How To Use Irritative In A Sentence
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Results Wei-chi embrocation had no irritative reaction to intact skin, but has mild stimulation to injured skin.
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an irritative agent
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In the first class of diseases two kinds of fevers were described, one from excess, and the other from defect of irritation; and were in consequence termed irritative, and inirritative fevers.
Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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The GAO report pdf identifies the main adverse health concerns from clothing treated with formaldehyde as a variety of irritative, allergenic and sensitization reactions on skin -- some of which can engage the immune system.
Bill Chameides: The Wrinkle in No-Iron Shirts
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Those trains or tribes of associate motions, whose introductory link consists of an irritative motion, are termed irritative associations; as when the muscles of the eyelids close the eye in common nictitation.
Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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Those trains or tribes of associate motions, whose introductory link consists of an irritative motion, are termed irritative associations; as when the muscles of the eyelids close the eye in common nictitation.
Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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XXXII. and termed irritative fever, it frequently happens that pain is excited by the violence of the fibrous contractions; and other new motions are then superadded, in consequence of sensation, which we shall term febris sensitiva, or sensitive fever.
Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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The single biggest mistake that the Soviets made, according to Ambassador Kabulov, was letting the Soviet military footprint become too large: "The more foreign troops you have roaming the country, the more the irritative allergy toward them is going to be provoked.
Tom Andrews: White House Ducks Afghanistan Exit
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Irritated eyes: as the name suggests, it implies dry eyes, burning eyes, light sensitivity, eyestrain are the most pesky and irritative symptoms that trouble the computer user.
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By these means the irritative movements of the stomach are excited into greater action than is natural; and in consequence all the irritative tribes and trains of motion, which are catenated with them, become susceptible of stronger action from their accustomed stimuli; because these motions are excited both by their usual irritation, and by their association with the increased actions of the stomach and lacteals.
Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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Other presentations include irritative voiding, discharge of mucous blood or pus from the umbilicus, and obstructive symptoms.
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Some of the irritative sensual, or muscular motions, which were usually not succeeded by sensation, are in this disease succeeded by sensation; and the trains or circles of motions, which were usually catenated with them, are interrupted, or inverted, or proceed in confusion.
Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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Patients may also have chills, myalgias, arthralgias, dysuria and irritative urinary symptoms.
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Both particles and irritative gasses are under suspicion.
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That exertion or change of the sensorium, which is caused by the appulses of external bodies, either simply subsides, or is succeeded by sensation, or it produces fibrous motions; it is termed irritation, and irritative motions are those contractions of the muscular fibres, or of the organs of sense, that are immediately consequent to this exertion or change of the sensorium.
Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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_ In the vertigo from circumgyration the irritative motions of vision are increased; which is evinced from the pleasure that children receive on being rocked in a cradle, or by swinging on a rope.
Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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In this case the patient dies for want of nourishment; either in three or four weeks, of the inirritative fever; or without quick pulse, by what we have called paresis irritativa.
Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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The symptoms which distinguish Irritative fever are a dry and red tongue; a sharp, small, but frequent pulse; subsultus; restlessness and delirium, which soon give place to signs of debility, with coma and cerebral irritation, sudden exacerbations, unequal and irregular remissions; rapid and important changes are also frequent concomitants of this form of disease.
An Epitome of Practical Surgery, for Field and Hospital.
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Hence the stomach continues torpid in respect to its motions, but accumulates its power of association; which is not excited into action by the defective motions of the spleen; this accumulation of the sensorial power of association now by its superabundance actuates the next link of associate motions, which consists of the heart and arteries, into greater energy of action than natural, and thus causes fever with strong pulse; which, as it was supposed to be most frequently excited by increase of irritation, is called irritative fever or synocha.
Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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While the polypus, who is their companion in their former state of life, not being allowed to change his form and element, can only propagate like vegetable buds by the same kind of irritative motions, which produces the growth of his own body, without the seminal or amatorial propagation, which requires sensation; and which in gnats and tadpoles seems to require a change both of food and of respiration.
Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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We have moved from an era of inappropriate prostatectomy for nocturia and other irritative symptoms by urologists to one of inappropriate pharmacotherapy by general practitioners, at massive cost.
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The cure of vertigo will frequently depend on our previously investigating the cause of it, which from what has been delivered above may originate from the disorder of any part of the great tribes of irritative motions, and of the associate motions catenated with them.
Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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In our recent studies, we found that exposure to petrochemical air pollution is associated with increased rates of acute irritative symptoms in adults.
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And by frequent repetitions of exhaustion by great stimulus, these vessels cease to acquire their whole natural quantity of sensorial power; as in the schirrous stomach, and schirrous liver, occasioned by the great and frequent stimulus of vinous spirit; which may properly be termed irritative paralysis of those parts of the system.
Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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This kind of connection we shall term irritative association, to distinguish it from sensitive and voluntary associations.
Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life