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Command Quotes - II
1. Man is made to adore and to obey: but if you will not command him, if you give him nothing to worship, he will fashion his own divinities, and find a chieftain in his own passions. - Benjamin Disraeli
2. Have fun in your command. Don't always run at a breakneck pace. Take leave when you've earned it, spend time with your families. - Colin Powell
3. Your position never gives you the right to command. It only imposes on you the duty of so living your life that others can receive your orders without being humiliated. - Dag Hammarskjold
4. In our system leadership is by consent, not command. To lead a President must persuade. Personal contacts and experiences help shape his thinking. They can be critical to his persuasiveness and thus to his leadership. - Donald Rumsfeld
5. Justice is the first virtue of those who command, and stops the complaints of those who obey. - Denis Diderot
6. You see that even the enemy did not dare to declare war against us till they had seized our generals, for they were sensible that, while we had commanders and yielded obedience to them, we were able to conquer them; but, having seized our commanders, they concluded that we should, from a want of command and discipline, be destroyed. - Xenophon
7. The issues a president faces are not black and white, and cannot be boiled down into 140 characters. Because when you have the nuclear codes at your fingertips and the military at your command, you can't make snap decisions. You can't have a thin skin or the tendency to lash out. - Michelle Obama
8. If I had been censured every time I have run my ship, or fleets under my command, into great danger, I should have long ago been out of the Service and never in the House of Peers. - Horatio Nelson.
Q: What do you call a dodgy neighbourhood in Italy?
A: A Spaghetto.
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Q: What did Lara eat for dinner?
A: Croft Macaroni and Cheese.
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Q: Where did the spaghetti go to dance?
A: The meat ball!
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Q: What do you call a pasta that is sick?
A: Mac and sneeze.
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Q: What does an Irishman get after eating Italian lasagna?
A: Gaelic breath!
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Pleurisy
Gist
Pleurisy is the inflammation of the membrane surrounding the lungs (pleura), causing sharp, stabbing chest pain that worsens with breathing, coughing, or sneezing. Primarily caused by infections (viral, bacterial pneumonia), it is treated by managing the underlying cause and reducing pain with NSAIDs. Recovery varies, often lasting a few days to weeks depending on the cause, with a generally good prognosis upon prompt treatment.
Pleurisy is inflammation around the lungs, which causes sharp chest pain. It's easy to treat and usually gets better in a few days, but can sometimes be a sign of something more serious, like pneumonia.
Summary
Pleurisy, also known as pleuritis, is inflammation of the membranes that surround the lungs and line the chest cavity (pleurae). This can result in a sharp chest pain while breathing. Occasionally the pain may be a constant dull ache. Other symptoms may include shortness of breath, cough, fever, and weight loss, depending on the underlying cause.
Pleurisy can be caused by a variety of conditions, including viral or bacterial infections, autoimmune disorders, and pulmonary embolism. The most common cause is a viral infection. Other causes include bacterial infection, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism, autoimmune disorders, lung cancer, following heart surgery, pancreatitis and asbestosis. Occasionally the cause remains unknown. The underlying mechanism involves the rubbing together of the pleurae instead of smooth gliding. Other conditions that can produce similar symptoms include pericarditis, heart attack, cholecystitis, pulmonary embolism, and pneumothorax. Diagnostic testing may include a chest X-ray, electrocardiogram (ECG), and blood tests.
Treatment depends on the underlying cause. Paracetamol (acetaminophen) and ibuprofen may be used to decrease pain. Incentive spirometry may be recommended to encourage larger breaths. About one million people are affected in the United States each year. Descriptions of the condition date from at least as early as 400 BC by Hippocrates.
Details:
What is pleurisy?
Pleurisy is an inflammation of the pleura, a large, thin sheet of tissue that wraps around the outside of your lungs and lines the inside of your chest cavity. Between the layer of the pleura that wraps around your lungs and the layer that lines your chest cavity is a very thin space called the pleural space. Normally this space is filled with a small amount of fluid that helps the two layers of the pleura glide smoothly past each other as your lungs breathe air in and out. Pleurisy occurs when the two layers of the pleura become red and inflamed, rubbing against each other every time your lungs expand to breathe in air. Infections like pneumonia are the most common cause of pleurisy.
