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Results 1 - 10 of 36 for Active site
  1. ... must be done to check whether there is active disease. A small reaction (5 mm of firm swelling at the site) is considered to be positive in people: Who ...
  2. ... bumpy, or overused area? Have you been rotating sites? Have you been less or more active than usual? Do you have a cold, flu, ...
  3. ... that form blood clots travel to the injury site to help stop bleeding. If these proteins become abnormally active throughout the body, you could develop DIC. The ...
  4. ... of white blood cells called eosinophils. Eosinophils become active when you have certain allergic diseases, infections, and other medical conditions.
  5. ... who carries the parasite, but does not have active Chagas disease
  6. ... scar or overused area? Have you been rotating sites? Was the injection into a lump or numb spot under the skin? What else has changed? Have you been less active than usual? Do you have a fever , cold , ...
  7. ... Chemotherapy is used to treat disease at all sites in the body. ... against rhabdomyosarcoma. Your provider will discuss these with ...
  8. ... make it hard to remember things. Stay physically active. Try to walk every day for up to 30 minutes and eat a healthy diet. Work with your health care provider to reduce or eliminate any medicines that might impair your memory.
  9. ... and a bandage is placed over the needle site. You are taken to a recovery area where you rest for several hours to prevent any CSF leakage.
  10. ... test is most often done to find the site of bleeding. It is done in people who have blood loss from the colon or other parts of the gastrointestinal tract. A similar test called a ventriculogram may be done to check heart function.
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