction, the inner layer of the prepuce “pouts” as opposed
to the rigid noncompliant prepuce of balanitis xerotica obliterans (BXO). Spence
in ...
Prasad Godbole, John P. Gearhart, Duncan T. Wilcox, 2008
2
Baby and Child Health Everything You Need to Know
Nonretractile foreskin In the majority of newborn boys, the foreskin is attached to
the head (glans) of the penis and cannot be pulled back. As boys develop, the
foreskin separates from the glans. At 6 months, 3 in 4 boys have a nonretractile ...
3
Illustrated Textbook of Paediatrics: With STUDENT CONSULT ...
nonretractile foreskin, but by 4 years this has declined to 10%, and by 16 years to
only 1%. A nonretractile foreskin often leadstoballooning onmicturition, which is
physiological. Gentle retraction of the foreskin at bathtimes helps to maintain ...
Tom Lissauer, Graham Clayden, 2007
4
Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries
(tehsemia. Colony consists of an upright stem with a few simple branches liearing
tufts of polyps with nonretractile tentacular regions. Only the body wall of the
polyps, the tentacles, and the cortical layer of the stem are provided with spicules.
A nonretractile foreskin is free of symptoms and self-limiting, and circumcision is
not needed. Parents often say that the prepuce “balloons” when the child urinates
, but this is a sign of a nonretractile foreskin rather than phimosis. Careful ...
Chris Dawson, Hugh N. Whitfield, 2009
6
Genitourinary Emergencies, An Issue of Emergency Medicine ...
Phimosis occurs naturally in newborns and is caused by physiologic adherence
between the epithelial lining ofthe glans and distal foreskin, leading to a
nonretractile foreskin.By 3 years ofage,fewer than 10% of foreskinsremain
nonretractile, ...
Jonathan Davis, John M. Howell, 2011
7
A Guide to the Carnivores of Central America: Natural ...
Muscular and short legged. Rounder face than olingo or cacomistle. Reddish
brown or grayish brown, ! often with a Not ringed, slightly longer than head and
body, prehensile, Long, curved claws, nonretractile. Ears small and round, set
low on ...
Carlos L. de la Rosa, Claudia C. Nocke, 2010
Traction is created by the nonretractile claws, which act like the running spikes on
an athlete's shoes. As a quadruped, a dog has four weightbearing legs. The
forelegs have no bony attachment, like the human collarbone (clavicle), and are ...
9
Language and Literacy Development: What Educators Need to Know
(1a) a domesticated flesheating mammal, Canis familiaris, usually having a long
snout and nonretractile claws, and occurring in many different breeds kept as
pets or for work or sport. . . .” It would be interesting to see how many readers of
this ...
James P. Byrnes, Barbara A. Wasik, 2012
Nonretractile Prepuce The prepuce is normally nonretractile in all newborns. No
attempt should be made to forcibly retract the prepuce. Moulding of Skull Bones
Seen in the first 24 to 28 hours. Stool Cycle in Newborn Meconium Stool It is the ...
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «NONRETRACTILE»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
nonretractile is used in the context of the following news items.
The dog: How did it become man's best friend?
... fox to the large gray wolf, all but one have lithe builds, long bushy tails, long legs, and digitigrade, four‐toed feet with nonretractile claws. «OUPblog, Feb 13»