Symptoms
The main symptom of pleurisy is a sharp or stabbing pain in your chest that gets worse when you breathe in deeply or cough or sneeze. The pain may stay in one place or it may spread to your shoulder or back. Sometimes it becomes a fairly constant dull ache. Depending on what's causing the pleurisy, you may have other symptoms, such as:
* Shortness of breath
* A cough
* Fever and chills
* Rapid, shallow breathing
* Unexplained weight loss
* A sore throat followed by pain and swelling in your joints
Diagnosis
Your doctor will find out if you have pleurisy or another pleural disorder by taking a detailed medical history and doing a physical exam and several diagnostic tests, including:
* Chest X-ray to show air or fluid in the pleural space, and what's causing the condition (for example, pneumonia, a fractured rib, or a lung tumor)
* CT scan that can show pockets of fluid, signs of pneumonia, a lung abscess or a tumor
* Ultrasound, which can show where fluid is located in your chest
* Magnetic resonance (MR) scan, which can show pleural effusions and tumors
* Blood tests, which can show whether you have a bacterial or viral infection, pneumonia, rheumatic fever, a pulmonary embolism or lupus
* Arterial blood gas tests, which show how well your lungs are taking in oxygen
Treatment
A procedure called thoracentesis is used to remove fluid from the pleural space. The doctor inserts a needle or a thin, hollow, plastic tube through the ribs in the back of your chest into your chest wall. A syringe is attached to draw fluid out of your chest.
To relieve symptoms, your doctor may recommend:
* Acetaminophen or anti-inflammatory agents, such as ibuprofen, to control pain
* Codeine-based cough syrups to control a cough
* Lying on the painful side to make you more comfortable
* Breathing deeply and coughing to clear mucus as the pain eases
Your doctor will look at the fluid under a microscope to determine what's causing the fluid buildup. If the fluid is infected, treatment involves antibiotics and draining the fluid. If the infection is tuberculosis or from a fungus, treatment involves long-term use of antibiotics or antifungal medicines. If the fluid is caused by tumors of the pleura, it may build up again quickly after it's drained. Sometimes antitumor medicines will prevent further fluid buildup. If they don't, the doctor may seal the pleural space.
Additional Information
Pleurisy is a condition in which the pleura — two large, thin layers of tissue that separate your lungs from your chest wall — becomes inflamed. Also called pleuritis, pleurisy causes sharp chest pain (pleuritic pain) that worsens during breathing.
One pleural layer of tissue wraps around the outside of the lungs. The other pleural layer lines the inner chest wall. Between these two layers is a small space (pleural space) that's usually filled with a very small amount of liquid. These layers act like two pieces of smooth satin gliding past each other, allowing your lungs to expand and contract when you breathe.
If you have pleurisy, these tissues swell and become inflamed. As a result, the two layers of the pleural lining rub against each other like two pieces of sandpaper. This causes pain when you breathe in and out. The pleuritic pain lessens or stops when you hold your breath.
Treatment of pleurisy involves pain control and treating the cause.
Symptoms:
Signs and symptoms of pleurisy might include:
* Chest pain that worsens when you breathe, cough or sneeze.
* Shortness of breath — often from trying to limit breathing in and out.
* Cough — only in some cases.
* Fever — only in some cases.
Pain caused by pleurisy might worsen with movement of your upper body and can spread to your shoulders or back.
Pleurisy can occur along with pleural effusion, atelectasis or empyema:
* Pleural effusion. In some cases of pleurisy, fluid builds up in the small space between the two layers of tissue. This is called pleural effusion. When there is a fair amount of fluid, pleuritic pain lessens or disappears because the two layers of pleura are no longer in contact and don't rub together.
* Atelectasis. A large amount of fluid in the pleural space can create pressure. This can compress your lung to the point that it partially or completely collapses (atelectasis). This makes breathing difficult and might cause coughing.
* Empyema. The extra fluid in the pleural space can also become infected, resulting in a buildup of pus. This is called an empyema. Fever often occurs along with an empyema.
When to see a doctor
Call your healthcare provider or seek emergency care right away if you experience unexplained, intense chest pain during breathing. You might have a problem with your lungs, heart or pleura or an underlying illness for which you need prompt medical care.
Causes
A variety of conditions can cause pleurisy. Causes include:
* Viral infection, such as the flu (influenza).
* Bacterial infection, such as pneumonia.
* Fungal infection.
* Autoimmune disorder, such as rheumatoid arthritis or lupus.
* Lung cancer near the pleural surface.
* Pulmonary embolism.
* Tuberculosis (TB).
* Rib fracture or trauma.
* Certain inherited diseases, such as sickle cell disease.
* Certain medications and recreational drugs.
Risk factors
The risk of pleurisy increases if you get certain infections, such as the flu or pneumonia. Some medical conditions, such as lupus, TB and sickle cell disease also can increase your risk. And taking certain medicines or certain recreational drugs raise the risk of pleurisy.
