Examples of red pulp in the following topics:
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- Red pulp is the site of blood filtration in the spleen.
- White pulp is secondary lymphoid tissue that is similar to that in the adenoid tonsils.
- When blood passes through the red pulp of the spleen, healthy blood cells easily pass, while older red blood cells are caught phagocytized by the macrophages within.
- Antigens are also filtered by the red pulp, which may be presented to naive lymphocytes in the white pulp of the spleen.
- This diagram of the spleen indicates the vein, artery, white pulp, red pulp, and capsule.
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- Endodontic therapy is the treatment for the pulp of a tooth which results in the protection of the decontaminated tooth.
- Root canals and their associated pulp chamber are the physical hollows within a tooth that are naturally inhabited by nerve tissue, blood vessels, and other cellular entities.
- To cure the infection and save the tooth, the dentist drills into the pulp chamber and removes the infected pulp and then drills the nerve out of the root canal with long needle-shaped drills.
- Sometimes the dentist performs preliminary treatment of the tooth by removing all of the infected pulp of the tooth and applying a dressing and temporary filling to the tooth.
- After removing as much of the internal pulp as possible, the root canals can be temporarily filled with calcium hydroxide paste.
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- In humans, red blood cells are produced in the heads of long bones.
- The red bone marrow is a key element of the lymphatic system, being one of the primary lymphoid organs that generate lymphocytes from immature hematopoietic progenitor cells.
- It synthesizes antibodies in its white pulp and removes antibody-coated bacteria along with antibody-coated blood cells by way of blood and lymph node circulation.
- Red blood cells, several white blood cells including lymphocytes, a monocyte, a neutrophil, and many small disc-shaped platelets.
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- Chromium was discovered as an element after 1761, when it was found in the red crystalline mineral, crocoite (lead(II) chromate).
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- Spices come from many different plant parts: saffron and cloves are stamens and buds, black pepper and vanilla are seeds, the bark of a bush in the Laurales family supplies cinnamon, and the herbs that flavor many dishes come from dried leaves and fruit, such as the pungent red chili pepper.
- Most paper is derived from the pulp of coniferous trees.
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- They are found in the stem, the root, the inside of the leaf, and the pulp of the fruit.
- Vascular tissue composed of xylem (red) and phloem tissue (green, between the xylem and cortex) surrounds the pith.
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- Other applications of biosurfactants include herbicides and pesticides formulations, detergents, healthcare and cosmetics, pulp and paper, coal, textiles, ceramic processing and food industries, uranium ore-processing, and mechanical dewatering of peat.
- Other applications include herbicides and pesticides formulations, detergents, healthcare and cosmetics, pulp and paper, coal, textiles, ceramic processing and food industries, uranium ore-processing, and mechanical dewatering of peat.
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- For example, plums and prunes have a thick skin covering a juicy pulp.
- The plum's skin is a source of insoluble fiber while soluble fiber is in the pulp.
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- The terms "red state" (Republican-voting) and "blue state" (Democratic-voting) were standardized during the 2000 US presidential election.
- Other networks alternated red and blue between the Democratic and Republican Parties every four years.
- Interestingly, though, there was no coordinated media effort to designate Democratic states blue and Republican states red on the 2000 election night and neither party's national committee has officially accepted the red and blue color designations.
- Despite the nearly nationwide acceptance of Republican red states and Democratic blue states, the paradigm has come under criticism.
- Another criticism of the red state-blue state paradigm is that it has not been entirely predictive of how states will vote.
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