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How To Use Jaundice In A Sentence

  • We encounter a patient with recurrent jaundice resulting from tumor ingrowth to the metallic stent.
  • The elf cast a jaundiced eye over the blackened mountain, which was still oozing lava.
  • This coloring, called jaundice, is related to bilirubin levels in her blood. The Official Lamaze® Guide
  • The imam still bore the mark of that experience in his gaunt frame and sallow, jaundiced complexion.
  • While she waited on the step May thought about Maurice's mother looking at Southport's slug-like sea with mean, jaundiced eyes. PROSPECT HILL
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  • We can't afford for them to have bad experiences because bad experiences are remembered and give a jaundiced view of the organisation. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was filmed at an art gallery by the same jaundiced organ while he gave his verdict on the exhibits on display. Times, Sunday Times
  • Placement of large bore plastic biliary stents was a good initial treatment for cholangitis or jaundice when present.
  • His doctor noticed immediately that Tom did look ill: his skin and the whites of his eyes had a yellowish hue this is called jaundice, and he had a swollen, distended abdomen. DR. SANJIV CHOPRA’S LIVER BOOK
  • Poor Ernest has been suffering since Wednesday last with the jaundice, which is very distressing and troublesome, though not alarming .... The Letters of Queen Victoria, Volume 1 (of 3), 1837-1843) A Selection from Her Majesty's Correspondence Between the Years 1837 and 1861
  • During pregnancy increased amounts of sex hormones are given off, while in jaundice the bile acids are retained in the body. Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1950 - Presentation Speech
  • Previously thought to be an "animal-only" pigment, bilirubin is best known as the yellowish hue associated with bruises and jaundice sufferers. Innovations-report
  • Objective To observer the effect of phenobarbital in preterm infant with jaundice.
  • When the liver becomes congested, serum transaminase and bilirubin levels may become elevated, and jaundice may be present.
  • The physical examination should focus primarily on signs of liver disease other than jaundice, including bruising, spider angiomas, gynecomastia, testicular atrophy, and palmar erythema.
  • At present he is thin, has severe jaundice and his body is distended as his own liver has become swollen and hard.
  • The root is the part used, and it is an excellent medicine to remove obstructions, it works power - fully by urine, and is good in jaundices, and in stoppages of the mense! The Family Herbal,: And of the Drugs which are Produced by Vegetables of Other Countries : with ...
  • After his experience in jail , he has a pretty jaundiced view of the penal system.
  • looked with a jaundiced eye on the growth of regimentation
  • A night to bring any man to contemplate the dogged scourge of Lady Fortune's whip with a jaundiced eye.
  • After his experience in jail , he has a pretty jaundiced view of the penal system.
  • Her social position jaundiced his view of things.
  • Could it be that the inertia of a bad system, already in place, sorely and irrevocably jaundices ideological perspectives? Matthew Anderson: Lower Case Capitalism
  • In simple cases of jaundice the neutral salts have seldom produced much good effect; but I have obtained considerable success from the diascordium, in doses of half a drachm to a drachm. The Dog
  • Their previously clear-eyed look of adoration is now decidedly jaundiced. Times, Sunday Times
  • And reports that his platelet count is low, when considered with this picture in which he looks jaundiced, his face emaciated, but his belly bulging - all suggest liver failure.
  • But this is surely too jaundiced a view. Times, Sunday Times
  • She detailed the jaundice, light stools and lack of weight gain.
  • The book casts a jaundiced eye on everything from helicopter rescues and large, boisterous groups to the use of cell phones, to which Guy had a particularly strong aversion.
  • All forms of congenital jaundice are nearly universally referred to by their eponyms rather than by their descriptive names.
  • Sometimes jaundice causes itching which can be treated with preparations such as calamine lotion.
  • In other words, by the time the doctors had discovered what was the cause of her recent complaints of abdominal pain, she had become jaundiced from a bile duct obstruction and even worse, had liver metastases.
