-
Embryonated,
unembryonated and de-
embryonated are
terms generally used in
reference to eggs or, in botany, to seeds. The
words are
often used as professional...
-
reproductive systems. Thus,
reproduction is by self-fertilisation. From humans,
embryonated eggs,
called oncospheres, are
released with
faeces and are transmitted...
-
Infection occurs when a
human swallows water or food
contaminated with
embryonated eggs. In the duodenum, a
single rhabditiform larva hatches from each...
-
definitive host.
Depending on the species, it will
either be non-
embryonated (immature) or
embryonated (ready to hatch). The eggs of all
trematodes (except schistosomes)...
-
Eaton cultivated an
agent thought responsible for
human pneumonia in
embryonated chicken eggs,
referred to as the "Eaton agent." This
agent was classified...
- infected.
Humans are infected, like
other paratenic hosts, by
ingestion of
embryonated T.
canis eggs. The
disease (toxocariasis)
caused by
migrating T. canis...
- only
eukaryotic cell
without the
globular protein G-actin. Eggs may be
embryonated or
unembryonated when p****ed by the female,
meaning their fertilized...
- ("six hooked") larva. A
gravid proglottid can
contain more than 50,000
embryonated eggs.
Gravid proglottids often rupture in the intestine,
liberating the...
- where,
after two to
three w****s, they
become embryonated and
enter the "infective" stage.
These embryonated infective eggs are
ingested by hand-mouth or...
- were
obvious for all to see, have
subsequently become applied to the
embryonated eggs that are
difficult to detect. Thus, the term "nit" in
English is...