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Their chemical composition is diverse, and rarely can a nidus be found.
The nidus makes up about two to ten percent of the mass of the stone.
If it's TB, then there has to be a nidus somewhere.
Nidus Festival - A weekend of faith, arts and justice.
Without the power of the Nidus, Rothgo would ultimately die.
A bezoar may form the nidus of an enterolith.
The nidus is seldom larger than 1.5 cm.
The sprouts of A. nidus are eaten as a vegetable in Taiwan.
The residual product can also potentially serve as a nidus for post-operative infection.
"You need to be flexible and see where your skills might apply to a new area," Mr. Nidus said.
This is suggestive of a nidus of autoimmune disease.
Eventually, in the state of love making, she stabs him to death in their nidus of sugar.
He had reclassified the already known A. nidus in its own genus Neottopteris.
The word derives from the Latin nidus or nest, via the French niche.
Hearing my children who work at sleep I know that at this hour everyone goes nowhere, unattached to the nidus of the day.
A. Social service groups are often more open to hiring people with criminal records, Mr. Nidus said.
A dozen shadowy figures ranged over the ice, a squadron heading north toward the ruins of Nidus.
It is derived from Latin nidus for "nest" and fugere meaning "to flee".
They are then swept into the pulmonary arteries where they impact and form the nidus of a thrombus.
Each aimed to obtain possession of the Nidus, a magical object of limitless power.
The resulting tangle of blood vessels, often called a nidus (Latin for "nest"), has no capillaries.
A disseminated infection, for example, has extended beyond its origin or nidus and involved the bloodstream to "seed" other areas of the body.
Asplenium nidus can survive either as an epiphytal, or terrestrial plant, but typically grows on organic matter.
The larvae feed on Asplenium nidus.
This presumably reflects the fact that biliary stasis remains with a nidus of infection already present even after stones are removed.