  • Damage to the liver or an obstruction of some kind in the bile duct (called a gallstone) can lead to a serious problems such as cholestasis, steatorrhea, or jaundice. CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
  • In that jaundiced reportorial frame of mind, sitting in the press compound at Bristol, desultorily I watched a woman shepherd a young man in a wheelchair onto the gym floor. Mayhill Fowler: Bittergate: the Untold Story Behind the Story that Rocked the Obama Campaign
  • Sadly, this famous yellow family are looking a tad jaundiced. The Sun
  • An NHS paediatric nurse monitors a baby undergoing phototherapy for jaundice at a London hospital. Third of NHS children's units fail to comply with EU working time directive
  • Familiar characters are seen with a jaundiced eye. Times, Sunday Times
  • Two thirds of pancreatic cancers develop in the head of the pancreas, and most patients present with progressive, obstructive jaundice with dark urine and pale stools.
  • Our patient presented with obstructive jaundice and had a large mucosal mass located in the midportion of the common bile duct.
  • At that time, the patient became jaundiced, without evidence of splenomegaly.
  • DANIEL SPITZ, FORENSIC PATHOLOGIST: Well, oftentimes, a yellow tint to the eyes indicates jaundice, which is generally associated with some kind of liver condition, maybe cirrhosis of the liver, maybe hepatitis. CNN Transcript May 17, 2006
  • He was filmed at an art gallery by the same jaundiced organ while he gave his verdict on the exhibits on display. Times, Sunday Times
  • When jaundice does not respond to phototherapy, or when the baby is anemic, a blood transfusion may be necessary.
  • There are many reasons for jaundice other than cancer, for example hepatitis, or obstruction of the common bile duct due to gallstones.
  • The air becomes jaundiced and clotted, and hangs in gaseous clouds over the rooms. LEARNING TO TALK: SHORT STORIES
  • However, there were complications that required additional surgery, jaundice possibly caused by gall-bladder disease, and pneumonia.
  • Babies with jaundice have a yellow color to the skin and eyes.
  • The transcutaneous jaundice meter is affected by factors such as gestational age, birth weight, and skin pigmentation.
  • His yellow pallor gave him a jaundiced look; his beard was unbrushed, his cap askew.
  • There are certain people who by reason of a special susceptibility cannot tolerate phosphorus, and the exhibition of it causes in them nausea, oppression, and a feeling of pain in the epigastric region, tormina and tenesmus, accompanied with diarrhea, and in rare cases jaundice, sometimes lasting several months. Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine
  • Mrs. Anderson droned slowly and warily, looking him over with a jaundiced eye.
  • There is a possibility that you might have jaundice in later life but after a complete rest you can keep playing tennis.
  • If it be within the [1075] body, and not putrified, it causeth black jaundice; if putrified, a quartan ague; if it break out to the skin, leprosy; if to parts, several maladies, as scurvy, &c. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • In prehepatic jaundice, excess unconjugated bilirubin is produced faster than the liver is able to conjugate it for excretion.
  • He was filmed at an art gallery by the same jaundiced organ while he gave his verdict on the exhibits on display. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘Well, to give you the proper textbook definition: jaundice occurs when there is a breakdown of red blood cells and you get a build-up of a yellow pigment called bilirubin.’ A Special Relationship
  • The film looks at infidelity, Hollywood-style with a jaundiced eye.
  • And thus they go on to the end of their term of life, full of their own fixed ideas, with their eyes full of beams and jaundices and darkness and death. Bunyan Characters (3rd Series)
  • He had a jaundiced view of life.
  • I'd been warned that she would look different - and she does, lying quietly, face drawn and jaundiced.
  • No wonder ministers and regulators are taking a slightly jaundiced view of their cheery claims. Times, Sunday Times
  • A CONTROVERSIAL documentary which set out to lift the lid on immigration's impact on Wisbech has been slammed as "jaundiced" and "misleading" by the market town's MP. Peterborough Today - News Feed
  • His yellow pallor gave him a jaundiced look; his beard was unbrushed, his cap askew.
  • But this is surely too jaundiced a view. Times, Sunday Times
  • Great claims were made for the beneficial effects of the Streatham waters, which were said to cure all manner of ills, including rheumatism, gout, jaundice, bilious attacks and even blindness.
  • She recommends the use of psyllium for constipation, aloe for jaundice and horehound for cough.
  • Stiglitz casts a jaundiced eye on all the major institutions, but none comes in for more criticism than the IMF.
