Prostheses is the plural of prosthesis
Prostheses is the plural form of prosthesis
'Prosthesis' is the singular form of 'prostheses'.
The plural of prosthesis is prostheses. It is a regular plural.
The advantage of prosthesis are many to people. It is useful for the people who have lost their limbs.
Nothing. Just a different way of saying it. Not true. There is the slight but significant aspect of grammar: prosthetic is an adjective, while prosthesis (plural: prostheses) is a noun. So you can say "she's had a prosthesis fitted on her leg" or she's got a prosthetic limb".
James R. Critser has written: 'Prostheses and contact lenses (Lexington Data Patent reports)' 'Medical science' 'Prostheses and contact lenses' -- subject(s): Contact lenses, Prosthesis 'Biotechnical engineering: Equipment and processes'
Howard P. Greisler has written: 'New biologic and synthetic vascular prostheses' -- subject(s): Biomedical materials, Blood vessel prosthesis, Vascular grafts
DefinitionA prosthesis is a device designed to replace a missing part of the body or to make a part of the body work better. Diseased or missing eyes, arms, hands, legs, or joints are commonly replaced by prosthetic devices.False teeth are known as dental prostheses. An artificial replacement of the jaw bone is called a maxillofacial prosthesis. Penis implants are also known as penile prostheses.
Implantable penile prostheses are usually considered a last resort for treating erectile dysfunction. They are implanted in the corpora cavernosa to make the penis rigid without the need for blood flow. The semi-rigid type of prosthesis.
Penile prostheses are semirigid or inflatable devices that are implanted into penises to alleviate impotence.
Hip prostheses may be made of metal, ceramic, plastic, or various combinations of these materials.
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