A central point or locus of an infection in an organism.
Sinônimos
Examples for "focus"
Examples for "focus"
1Last year saw Harry increasingly focus on the issue of climate change.
2Prevention is therefore paramount and a logical focus for future research attention.
3Officials said they needed to focus on a possible early general election.
4That new focus could fall on state elections due later this year.
5Primary production would remain the main focus of water storage scheme use.
1You are the focal point, and therefore the focal point for criticism.
2Deal-making and earnings reports provided a second focal point for regional investors.
3The dining room had long been the focal point of the home.
4His mobility up front has given the side a better focal point.
5But Washington wants North Korea's nuclear program to be the focal point.
1Thin-slice MRI acquired for treatment planning did not show the AVM nidus.
2The nidus went off with a concussive hiss and multiple popping sounds.
3Metabolites were extracted from C. nidus ANDES-F1080 using water and methanol as solvents.
4He picked up the papers on the table and left the stolen nidus behind.
5Remember, pollen-tubes protrude within anther in Neottia nidus-avis.
6The electron microscopy of the thrombotic vegetation demonstrated nanobacterium as a nidus for carbonate apatite formation.
7Surface MRA clearly demonstrated nidus adjacent to eloquent area and three-dimensional figures of feeding arteries and draining veins.
8The exact localization of the nidus and the identification of the feeding arteries are critical for therapy planning.
9The nidus fell to the floor.
10The custom of providing a material abode or nidus for the ghost is found all over the earth; e.g.
11A retrospective review of the tissue sections showed a nidus of associated astrocytic proliferation, suggesting a diagnosis of ganglioglioma.
12To achieve this objective, C. nidus ANDES-F1080 was grown in four different substrates: two artificial-based and two natural-based culture media.
13A Correct identification of the arterial feeder and the nidus was possible in about 75% of the patients.
14Patients without residual nidus or early draining veins on postoperative angiograms are considered cured, with the risk of hemorrhage eliminated.
15This technique has improved our success rate in achieving superselective catheterization of the nidus and has shortened the overall procedure time.
16Permanent embolic obliteration of the malformation requires placement of occlusive material directly into the nidus (core) of the lesion.