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Q: Why are tissues more easily transplanted than organs between people with a minimal risk of rejection by the recipient?
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Difference between analytical and other instrumentation?

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Why some donated blood is rejected?

There are several conditions for a blood donation. For instance, you have to have a minimal weight, because they take off a minimal amount of blood for everybody. So they don't want to take off most of your blood just because you're small. If you're sick that day, they won't take your donation. They also need a minimal percentage of iron in your blood, which is VERY important.


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What part of speech is minimal?

No, minimal is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example minimal effort or minimal care.


What is the difference between complete and minimal medium?

A complete medium has all the nutrition that is required by a particular strain of an organism. A minimal medium only has the nutrition required by wild types of organism strains.


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phoneme / / like f and v make a minimal pairs like fan-van but allophones [ ] cant found in minimal pairs but founded in complementary distribution


How was the life of the Africans slaves in La Encomienda?

In practice, the difference between encomienda and slavery could be minimal.


What is the minimal interval between two cars?

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It is supposed to snow but the accumulation should be minimal. His effort in class has been minimal.


What care should a patient receive after a pancreatic islet cell transplantation?

Islet cell transplantation is done for Type I Diabetics to replace the pancreatic cells, called the Islets of Langerhans, that have been destroyed by the body's own immune system in an autoimmune disorder. It may not be a covered procedure by health insurance since some insurance companies still consider it an experimental procedure. Recovery time from the procedure itself is minimal. However, current technology requires that patients continuously remain on immunosuppressive drugs (also known as anti-rejection drugs) for life to avoid rejection of the transplanted islet cells. These drugs, used to prevent further autoimmune disease and destruction of the foreign cells that came from a donor, have significant side effects. Some of those are: increased risk and incidence of bacterial, viral and fungal infections. Mouth sores, GI/stomach upset and diarrhea are common. The drugs reduce the white blood cells in the blood so that the body no longer can adequately fight infections (these are suppressed to prevent attacks on the transplanted tissue). Other side effects are decreased kidney function, increased cholesterol, hypertension, anemia, and fatigue.