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Active site
- ... 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 ...
- ... bumpy, or overused area? Have you been rotating sites? Have you been less or more active than usual? Do you have a cold, flu, ...
- ... 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 ...
- ... of white blood cells called eosinophils. Eosinophils become active when you have certain allergic diseases, infections, and other medical conditions.
- ... who carries the parasite, but does not have active Chagas disease
- ... 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 , ...
- ... Chemotherapy is used to treat disease at all sites in the body. ... against rhabdomyosarcoma. Your provider will discuss these with ...
- ... 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.
- ... 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.
- ... 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.