bursae in English

noun
1
a city in northwestern Turkey; population 1,431,200 (est. 2007). It was the capital of the Ottoman Empire 1326–1402.
noun
1
a fluid-filled sac or saclike cavity, especially one countering friction at a joint.
Another slip may attach to the synovial bursa forming a tensor bursae mucosae tendinum.

Use "bursae" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "bursae" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "bursae", or refer to the context using the word "bursae" in the English Dictionary.

1. Synovial Bursae, which are located between bones and muscles, tendons, and ligaments

2. Bursae are small fluid-filled sacs that reduce friction between moving parts in your body's joints

3. "Bursae" is the plural form of "Bursa." The major Bursae are located adjacent to the tendons near the large joints, such as the shoulders, elbows, hips, and knees

4. A synovial Bursa (Bursae synoviales) is a walled space containing a viscid fluid

5. By padding these areas, Bursae (plural for Bursa) decrease friction, rubbing and inflammation

6. Bursae function to facilitate the gliding of muscles or tendons over bony or ligamentous surfaces.

7. Although you have Bursae throughout your body, bursitis most often occurs around the joints.

8. Bursae function to facilitate the gliding of muscles or tendons over bony or ligamentous surfaces

9. Examples of superficial Bursae include the patella Bursa at the knee and the olecranon Bursa at the elbow.

10. Echinoderms normally use their respiratory organs like dermal Branchiae (papulae), tube feet, respiratory tree, and bursae

11. Bursae are fluid-filled sacs that act as a cushion between bones, tendons, joints, and muscles

12. Hip bursitis is inflammation or irritation of one or more of the Bursae (shown in blue) in your hip.

13. Bursa, plural Bursas or Bursae, within the mammalian body, any small pouch or sac between tendons, muscles, or skin and bony prominences at points of friction or stress

14. There are many Bursae located throughout the body that act as cushions between bones and soft tissues, such as skin.

15. Bursa, plural Bursas or bursae, within the mammalian body, any small pouch or sac between tendons, muscles, or skin and bony prominences at points of friction or stress

16. Stressed ducklings exhibited signs of the General Adaptation Syndrome; namely, involution of the bursae of Fabricius and thymus glands, hypertrophy of the adrenal glands (except in those birds injected with cortisone), and retardation of growth.

17. For the purpose of rheumatic diseases, ultrasound standard scans help to detect the lesions at the biceps tendon, the bursae, the rotator cuff, the humeral head as well as in the acromial and sternoclavicular joints.

18. Bursae allow the joints of the body to articulate repeatedly throughout life while withstanding pressures like the impact from running or the pull on a joint that can be caused with heavy lifting.

19. A Bursa is a fluid-filled sac that cushions an area of friction between tissues, such as tendons and bone. Bursae reduce friction between moving parts of the body, such as around the joints of the shoulder, elbow, hip, knee, and adjacent to the Achilles tendon in the heel.

20. A synovial bursa (plural bursae or Bursas) is a small fluid-filled sac lined by synovial membrane with an inner capillary layer of viscous synovial fluid (similar in consistency to that of a raw egg white).It provides a cushion between bones and tendons and/or muscles around a joint

21. A posterior ring Apophyseal fracture and disc herniation in a 21-year-old competitive basketball player: a case report 1h): Papillae anal small, somewhat rounded, covered with hair, apophysis posterior large, thorn-like, apophysis anterior reduced, ductus bursae large, highly covered, corpus bursa large, balloon-like with pair of rod-like

22. A Bursa is a closed, fluid-filled sac that works as a cushion and gliding surface to reduce friction between tissues of the body. The major Bursae (this is the plural of Bursa) are located next to the tendons near the large joints, such as in the shoulders, elbows, hips, and knees