  • Another unknown but dedicated government employee is Pius Bannis, a man even the most jaundiced would find hard to describe as a faceless bureaucrat. Max Stier: Support Your Local Federal Worker
  • That alone attests that the outside world has a more jaundiced, suspicious view of the National than those within racing. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some people of eastern Mediterranean and southern Italian origins suffer from a hereditary enzyme deficiency called favism, the symptoms of which, anemia, jaundice, fever, and diarrhea, can be brought on by eating fava beans.55 These beans had been grown in Languedoc long before seeds of Phaseolus beans were brought there from Spain at the end of the sixteenth century. Savoring The Past
  • So is their jaundiced view of him justified? The Sun
  • Elevated alkaline phosphatase is associated with liver disease and with both obstructive jaundice and intrahepatic jaundice.
  • He directed a narrow, jaundiced eye at the lead counsel for the defense, who smirked back at him from his table.
  • She couldn't hear them, but then the doctor said something to Dr. Desai that included the word "jaundiced". MORE FROM GINNY BATES: LESBIANS HAVING BABIES
  • Mild jaundice in the newborn is common and often clears without treatment.
  • This type of jaundice is usually caused by a gallstone, or a tumour or cyst in the bile duct or pancreas.
  • Or perhaps that is just a jaundiced view. Times, Sunday Times
  • America's favourite yellow family look a tad jaundiced. The Sun
  • This book is such a perfect send-up of the primary Heinlein themes, and such a jaundiced/humorous take on where the genre's thralldom to Heinlein has taken the field that it is practically a manifesto and declaration of independence for those who are critical of "traditional" SF. MIND MELD: The Hugo Awards - Success at Picking the Best, How Well it Represents the Genre, 2009 Predictions & Overlooked Titles
  • Pick it up and take a look with an open-heart and an unjaundiced eye. Leslie Griffith: Cindy McCain: Pretty in Pink
  • I'm afraid I look on all travel companies' claims with a rather jaundiced eye, having been disappointed by them so often in the past.
  • I believe at that time we were taking a variant of quinine called mepacrine, a little yellow pill which turned us a delicate shade of buttercup, and when we went on leave our friends and relatives thought we had jaundice.
  • Intravenous cholangiography is rarely used now as opacification of the bile ducts is poor, particularly in jaundiced patients, and anaphylaxis remains a problem.
  • Chronic alcohol use may result in fatty liver, hepatitis, and cirrhosis, with varying levels of jaundice.
  • If the president and Congress want to slip some growth-inducing remedies into the pending deficit deal, what should they examine with an unjaundiced eye? Prescriptions to Revive Recovery
  • Objective : To study the diagnosis and treatment of neonatal breast milk jaundice ( BMJ ).
  • Without treatment, severe jaundice can pose a risk of permanent brain damage resulting in athetoid cerebral palsy.
  • Even student teachers, who might reasonably be expected to be the least jaundiced and most optimistic informants, aren't happy.
  • According to Hazelden, the drug and alcohol treatment center, long-term steroid use decreases HDL (good) cholesterol, increases LDL (bad) cholesterol, and can cause jaundice, high blood pressure, kidney tumors, liver tumors and cancer. Jim Lichtman: Should Manny Play?
  • The petals are a jaundiced yellow, netted with purple veins that coalesce in the violet throat where a flaccid bunch of anthers and a longer style rest. Country diary: Elton, Cambridgeshire
  • The patient was cachectic and jaundiced with several liters of ascites.
  • These included abortion, asthma, dropsy, sterility, cancer, dysmenorrhea, melancholy, empyema, worms, and jaundice to name only a few.
  • No wonder ministers and regulators are taking a slightly jaundiced view of their cheery claims. Times, Sunday Times
  • He scanned Shaftesbury Avenue with a jaundiced eye, and thought that he had never seen a beastlier thoroughfare. Uneasy Money
  • A reorganisation of the management of acutely jaundiced patients was needed.
  • BTW Sam ... a 'smirk' is certainly in the eye of the beholder ... you obviously have a jaundiced eye! Clinton win leads to Obama boost
  • The clerk is an emaciated and jaundiced gentleman to whom I assign a tentative diagnosis of pancreatic cancer.
  • It is used to treat fevers, coughs, prolonged fevers, colds influenza, asthma, hepatitis, malaria, jaundice, cholecystitis, amenorrhea, low energy with digestive weakness.
  • We can't afford for them to have bad experiences because bad experiences are remembered and give a jaundiced view of the organisation. Times, Sunday Times
  • I think it's pretty clear to anyone who reads this site on a regular basis that I have a jaundiced eye when it comes to many corporations.
