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Results 1 - 10 of 74 for Compensate
  1. ... gland is enlarged (goiter) in an attempt to compensate for reduced hormone production. Because cases caused by ... The thyroid gland enlarges, forming a goiter, to compensate for decreased levels of thyroglobulin. With this compensation, ...
  2. ... only red blood cells because other cells can compensate for a decrease in enzyme activity, but red ... a complete loss of enzyme activity. Cells cannot compensate for a complete loss of this enzyme, which ...
  3. ... sphingolipid production because the body is able to compensate for the SPT enzyme's reduced production. When ... amount of sphingolipids, the body is able to compensate, and there does not seem to be an ...
  4. ... possible that other enzymes may be able to compensate for the defective OCRL enzyme in unaffected tissues. ... possible that other enzymes may be able to compensate for the defective OCRL enzyme in unaffected tissues. ...
  5. ... only red blood cells because other cells can compensate for a decrease in enzyme activity, but red ... a complete loss of enzyme activity. Cells cannot compensate for a complete loss of cytochrome b5 reductase ...
  6. ... body to function as expected. Gene therapy can compensate for genetic alterations in a couple different ways. ...
  7. ... blood may also break down fibrin, helping to compensate for the reduced plasminogen levels. More About This ...
  8. ... protein is produced from a gene, which can compensate for the effects of a genetic alteration. Examples ...
  9. ... this other version of the protein may partially compensate for the loss of mitochondrial ornithine transporter 1 ...
  10. ... proteins in this signaling pathway is increased to compensate for the protein whose function is reduced; however, ...
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