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These fractures are best repaired with nonabsorbable suture or with wires.
Apple juice contains sorbitol, which is nonabsorbable.
Ethilon is a synthetic nonabsorbable nylon suture manufactured by Ethicon.
Even though it is nonabsorbable, the knot security decreases over time (in vivo) and should not be used where permanent retention is required.
A safer and probably more effective antibiotic is rifaximin, a nonabsorbable antibiotic from the rifamycin class.
Prolene is a synthetic, monofilament, nonabsorbable polypropylene suture.
"I knew from previous research that sorbitol was nonabsorbable, and that white grape juice contained no sorbitol," he said.
Its most common medical use is in the synthetic, nonabsorbable suture Prolene, manufactured by Ethicon Inc.
Paromomycin is a nonabsorbable aminoglycoside indicated for the treatment of intestinal amebiasis but not specifically approved for cryptosporidiosis.
Viscous and nonviscous fibres, nonabsorbable and low glycaemic index carbohydrates, blood lipids and coronary heart disease.
Preventive measures include restriction of animal dietary protein consumption and the use of nonabsorbable disaccharides (e.g., lactulose) and/or antibiotics (e.g., neomycin, rifaximin).
Materials that have been used to make biologic tubes include blood vessels and skeletal muscles, while nonabsorbable and bioabsorbable synthetic tubes have been made from silicone and polyglycolide respectively.
This favors the formation of the nonabsorbable NH from NH, trapping NH in the colon and effectively reducing plasma NH concentrations.
Osmotic laxatives, such as Fleet Phospho-Soda, Milk of Magnesia, or Miralax, and nonabsorbable sugars (such as lactulose or sorbitol), hold fluids in the intestine.
The advent of the first nonabsorbable facial filler to gain F.D.A. sanction (liquid silicone, a permanent substance injected by some doctors, has not been approved for cosmetic use) is creating a schism among doctors.
Osmotic laxatives (such as Milk of Magnesia and nonabsorbable sugars such as lactulose), which work by holding fluids in the intestine and drawing fluids into the intestine from other tissue and blood vessels.
Factors that decrease absorption include food, oral nonabsorbable antibiotics (e.g. vancomycin, neomycin, and bacitracin), and more rapid transit through the gastrointestinal tract (GI) tract, such as diarrhea, while slower transit time in the GI tract from constipation will increase absorption.