Diagnosis
Your healthcare provider will likely start by asking about your medical history and doing a physical exam that includes listening to your chest with a stethoscope.
To determine if you have pleurisy and identify the cause, your healthcare provider might recommend:
* Blood tests. A blood test might tell if you have an infection. Other blood tests might detect an autoimmune disorder, such as rheumatoid arthritis or lupus. In these conditions, pleurisy can be the first sign.
* Chest X-ray. A chest X-ray can show if your lungs are fully inflating or if there is air or fluid between the lungs and ribs.
* Computerized tomography (CT) scan. A CT scan combines a series of X-ray images taken from different angles around your body. It uses computer processing to create cross-sectional images that look like slices of your chest. These detailed images can show the condition of the pleura. They can also show if there are other causes of pain, such as a blood clot in the lung.
* Ultrasound. This imaging method uses high-frequency sound waves to produce precise images of structures within your body. An ultrasound might be used to determine whether you have a pleural effusion.
* Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG). This heart-monitoring test might be recommended to rule out certain heart problems as a cause for your chest pain.
Diagnostic procedures
In some cases, your healthcare provider might remove fluid and tissue from the pleural space for testing. Procedures might include:
* Thoracentesis. In this procedure, a local numbing agent (anesthetic) is injected between your ribs to the area where fluid was seen on your imaging studies. Next a needle is inserted through your chest wall between your ribs to remove fluid for lab analysis. Removing fluid can also help you breathe better. The needle is usually inserted with the help of ultrasound guidance.
* Thoracoscopy. If TB or cancer is suspected, a thoracoscopy — also called a pleuroscopy — may be performed. During this procedure, a tiny camera (thoracoscope) is inserted through a small cut in your chest wall. This procedure allows for a direct view inside your chest to look for any problems or to get a tissue sample (biopsy).
Treatment
Treatment for pleurisy focuses primarily on the underlying cause. For example, if bacterial pneumonia is the cause, an antibiotic can be prescribed to manage the infection. If the cause is a viral infection, pleurisy may go away on its own.
The pain and inflammation associated with pleurisy is usually treated with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), such as ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin IB, others). Occasionally, your healthcare provider may prescribe steroid medication.
The outcome of pleurisy treatment depends on the seriousness of the underlying cause. Early diagnosis and treatment of the condition that caused pleurisy can help you feel better. Depending on the cause and the condition, you may make a full recovery.
Lifestyle and home remedies
These steps might help relieve symptoms related to pleurisy:
* Take medication. Take medication as recommended by your healthcare provider to relieve pain and inflammation.
* Get plenty of rest. Find the position that causes you the least discomfort when you rest. Even when you start to feel better, be careful not to overdo it.
* Don't smoke. Smoking can cause more irritation to your lungs. If you smoke and can't quit on your own, ask your healthcare provider for help.
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Hi,
#10811. What does the term in Geography Downtown mean?
#10812. What does the term in Geography Storm drain mean?
Hi,
#2610. What does the medical term Multiple sclerosis mean?
Hi,
#6027. What does the noun heist mean?
#6028. What does the noun heliport mean?
Hi,
#9896.
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#6388.
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2750.
Icon of the Seas
Gist
Royal Caribbean's Icon of the Seas is the world's largest cruise ship, featuring 20 decks, 7 pools, and a 7,600-passenger maximum capacity. Launched in early 2024, this LNG-powered vessel operates 7-night Eastern/Western Caribbean itineraries from Miami, featuring "Perfect Day at CocoCay," the largest waterpark at sea, and unique neighborhoods like Surfside and the AquaDome.
Royal Caribbean's Icon of the Seas is the world's largest cruise ship, measuring 1,196 feet (365 meters) long, over 250,000 gross tonnes, and 20 decks high. It accommodates up to 7,600 passengers (5,610 double occupancy) and 2,350 crew. It is 6% larger than the previous record holder, Wonder of the Seas.
Summary:
Key Features and Highlights
Size: 365 meters (1,198 feet) long and roughly 248,663 gross tons.
Water Park & Pools: Category 6 waterpark (largest at sea) and7 pools, including the first suspended infinity pool at sea.
Neighborhoods: Features 8 distinct neighborhoods, including the family-focused Surfside and the relaxing Hideaway.
Entertainment: Features the AquaDome (diving performances), Absolute Zero ice rink, and "The Pearl," a massive, interactive art installation.
Dining & Bars: 40 different dining and drinking venues, including the upscale Empire Supper Club.
