Cancer
... loss , poor appetite and cachexia (wasting),
excessive sweating ( night sweats ), anemia , and ... Hyperplasia refers to tissue growth based on an
excessive rate of cell division, leading to a larger than ... "dysplasia." Dysplasia is an abnormal type of
excessive cell proliferation characterized by loss of ...
Diabetes mellitus
... 2 is usually prompted by recent-onset symptoms of
excessive urination ( polyuria ) and
excessive thirst ( polydipsia ), often accompanied by ... Apparently, the Greeks named it thus because the
excessive amounts of urine diabetics produce (when blood ...
Cloning
... birth-length, but they were actually longer - suggesting these clones would live longer life spans than normal cows (but many have died young after
excessive growth). Researchers think that this could eventually be developed to reverse aging in humans.
Human cloning
Main article: Human cloning ...
Foot and mouth disease
... cattle, foot-and-mouth disease is characterized by high fever that declines rapidly after two or three days; blisters inside the mouth that lead to
excessive secretion of stringy or foamy saliva and to drooling; and blisters on the feet that may rupture and cause lameness. Adult animals may suffer weight ...
Photosynthesis
... every square millimetre of leaf. The surface of the leaf is uniformly coated with a water-resistant, waxy cuticle , that, protects the leaf from
excessive absorption of light and evaporation of water. The transparent, colourless epidermis layer allows light to pass through to the mesophyll cells where ...
Photosynthesis
... every square millimetre of leaf. The surface of the leaf is uniformly coated with a water-resistant, waxy cuticle , that, protects the leaf from
excessive absorption of light and evaporation of water. The transparent, colourless epidermis layer allows light to pass through to the mesophyll cells where ...
Rudolf Steiner
... life in thinking and advised people to attend more to the spirit or 'drift' of his words than to the letter. Otherwise readers would fall into an
excessive literalism and turn his work into a doctrine, a result he wanted to avoid.
Those of Steiner's students alert to this distinction tend to affirm ...
Thomas Malthus
... (See Malthusian catastrophe for more information.) Only misery, moral restraint and vice (which for Malthus included contraception ) could check
excessive population growth. Malthus favoured "moral restraint" (including late marriage and sexual abstinence) as a check on population growth. However, it is ...