  • Your midwife or health visitor will also check for jaundice.
  • Who could not be just a little jaundiced with capitalism these days? Times, Sunday Times
  • Treatments in vogue included horseback riding for pulmonary tuberculosis, and a decoction of carrots for jaundice.
  • Being a water-borne disease, jaundice can be tackled if the people exercise enough caution in preparing and consuming food.
  • The animals harbor the lice and fleas that spawn serious diseases such as typhus, trichinosis, and infectious jaundice.
  • A jaundiced eye I was born a cynic. Times, Sunday Times
  • A yellowing of the skin indicates jaundice.
  • Today's citizen may peruse the items on a poll tax bill with a jaundiced eye, but we tend to take for granted that a nice shiny fire engine will make its efficiently speedy way towards us should we ever need it to.
  • He then became interested in jaundice, which is always associated with chloroform poisoning and injury to the liver. George H. Whipple - Biography
  • Not surprisingly, this gives financiers a jaundiced view of the world. Times, Sunday Times
  • Afterwards, I felt much better straight away and my family noticed my colour had gone from jaundiced yellow to pink. The Sun
  • Yellow Form, of which the late Home Secretary takes the same jaundiced view as he did of the Yellow Press, was being sent out indiscriminately to all whom it did not concern: the War Office had issued a misleading poster; and everywhere men were being "bluffed" into the Army. Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 150, March 8, 1916
  • My own guess is that my former colleague's now jaundiced view has been colored by overexposure to certain influences.
  • Four of these animals lived in excellent nutritive condition for periods varying between one and seven months, when each in turn developed symptoms of acute jaundice (bile pigment in urine, yellowing of sclera and skin) accompanied by rise in rectal temperature, anuria and progressive bodily weakness, ending fatally in from two to three days after the onset. John Macleod - Nobel Lecture
  • When I had jaundice, they all came and gawped at me. Pam Ayres: My family values
  • It has been overwhelming, and the pair are looking a little jaundiced. Times, Sunday Times
  • Other presenting features include lymphadenopathy, epistaxis, weight loss, jaundice, and edema.
  • The ill effects included foetal hypoxia and death, neo-natal jaundice and several such complications.
  • Hepatobiliary scintigraphy is useful in evaluating the jaundiced infant and in diagnosing and differentiating various hepatic diseases such as biliary atresia and neonatal hepatitis.
  • If left untreated, jaundice can cause a condition called kernicterus, which can cause brain damage, deafness, mental retardation and cerebral palsy. Msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines
  • The 16-year-old was walking in an alleyway between Museum Gardens and Exhibition Square when the man, who had a jaundiced, yellow complexion and bad teeth, approached her.
  • After his experience in jail , he has a pretty jaundiced view of the penal system.
  • The patient with large duct obstruction will be jaundiced.
  • A night to bring any man to contemplate the dogged scourge of Lady Fortune's whip with a jaundiced eye.
  • Some jaundiced patients may complain only of yellow eyes because they notice the color there.
  • Yellow eyes or a yellow complexion can be signs of illness (as in jaundice) or of devilry, or both: Frankenstein's monster had yellow, watery eyes.
  • However, there were complications that required additional surgery, jaundice possibly caused by gall-bladder disease, and pneumonia.
  • One need not be of a particularly cynical disposition to look with a jaundiced eye on the controversy involving allegations about an unpaid £5,000 bill for cigars and alcohol.
  • It spilled out, a sickly ribbon of yellow jaundice that crept from the antechamber in a ghostly thread.
  • · Localizing features linked to a particular organ system, eg cough and haemoptysis in TB, dyspnea in cardiac failure or anaemia, abdominal pains in parasitoses, jaundice in hepatitis. Chapter 6
  • The air becomes jaundiced and clotted, and hangs in gaseous clouds over the rooms. LEARNING TO TALK: SHORT STORIES
  • If it's hard getting in and out, it kind of jaundices the rest of your trip, '' he said. Boston.com Top Stories
  • That alone attests that the outside world has a more jaundiced, suspicious view of the National than those within racing. Times, Sunday Times
  • He seems to have/take a very jaundiced view of life.
  • His yellow pallor gave him a jaundiced look; his beard was unbrushed, his cap askew.
  • It means the liver cannot break down bilirubin, which can leave the sufferer jaundiced and lead to brain damage.
