thymus in English

noun
1
a lymphoid organ situated in the neck of vertebrates that produces T cells for the immune system. The human thymus becomes much smaller at the approach of puberty.
Primary lymphoid organs in the thymus and bone marrow constitute the major site of lymphocyte development.
noun
    thymus gland

Use "thymus" in a sentence

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

1. The sixth chakra ( thymus center ), also newly formed(sentence dictionary), is where the thymus gland is situated.

2. Thymus 'Pink Chintz' with its thick

3. Lymphocytes from the thymus or lymph nodes of inbred rats were Autosensitized in vitro against monolayers of autochthonous thymus reticulum cells or syngeneic fibroblasts

4. The therapy is a cultured human thymus tissue designed to treat pediatric congenital Athymia, an ultra-rare condition characterized by an absent thymus at birth

5. In the involuting thymus lysosomes are involved in autolytic or phagocytic processes.

6. The rats all developed enlarged adrenal glands, shrunken thymus glands and bleeding ulcers.

7. 7 Children with congenital Athymia are born without a thymus, which makes them severely immunodeficient

8. Complete DiGeorge syndrome is a rare disorder in which children have no detectable thymus (Athymia)

9. Pink Chintz Thyme (Thymus Pink Chintz) is a low, tight growing selection of creeping thyme

10. Congenital Athymia is an ultra-rare disease characterized by the absence of a functioning thymus

11. You talk about the thymus gland revivifying over the course of a couple of generations.

12. The Thymus gland: This is a small walnut sized gland which lies behind the breast bone.

13. The thymus gland or pancreas of a young animal, especially a calf or lamb, used for food.

14. 23 As matures , the thymus gland disappears. Sweetbreads may be broiled, fried, braised, or cooked in liquid.

15. Neuroendocrine tumors of the thymus, also known as thymic carcinoids, are rare tumors of the anterior mediastinum.

16. Brain, liver, kidneys, heart, spleen, thymus, pituitary, thyroid (post-fixation), adrenal glands and known target organs or tissues.

17. CD8+ (Cytotoxic) T cells, like CD4+ Helper T cells, are generated in the thymus and express the T-cell receptor

18. Thymus lymphocytes of normal adult rats were Autosensitized in vitro against soluble antigens extracted from the brains of syngeneic rats

19. The thymus is a lymphocyte-rich, Bilobed, encapsulated organ located behind the sternum, above and in front of the heart

20. Congenital Athymia is a rare condition 1 in which children are born without a thymus, resulting in profound immunodeficiency and immune dysregulation

21. From the Aborted fetuses, thymus, liver, spleen and full-thickness skin were transplanted and grafted onto the rodents and allowed to grow

22. 23 Objective To explore feasibility of prevention of organ specific autoimmune disease by transplanting mixed fetal syngeneic or allogeneic and xenogeneic thymus.

23. spices: bay leaves (Laurus nobilis); dill seed (Anethum graveolens); fenugreek seed (Trigonella foenumgraecum); saffron (Crocus sativus); thyme (Thymus vulgaris); turmeric (Curcuma longa)

24. At the time, "yeast nucleic acid" (RNA) was thought to occur only in plants, while "thymus nucleic acid" (DNA) only in animals.

25. These are the pituitary, the thyroid, the parathyroids, the adrenals, the thymus, the pineal, the islands of Langerhans and the gonads or sex glands.

26. Creeping Thyme bulk pack ground cover, 4000 seeds, fragrant herb, pink blooms, zones 4 to 9, sun or light shade, deerproof, Thymus serpyllum Nelashiuckomd

27. Purpose of review: Transplantation of cultured postnatal allogeneic thymus has been successful for treating Athymia, mostly associated with complete DiGeorge syndrome, for more than 20 years

28. An ultra-rare condition in which children are born without a thymus, congenital Athymia can lead to profound immunodeficiency, immune dysregulation and high susceptibility to …

29. The weight of the thymus gland is unaltered by tumour growth, however, if the adrenal glands of the animal are excised prior to tumour transplantation.

