no it is not, a lumbosacral sprain is the severe stretching, while a lumbosacral strain is a partial or complete tearing
The median sacral crest on the sacrum is a bony ridge formed by fusion of sacral vertebrae, indicating where the individual vertebrae once were. In contrast, the median sacral crest on lumbar vertebrae does not exist, as lumbar vertebrae do not fuse in the same way as sacral vertebrae.
The Andromeda strain is a fictitious extraterrestrial microorganism described in Michael Crichton's novel of the same name. In the story, the Andromeda strain is a deadly microbe that causes rapid blood clotting in infected individuals. It is also the focus of a government research project aiming to study its potential as a biological weapon.
In genetic crosses, the term "strain" refers to a specific genetic line or variety of organisms that are pure-breeding for certain traits. Strains can differ in their genetic makeup and can be used in breeding experiments to study inheritance patterns and gene expression.
The link should help. It says 10% of adults. I know this because I have the same condition except I wasn't technically an adult when I was diagnosed. I hope the link helped.
No, hunger and appetite are not the same thing. Hunger is the body's physical need for food, while appetite is the desire to eat.
Cervical is in the neck area. Lumbar is the lower back area.
Residual Strain is the same thing as permanent strain, as in permanent strain in a beam. If you refer to a stress vs strain plot, you'll see that this relationship in metals is linear up until the yield point where the metal plastically deforms. After stress slightly decreases due to this yielding, It will continue to increase, along with strain but on a more curve-shaped line. When stress is removed from the metal, it will slowly decrease back down to 0, but there will be an offset in the strain. The distance from where strain equals zero to this new point along the axis is the the residual strain left in the metal due to plastic deformation.
Strain gage and Extensometer both are same purpose to check the stress and strain in selective test pieces, but traditional they were using strain gage its take the preparation time is high and Extensometer we are check the directly both results are same.
The median sacral crest on the sacrum is a bony ridge formed by fusion of sacral vertebrae, indicating where the individual vertebrae once were. In contrast, the median sacral crest on lumbar vertebrae does not exist, as lumbar vertebrae do not fuse in the same way as sacral vertebrae.
a stress strain curve and a load displacement curve is pretty much the same thing, given the data is from the same specimen. its just the stress (force/area) is divided by a constant area and the strain (change in length/original length) is divided by a constant original length. therefore your curve would pretty much look the same as dividing by a constant will not change your graph. hope this explains your question
When you have stress you also have strain - stress cannot exist without strain, so they come at the same time You can have strain without stress - like expanding something under temperature in a free state. If the state is not free, then you have stress occurring at the same time.
yes
could be chronic arthritis, spinal istnosis, herniated disc, or muscle strains. Spinal istnosis is when something wrongs with the spine and herniated disc is bulging of lumbar disc. hope i helped!
Some people mean the same thing when they talk about repetitive strain injuries and repetitive motion injuries. The difference is most likely that RSIs are from abusing a part of your body by working it improperly while a RMI is just from regular use.
Hookes law says that stress, s, is proportional to strain,e, as s = E e where E is modulus. Since strain has no units (it is deflection per unit length) the units of E are the same as s. E is the slope of the stress strain diagram.
No, they are not the same thing. Mean and average are the same thing.
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