  • Patients with jaundice are still most often referred to surgeons, though in practice few require surgery.
  • Neonatal physiologic jaundice due to an enzyme deficiency is hepatic in origin.
  • Or perhaps that is just a jaundiced view. Times, Sunday Times
  • In severe cases of the disease, the following signs and symptoms may be present: blood clots in the veins, which may cause thrombophlebitis disseminated intravascular coagulation a disorder causing severe bleeding in many body organs jaundice, or yellowing of the eyes and skin low blood sugar level pleural effusion pulmonary emboli, or blood clots in the arteries of the lungs severe ascites Balkinization
  • Wysing Arts Centre, Sun to 18 MarSkye SherwinFreud's portraits are hard, disquieting things, attuned to the tough reality of bare, veiny sprawling bodies and the jaundiced walls, gummy sheets and cruel furniture around them. This week's new exhibitions
  • The index case was identified as a 43 year-old male farmer who presented with clinical symptoms of fever, jaundice and haematuria (blood in urine).
  • I would be delighted to hear Chris Smith tell us why the Dome's critics are wrong, but nothing will foster mistrust and cynicism faster than the random accusation that they are jaundiced cynics.
  • Severely jaundiced patients are the ones more likely to exhibit renal failure, haemorrhages and cardiovascular collapse.
  • But the proximate cause of my jaundiced demeanour, which is now bubbling over into anger, was an interview on the programme with the vacuous Shane Richmond. Death is a commodity
  • There may also be hepatomegaly (enlarged liver), anaemia and jaundice. Chapter 2
  • He's skinny and angular, with a hollow face, jaundiced skin, sunken black eyes and a flaxen mop.
  • Disorders and displacements of the uterus, ulcers and cancer, gastralgia and gastric spasms, jaundice, pains in the nose, are supposed in women to result from masturbation, as well as fluor albus, nymphomania, &c. The Sexual Life of the Child
  • So in some ways, one could argue that things are "better" now for the LGBT community, but Herring casts an unjaundiced eye upon what she terms the "the fault lines of religion, race, and sexual identity. Georgianne Nienaber: The Campaign: The Audacity of Hope Did Not Die in Maine
  • I have weighed the yeas and nays with the kind of practiced, not to say jaundiced, assay that those of us in the opining rackets routinely bring to such emotionally resonant issues as, say, tax policy or the federal highway fund.
  • They issued eulogies of his career, prematurely exiling him to history's jaundiced pages.
  • Grieve says it "is a good remedy for enfeebled digestion and debility," that it "will relieve melancholia and help to dispel the yellow hue of jaundice from the skin," that it acts as a diuretic, that it's a good vermifuge duh, and that it's a good "mental restorative. Absinthe
  • Augmentin can cause jaundice by slowing the normal flow of bile from the liver.
  • Her jaundiced skin now shimmered with a light green hue from biliverdin.
  • Objective: To observe the effects of the Febricide and Catharsis Treatment of Chinese Medicine (FCTCM) to the Obstructive Jaundice Endotoxemia (OJE).
  • As a choleric sign it is prone to fevers and is linked to yellow-jaundice and sore eyes.
  • The lung of a long-winded fox is used as a cure for asthma, the yarrow is used to cure jaundice, agaricos is used for blisters, aristolochia (the fruit of which has the form of a uterus) is used for the pains of child-birth, and nettle-tea for nettle-rash. Criminal Psychology: a manual for judges, practitioners, and students
  • It has been overwhelming, and the pair are looking a little jaundiced. Times, Sunday Times
  • They dispense medicine of jaundice, diabetes, leucoderma [white patches on body], obesity, asthma, epilepsy and many other chronic disorders! Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • Hemolysis, jaundice, changes in lipid profile, oxidative stress, renal dysfunction and death 'Growing concern' over marketing tainted beef
  • Perhaps this is why he has a jaundiced view of the Canaries. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sometimes jaundice causes itching which can be treated with preparations such as calamine lotion.
  • Elevated alkaline phosphatase is associated with liver disease and with both obstructive jaundice and intrahepatic jaundice.
  • Symptoms include fatigue, fever, nausea, jaundice and dark urine, although some people never manifest symptoms.
  • So it is always well to cast a slightly jaundiced eye over the high flown phrases of professions' protestations of their own virtue, as exhibited in their training manuals.
