Examples of right lower quadrant in the following topics:
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- The abdominopelvic region can be divided into four quadrants.
- The right upper quadrant contains the right portion of the liver, the
gallbladder, right kidney, a small portion of the stomach, the duodenum, the head of the pancreas, portions of
the ascending and transverse colon, and parts of small intestine.
- In the right lower quadrant sits the cecum, appendix, part of the small
intestines, the right half of the female reproductive system, and the right ureter.
- The left lower quadrant houses the majority of the small intestine, some
of the large intestine, the left half of the female reproductive system, and the left
ureter.
- The right iliac region contains the appendix, cecum, and the right iliac fossa.
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- Later, as the appendix becomes more inflamed and irritates the adjoining abdominal wall, it tends to localize over several hours into the right lower quadrant, except in children under three years.
- Also, there is severe pain on sudden release of deep pressure in the lower abdomen (rebound tenderness).
- In case of a retrocecal appendix (appendix localized behind the cecum), however, even deep pressure in the right lower quadrant may fail to elicit tenderness (silent appendix), the reason being that the cecum, distended with gas, protects the inflamed appendix from the pressure.
- The occurrence of a fecalith in the appendix seems to be attributed to a right-sided fecal retention reservoir in the colon and a prolonged transit time.
- This is in accordance with the occurrence of a right-sided fecal reservoir and the fact that dietary fiber reduces transit time.
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- The lower right quadrant here contains a meaningful cluster of actors and events, and illustrates how the results of correspondence analysis can be interpreted.
- In the lower right we have some propositions regarding Indian casino gambling (68 and 70) and two propositions regarding ecological/conservation issues (40 and 50).
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- In figure 4.5, we've used the "drag and drop" method ("grab" a node with the cursor, and drag it to a new location) to relocate the nodes so that organizations that share the same combinations of attributes are located in different quadrants of the graph.
- If the hypothesis were strongly supported (and its not) most of the arrows would be located within each the four quadrants, and there would be few arrows between quadrants.
- Notice that there is a cluster of nodes at the left (News, Indu, Comm) that are all pretty much not welfare organizations themselves, while the nodes at the right are (generally) more directly involved in welfare service provision.
- The upper left-hand quadrant contains mostly "blue" nodes, while the lower right quadrant contains mostly "red" ones -- so one "direction" might be interpreted as "non-government/government. "
- There is no one "right way" to use space in a graph.
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- Further north Lake Erie and been expanded dramatically and shifted somewhat to the south where it takes on the appearance of a vast inland sea occupying the entire northwestern quadrant of the map.
- Heading south along the Delaware River Philadelphia is identified and beautifully rendered as a grid embraced in four quadrants.
- The lower right quadrant of this map is occupied by a fabulous decorative title cartouche.
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- Reference angles in quadrant 1 are used to identify which value any angle in quadrants 2, 3, or 4 will take.
- For any given angle in the first quadrant, there is an angle
in the second quadrant with the same sine value.
- As we can see from the diagrams below, for any angle in quadrants II, III, or IV, there is a reference angle in quadrant I.
- In the right figure, $t$ is the reference angle for $\beta$.
- For any angle in quadrants II, III, or IV, there is a reference angle in quadrant I.
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- On the x-axis, numbers increase toward the right and decrease toward the left.
- To plot the point $(2,3)$, start at the origin and move
three units to the right and five units up from it.
- The Cartesian coordinate system is broken into four quadrants by the two axes; labeled, I, II, III, and IV, starting from the upper right and continuing counter-clockwise as pictured below.
- The four quadrants of a Cartesian coordinate system.
- The four quadrants of a Cartesian coordinate system.
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- We have already defined the trigonometric functions in terms of right
triangles.
- The x- and y-axes
divide the coordinate plane (and the unit circle, since it is centered at the origin) into four quarters called quadrants.
- We
label these quadrants to mimic the direction a positive angle would
sweep.
- The four quadrants are labeled I, II, III, and IV.
- We have previously discussed trigonometric functions as they apply to right triangles.
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- Researchers have frequently noted that a single left-right axis is insufficient to describe the existing variation in political beliefs.
- Researchers have frequently noted that a single left-right axis is insufficient in describing the existing variation in political beliefs, and often include other axes.
- In this context, the contemporary American on the left is often considered individualist (or libertarian ) on social/cultural issues and communitarian (or populist) on economic issues, while the contemporary American on the right is often considered communitarian (or populist) on social/cultural issues and individualist (or libertarian) on economic issues.
- Numerous alternatives exist, usually developed by those who feel their views are not fairly represented on the traditional right-left spectrum.
- This puts left-wingers in the left quadrant, libertarians in the top, right-wingers in the right, and what Nolan originally named "populists" at the bottom.
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- This section from a panoramic x-ray film depicts the teeth of the lower left quadrant, exhibiting generalized severe bone loss of 30–80%.
- The pink arrow, on the right, points to a furcation involvement, or the loss of enough bone to reveal the location at which the individual roots of a molar begin to branch from the single root trunk; this is a sign of advanced periodontal disease.