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calcification
[ kal-suh-fi-key-shuhn ]
noun
- a changing into lime.
- Physiology. the deposition of lime or insoluble salts of calcium and magnesium, as in a tissue.
- Anatomy, Geology. a calcified formation.
- a soil process in which the surface soil is supplied with calcium in such a way that the soil colloids are always close to saturation.
- a hardening or solidifying; rigidity:
As the conflict developed, there was an increasing calcification of attitudes on both sides.
calcification
/ °ìă±ô′sÉ™-´ÚÄ-°ìÄå′²õ³óÉ™²Ô /
- Medicine.
- The accumulation of calcium or calcium salts in a body tissue. Calcification normally occurs in the formation of bone, but can be deposited abnormally, as in the lungs.
- A structure that has undergone calcification.
- Geology.
- The replacement of organic material, especially original hard material such as bone, with calcium carbonate during the process of fossilization.
- The accumulation of calcium in certain soils, especially soils of cool temperate regions where leaching takes place very slowly.
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of calcification1
Example Sentences
In addition to breast density, their machine-learning tool considers changes in other patterns in the images, including in texture, calcification and asymmetry within the breasts.
This calcification does not bode well for a democracy’s ability to address differences among politicians and voters or to find common ground.
The commercially available AI system used for screening was trained by deep learning models to highlight and rate suspicious lesions and calcifications within mammograms.
These complications include carotid artery calcification, calcification of the abdominal aorta and peripheral vessels in the lower extremities, and small vessel disease in the feet.
Nevertheless, individuals who had large amounts of damaged teeth possessed higher rates of inflammation, brain tissue loss and aortic valve calcification.
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