Sustainability: First Royal Caribbean ship powered by Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG).
Itinerary and Experience
Homeport: Miami, Florida.
Destinations: 7-night Eastern and Western Caribbean cruises.
Private Island: Includes visits to Perfect Day at CocoCay in the Bahamas.
Capacity: 5,610 passengers at double occupancy (up to 7,600 max) and 2,350 crew.
Details
Icon of the Seas is a cruise ship operated by Royal Caribbean International and is the lead ship of the Icon class. She entered service on 27 January 2024 out of the Port of Miami in the United States. At 248,663 gross tonnage (GT), Icon of the Seas and her sister ships, built by Meyer Turku in Finland, are the largest cruise ships in the world.
History:
Planning
In October 2016, Royal Caribbean and Finnish shipbuilder Meyer Turku announced an order to build two ships under the project name "Icon". The ships were expected to be delivered in the third quarter of 2023 and in 2025 and would be classified by DNV. (Det Norske Veritas (DNV), formerly DNV GL, is an international accredited registrar and classification society headquartered in Høvik, Norway. DNV provides services for several industries, including maritime, oil and gas, renewable energy, electrification, and healthcare.)
Royal Caribbean applied to register a trademark for "Icon of the Seas" in 2016.
Construction
Steel-cutting for Icon of the Seas began in June 2021. In October 2021, Royal Caribbean announced that the first LNG tank for the ship was installed at the Neptun Werft in Rostock, Germany. In December 2021, the floating engine room unit, including the LNG tanks, was towed to Turku in Finland by tug. The keel was laid in April 2022. The ship was launched 9 December 2022. In May 2022, Royal Caribbean confirmed that Icon of the Seas would be bigger than the Oasis class.
On 19 June 2023, Icon of the Seas sailed for the first of her sea trials. She returned to the Meyer Turku shipyard on 22 June for adjustments to her systems, and to have interior spaces completed and furnished.
On 27 November 2023, the ship was handed over to Royal Caribbean. The ship retracted her funnel to pass under the Great Belt Bridge in Denmark, and docked at the Navantia Shipyard in Cádiz, Spain, for final outfitting work. She departed Cadiz on 23 December for Puerto Rico and on 10 January 2024 arrived at her home port, PortMiami.
Christening
On 23 January 2024, the naming ceremony was held and Icon of the Seas was christened by soccer player Lionel Messi. Her maiden voyage began on 27 January out of PortMiami.
Design
Icon of the Seas can be powered by liquefied natural gas (LNG). The ship has six multi-fuel Wärtsilä engines; these can be powered with both LNG and distillate fuel. Icon of the Seas is the first Royal Caribbean vessel to use such technology.
Icon of the Seas is the largest cruise ship in the world by gross tonnage, a title also held by sister ship Star of the Seas. The ship has a crew of 2,350, and a capacity of 5,610 passengers at double occupancy, or 7,600 passengers at maximum capacity. Icon of the Seas has 20 decks with seven swimming pools and six water slides. The company claims the ship has the tallest waterfall, the tallest water slide, and the largest waterpark of any cruise ship.
Features
The ship was designed by a team of architects and designers, including Wilson Butler Architects, 3Deluxe, RTKL, and Skylab Architecture. The designers introduced new concepts including:
* Aquadome: A diving and performance venue under a glass dome on the top of the ship
* The Pearl: A structural feature designed as a dynamic art installation on the Royal Promenade
* Absolute Zero: Ice skating rink and entertainment venue
* Surfside: Family neighborhood
* The Hideaway: Beach club featuring first suspended infinity pool of any ship
* Thrill Island: The largest waterpark at sea, featuring six different water slides
* Swim & Tonic: Largest swim up bar at sea
* Jogging track: A 670-metre-long (2,197 ft) loop that wraps around the ship's perimeter on Deck 5
Incidents
In May 2024, a passenger reportedly jumped from Icon of the Seas. He was recovered by a rescue boat from the cruise ship and later pronounced dead.
On 25 June 2024, a fire was reported onboard while docked at Costa Maya, Mexico. Electrical power was lost for a while but the flames were quickly extinguished, with the damage being "minimal" according to the cruise line.
On 25 July 2025, a crew member, a 35-year-old South African man, allegedly stabbed a 28-year-old South African woman multiple times onboard the Icon of the Seas cruise ship. The man then fled the scene and jumped off the ship, according to police. He was later found dead by onboard medical staff.