30. Seven days prior to transplantation 5×107 donor splenocytes were injected into the thymus of LEW (RT11) recipients of WKA (RT1u) cardiac or renal allografts.

31. Congenital Athymia is a condition where there is a complete lack of a functional thymus, an essential part of the immune system, which leads to …

32. Atrophying Sentence Examples It may follow a diminished functional activity, as in the Atrophying thymus gland' and in the muscle cells of the uterus after parturition.

33. Congenital Athymia is an ultra-rare condition in which children are born without a thymus, causing profound immunodeficiency, vulnerability to potentially fatal infections, and life-threatening

34. Congenital Athymia is an ultra-rare condition in which children are born without a thymus, causing profound immunodeficiency, vulnerability to potentially fatal infections, and life-threatening

35. RVT-802, derived from infant thymus tissue, is designed to reconstitute the immune system for the treatment of T cell immunodeficiency resulting from pediatric congenital Athymia.

36. Hierodula patellifera can increase the index of testis and thymus gland, raise the temperature in mice, and decrease the content of LPO in liver of the hypercholesteremia rets.

37. Thymus (T) lymphocytes Autosensitized in vitro were shown in previous studies to produce enlargement of draining popliteal lymph nodes upon injection into the footpads of syngeneic rats

38. Congenital Athymia is an ultra-rare (defined as prevalent in no more than 1:50,000 []) pediatric condition characterized by the lack of thymic development in utero.The thymus is responsible for the maturation and selection of T-cell precursors, and, as a result, pediatric patients with congenital Athymia lack naïve T cells that normally undergo positive and negative selection in the thymus

39. Thymus (T) lymphocytes Autosensitized in vitro were shown in previous studies to produce enlargement of draining popliteal lymph nodes upon injection into the footpads of syngeneic rats

40. Congenital Athymia is an ultra-rare condition in which children are born without a thymus, causing profound immunodeficiency, vulnerability to potentially fatal infections, and life-threatening immune dysregulation

41. F3-histone from calf thymus compete with amboceptor in fixation on sheep erythrocytes: sheep erythrocytes treated with histone fixed less amboceptor and after treatment with amboceptor fixed less histone.

42. Congenital Athymia is an ultra-rare condition in which children are born without a thymus, causing profound immunodeficiency, vulnerability to potentially fatal infections, and life-threatening immune dysregulation

43. Amber may be placed directly on a wound or over the internal organs to promote healing, or at the thymus gland to restore balance to the entire system

44. In the thymus Anlagen of wild-type mice, CD31(+) endothelial cells are initially observed between epithelial cells on embryonic day (Ed)12.5 and form luminal structure on Ed13

45. The effect of aging on the thymus and immune senescence is well established, and the resulting inflammaging is found to be implicated in the development of many chronic diseases inclu …

46. Many children with a severely deficient or absent thymus, referred to as Athymia, have inherited a chromosome that is missing a key stretch of genes on a region called 22q11

47. 30 In the thymus , immature T cells undergo a strict "education" in which they are programmed to not react strongly (and therefore harmfully) to any bodily tissues. Disobedient cells are destroyed.

48. Physiological Atrophy is a function of the growth changes of an organism (Atrophy of the thymus during puberty, Atrophy of the sex glands, skin, and bones in old people, and so on).

49. Tolerance is classified into central tolerance or peripheral tolerance depending on where the state is originally induced—in the thymus and bone marrow (central) or in other tissues and lymph nodes (peripheral).

50. Ectopic hamartomatous thymoma has to be distinguished from ectopic cervical thymoma, thymolipoma, ectopic salivary tissue, teratoma, peripheral nerve sheath tumours, malignant epithelial tumours with thymus-like differentiation, biphasic synovial sarcoma, and skin adnexal tumours.