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A. G. Nicholls has written: 'A contribution to the study of Bright's disease with special reference to the etiological relationship of the bacillus coli' -- subject(s): Bright's disease, Kidneys, Diseases, Mal de Bright, Reins, Maladies 'Notes on a case of accessory pancreas' -- subject(s): Tumors, Pancreas 'Remarks on a case of paranephritic abscess, with rupture into the stomach' 'A case of cholecystico-gastric fistula with accompanying diverticula in the duodenum' -- subject(s): Cholecystitis, Diseases, Duodenum
Who is nominative. Whom is accusative.
The small intestine adds glucose from the food you eat, into the blood stream. Perhaps you mean insulin which regulates the uptake of glucose. Insulin is a peptide hormone produced by beta cells of the pancreatic islets. The pancreas is the organ in this case.
Both the interrogative and relative pronoun 'whom' is objective case; used as the object of a sentence or clause. Interrogative: Whom will you tell? (you tell whom) Relative: The person, for whom I made this, is not here right now. (object of the preposition for)
Gordon Gordon-Taylor has written: 'The radical surgery of cancer of the pancreas' -- subject- s -: Cancer, Pancreas, Surgery 'On gall-stones and their sufferers' -- subject- s -: Gallstones 'A successful case of septuple bowel resection and sextuple anastomosis ..' -- subject- s -: Diseases, Intestines
The objective case of who. See Who.
The pronoun 'who' is the subjective case and the pronoun 'whom' is the objective case for the interrogative or the relative use. Examples: Subjective: Who is our new calculus teacher? The teacher who taught geometry last term. Objective: To whom do I give my completed application? The person to whom you give the form is the manager. (object of the preposition 'to')
Homogeneous enhancement implies a uniform enlargement of a surface or organ. In the case of the pancreas, it implies that part of the organ is evenly growing to outweigh other parts.
This is not a "What" question, but okay. They would consult the case's dissenting opinion.
Kathryn Nash has written: 'Hepatology' -- subject(s): Liver Diseases, Diseases, Case studies, Case Reports, Problems and Exercises, Liver
In the US the plaintiff or defendant cannot be represented by legal counsel, they must present their own case. They can in most instances have an attorney/legal advisor outside the courtroom with whom they can consult if the judge is willing.
Please stop using only upper case.