  • Afterwards, I felt much better straight away and my family noticed my colour had gone from jaundiced yellow to pink. The Sun
  • Jealousy is the jaundice of the soul. John Dryden 
  • She developed complications after the surgery including jaundice, infection, kidney failure and a heart attack.
  • Familiar characters are seen with a jaundiced eye. Times, Sunday Times
  • So I can examine recent Confrontation Clause jurisprudence with an unjaundiced eye, and conclude that it makes nosense. The Volokh Conspiracy » “Incorporation,” Originalism, and the Confrontation Clause:
  • Rare presentations of infection include severe haemorrhage, jaundice, parotitis, and cardiomyopathy.
  • A jaundiced baby's skin will look slightly yellow, it often looks like a suntan.
  • Griselda among herbs, may be given with admirable effect in pottage, as a domestic aperient, "loosening the belly, helping the jaundice, and dispersing the tympany. Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
  • takes a jaundiced view of societies and clubs
  • The primary reason for treating jaundice in neonates is to prevent neurologic damage.
  • Perhaps this is why he has a jaundiced view of the Canaries. Times, Sunday Times
  • Other symptoms include bleeding, jaundice, excessive yellowness of urine, feces, eyes and skin, excessive hunger, thirst, burning sensations and difficulty sleeping.
  • I believe at that time we were taking a variant of quinine called mepacrine, a little yellow pill which turned us a delicate shade of buttercup, and when we went on leave our friends and relatives thought we had jaundice.
  • The spas, also, were claimed to cure ‘dropsy, jaundice, scurvy, greensickness and other distempers not to be mentioned’.
  • From such examination, physicians considered that they could identify problems ranging from jaundice to dropsy, diphtheria, pregnancy, and anxiety.
  • This point can be used in the treatment of disorders of zang organs, such as spleenomegaly, hepatomegaly, hypochondriac pain or jaundice.
  • In 1901-1903 Landsteiner pointed out that a similar reaction may occur when the blood of one human individual is transfused, not with the blood of another animal, but with that of another human being, and that this might be the cause of shock, jaundice, and haemoglobinuria that had followed some earlier attempts at blood transfusions. Karl Landsteiner - Biography
  • Damage to the liver or an obstruction of some kind in the bile duct (called a gallstone) can lead to serious problems such as cholestasis, steatorrhea, or jaundice. CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
  • Even to the jaundiced eyes of veteran Washington reporters, this is mighty early to be planning a presidential campaign.
  • This is an incredible opportunity to look at our lives with an unjaundiced eye and really think about what you want to do in your life. Stephen Josephson: Everything is Not Going to be Ok
  • He was filmed at an art gallery by the same jaundiced organ while he gave his verdict on the exhibits on display. Times, Sunday Times
  • Findings of the physical examination on admission revealed an emaciated, deeply jaundiced man, with orthostatic hypotension and marked dyspnea.
  • He not only lists its uses, but tries to explain its actions: for example, ‘The emulsion of the seed is good for the jaundice, if there be ague accompanying it, for it opens obstructions of the gall, and causes digestion of choler.’
  • After his experience in jail , he has a pretty jaundiced view of the penal system.
  • She viewed politics and politicians with a jaundiced eye .
  • If untreated, jaundice can lead to infection and abscesses in the liver, which can be fatal.
  • Liver damage can cause jaundice, which is when the skin turns yellow. CR4 - Recent Forum Threads and Blog Entries
  • Jaundice is palliated by stenting the stricture at the lower end of the common bile duct; this has superseded operative palliation.
  • Since nostalgia renders me gooier than the Redskins base defense, I will be incapable of offering a critical, jaundiced look at the Redskins 'homecoming weekend, which included a Saturday night dinner and a Sunday reception, parade and halftime ceremony. The Redskins homecoming weekend
  • Because of him, we read everything more closely, with a jaundiced eye, searching for hidden idiocies, subtle contradictions.
  • The government's late conversion to the works of Joyce is viewed with a jaundiced eye by his grandson.
  • She appeared well but was mildly jaundiced and had a temperature of 38.2°C and a pulse of 110 bpm.
  • If untreated, jaundice can lead to infection and abscesses in the liver, which can be fatal.
  • He has a very jaundiced view of the world.
  • She developed complications after the surgery including jaundice, infection, kidney failure and a heart attack.

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