Examples of procedure in the following topics:
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- To recursively elaborate previously learned procedural and cultural mathematical competencies, each emphases section will have the 5th emphasis on the Practical Procedures of this
level of mathematics.
- Some tasks are designed to remind you of past learned procedures,
while others are designed to help you think about learning something like Number for the
first time.
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- But, there is a place for ensuring that we study together the practical procedures of the concepts that we are studying.
- This work can do much more: it will give us a chance to talk about and investigate methods for teaching these practical procedures to your students in a more productive way then you might have been taught.
- Some tasks are designed to remind you of past learned procedures, while others are designed to help you think about learning something like Number for the first time.
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- This is to satisfy safety procedures for investigation and experimentation section based on MSDE & NGSS.
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- The student will explain each of the details of each procedure used.
- In each case, describe your procedure briefly, including how you might have used the random number generator, and then list the restaurants in the sample you obtained
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- A tonsillectomy is a surgical procedure in which the tonsils are removed from either side of the throat.
- A tonsillectomy is a surgical procedure in which the tonsils are removed from either side of the throat.
- For children, the adenoids are removed at the same time, a procedure called adenoidectomy.
- Tonsillectomy remains one of the most common surgical procedures in children in the United States.
- The generally accepted procedure for tonsillectomy involves separating and removing the tonsils from the subcapsular plane – a fascia of tissue that surrounds the tonsils.
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- Arthroscopy is a minimally-invasive surgical procedure used in treating damage to the interior of a joint using a small incision and scope.
- Arthroscopy (also called arthroscopic surgery) is a minimally-invasive surgical procedure in which an examination, and sometimes treatment of damage to the interior of a joint, is performed using an arthroscope, a type of endoscope that is inserted into the joint through a small incision.
- Arthroscopic procedures can be performed either to evaluate or to treat many orthopedic conditions including torn floating cartilage, torn surface cartilage, ACL reconstruction, and trimming of damaged cartilage.
- In knee arthroscopy, for example, only two small incisions are made: one for the arthroscope, permitting observation of the procedure and one for the surgical instruments to be used in the knee cavity.
- The most common joints of the body that are successfully examined and or treated via this procedure include the knee, shoulder, elbow, wrist, ankle, foot, and hip.
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- One important procedure, known as the Williamson Ether Synthesis, proceeds by an SN2 reaction of an alkoxide nucleophile with an alkyl halide.
- Reactions #1 and #2 below are two examples of this procedure.
- Reactions #3 and #4 are examples of this two-step procedure.
- As shown in the following two equations, the success of this procedure depends on the temperature.
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- Two other useful procedures for preparing carboxylic acids involve hydrolysis of nitriles and carboxylation of organometallic intermediates.
- Both methods require two steps, but are complementary in that the nitrile intermediate in the first procedure is generated by a SN2 reaction, in which cyanide anion is a nucleophilic precursor of the carboxyl group.
- In the second procedure the electrophilic halide is first transformed into a strongly nucleophilic metal derivative, and this adds to carbon dioxide (an electrophile).
- An existing carboxylic acid may be elongated by one methylene group, using a homologation procedure called the Arndt-Eistert reaction.
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- Breast augmentation denotes the breast implant and fat-graft mammoplasty procedures for correcting the defects, and for enhancing the size, form, and feel of a woman's breasts.
- Each augmentation approach corrects post–mastectomy defects in a breast reconstruction procedure; congenital defects and congenital abnormalities of the chest wall; and aesthetically enhances the natural size, look, and feel of the bust.
- In breast reconstruction practice, the tissue expander is a temporary breast-implant device used to prepare the implant-pocket (recipient site), as part of a staged reconstruction mammoplasty procedure.
- Reduction mammoplasty (also breast reduction and reduction mammoplasty) is the plastic surgery procedure for correcting over-sized breasts.
- Moreover, the correction of gynecomastia (woman's breast) is the analogous, enlarged male-breast reduction surgery procedure, wherein there is no consideration of lactation capability.
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- Informed consent for the procedure is typically required.
- The entire procedure, once preparation is complete, typically takes 10–15 minutes.
- After the procedure is complete, the patient is typically asked to lie flat for five to ten minutes to provide pressure over the procedure site.
- Acetaminophen or other simple analgesics can be used to ease soreness, which is common for two to three days after the procedure.
- Patients are also advised to avoid washing the procedure site for at least 24 hours after the procedure is completed.