“mucous” in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “mucous”:

+ The yellow colour of the skin and mucous membranes happens because of an increase in the bile pigment, bilirubin, in the blood.

+ They can be mucous membranes like the surface of the stomach or inside the mouth.

+ They are mucous membranes, which are mostly inside bones.

+ This makes it very hard for the cilia to do their job, and bring the mucous up out of the airways.

+ The mucous also has antiseptic qualities: it contains lysozyme and immunoglobulins.

+ The body produces about a litre of mucous per day, in the mouth and other places.

+ During an asthma attack the submucosal glands and the goblet cells start making much more mucous than normal, and the mucous is also thicker than normal.

+ The nasal cavity is lined with mucous and little hairs called cilia.

mucous in-sentences
mucous in-sentences

Example sentences of “mucous”:

+ The walls of the vagina are composed of soft elastic folds of mucous membrane skin which stretch or contract to the size of the penis.

+ Tiny hairs that line the airways called "cilia", move back and forth in a whiplike motion and bring the mucous and trapped particles up to the pharynx to be coughed up.
+ When airway remodeling happens the body may make many more submucosal glands and goblet cells than normal, which means even more mucous is made.

+ The walls of the vagina are composed of soft elastic folds of mucous membrane skin which stretch or contract to the size of the penis.

+ Tiny hairs that line the airways called “cilia”, move back and forth in a whiplike motion and bring the mucous and trapped particles up to the pharynx to be coughed up.

+ When airway remodeling happens the body may make many more submucosal glands and goblet cells than normal, which means even more mucous is made.

+ Submucosal glands and goblet cells make mucous which helps to protect the airways by trapping harmful particles like dust and pollen.

+ The mucous and whatever particles they trap are brought up to the “pharynx” by tiny hairs on the inside of the airway that move back and forth called “cilia”.

+ Mast cells are a type of innate immune cell in connective tissue and the mucous membranes.

+ They can protect themselves by secreting a mucous substance which hardens to form a sheath around them.

+ Most newts can be safely handled, provided that the toxins they produce are not ingested or allowed to come in contact with mucous membranes, or breaks in the skin.see Accessed 2007-11-28 After handling, proper hand-washing techniques should be followed due to the risk from the toxins they produce and bacteria they carry, such as salmonella.

+ Saliva consists of two fluids, mucous and serous.

+ Both diseases have painful, watery blisters in the skin or mucous membranes or on the genitals.

+ Food particles in the water current are trapped in a stream of mucous that travels along the tentacles until it reaches the oral ring.

+ During an asthma attack the submucosal glands and goblet cells make too much mucous, and it is thicker than normal which makes it harder for the cilia to bring the mucous up.

+ There may be too much mucous for the cilia to bring up and the airway may become blocked.

+ The mucous is normally a thin film which lines the airways.

+ In healthy persons, candidiasis is usually a very small infection of the skin or mucous membranes.

+ Ulcers start when the top layer of skin or mucous membrane is damaged.

+ Unlike skin, which has hair growing out of it, mucous membranes are hairless.

+ Lassa fever is transmitted by humans through skin lesions, mucous that is exposed to the virus, or by a patient’s blood.

+ One observer wrote, “One of the most striking of the complications was hemorrhage from mucous membranes, especially from the nose, stomach, and intestine.

+ So now there is too much mucous being made, and not enough being brought up by the cilia.

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