Environmental impact
Although LNG/methane burns significantly less polluting than diesel, overall emissions depend on methane leakage. Environmental groups (ICCT and T&E) have said that LNG is a more damaging fuel as it releases more harmful greenhouse gas emissions than marine gas oil through the engine. Nick Rose, a vice-president of Royal Caribbean, said "We consider [LNG] a transitional fuel that helps build flexibility into our ship design ... LNG is one part of our alternative fuel strategy, along with biofuels, methanol and other energy sources like shore power".
Although reportedly being more fuel efficient than the previous Oasis class, the environmental impact of the Icon of the Seas remains considerable. In particular Royal Caribbean cite the use of LNG as one of the most remarkable advances in reducing the emissions of cruise ships. Critics say that LNG is still a fossil fuel producing carbon dioxide and the engine itself could lead to methane leaks, a greenhouse gas more harmful than carbon dioxide itself.
Additional Information
As the boldest ship at sea, Icon of the Seas packs endless thrills, chill and wows into every vacation. To make the most of your time aboard, make sure you pack a swimsuit or two so you can make a splash across the seven different pools onboard. Don’t forget to bring an impressive outfit for your evening meal at Empire Supper Club or Chops Grille℠ — and make sure to pack a good book for easy reading in Central Park between adventures.
This is more than a vacation upgrade. It’s the best family vacation in the world. Introducing the Icon of the Seas® — a first-of-its-kind Royal Caribbean® adventure where you’ll have the time of your life, multiple times a day. It’s thrills you never dared to imagine and next-level chill you never dreamed possible.
A first-of-its-kind Royal Caribbean ® adventure. It’s thrills you never dared to imagine and next level chill you never dreamed possible.
Max out memories like never before on 7-night adventures to the Western and Eastern Caribbean onboard Icon of the Seas SM. Every sailing on our newest, thrill-packed ship stops at our private destination, Perfect Day at CocoCay in The Bahamas. Brace yourself for Category 6, the largest waterpark at sea with six record breaking slides and discover adventure for all ages at Surfside, the first Royal Caribbean ® neighborhood built just for families.
Icon of the Seas is a cruise ship owned by Royal Caribbean International and is the first ship of the Icon class. Entered service in 2024, the ship has a gross registered tonnage of 250,800 tons, making her the largest cruise ship in the world by gross tonnage.
Design
The Icon of the Seas uses fuel cell technology, supplied by ABB Group, and will be powered by liquefied natural gas, with a tonnage of 250,800 tons. It will contain other alternative energy features, such as the use of fuel cells to produce electricity and fresh water.
The ship will have a crew of 2,350 and a capacity of 5,610 passengers at double occupancy or 7,600 passengers at full capacity. It has 20 decks with seven pools and six waterslides. It claims to have the tallest waterfall, the tallest waterslide, the largest water park, and the first suspended infinity pool on any ship.
Construction
On October 10, 2016, Royal Caribbean and Meyer Turku announced an order to build two ships under the project name "Icon." The ships are expected to be delivered in the third quarter of 2023 and in 2025. The ships will be classified by DNV.
Royal Caribbean registered a trademark for Icon of the Seas in 2016, which at the time was suggested as an indication of the name of the first ship.
Steel cutting for Icon of the Seas began on June 14, 2021. On October 28, 2021, Royal Caribbean announced that the first LNG tank for the ship was installed at Neptun Werft in Rostock, Germany. In December 2021, the floating engine room unit, including the LNG tanks, was moved to Turku by a tugboat. The keel was laid on April 5, 2022.
In May 2022, Royal Caribbean confirmed that Icon of the Seas would be larger than the Oasis-class ships, the largest cruise ships in the world at the time.
On June 19, 2023, Icon of the Seas set sail for the first of her sea trials. She returned to the Meyer Turku shipyard on June 22. Final adjustments to the ship's systems will now be made, and the interior spaces will be completed and furnished during this phase. On November 27, 2023, Icon of the Seas was officially delivered to Royal Caribbean. Upon delivery, the cruise ship entered drydock at the Navantia shipyard in Cadiz for refurbishment of accommodations, restaurants, pools, and other amenities, as well as final adjustments to her propulsion system.
On December 13, 2023, with the ship in the aforementioned Navantia dock, it was revealed that the Icon of the Seas was christened by soccer player Lionel Messi.
Operational history
On January 10, 2024, Icon of the Seas docked at the Port of Miami, with her official maiden voyage scheduled for January 27, 2024. Her official maiden voyage began on January 27 from the Port of Miami in the United States.
On June 25, 2024, a fire was reported on board while docked in Costa Maya, Mexico. Power was briefly out, but the flames were quickly extinguished.
On September 23, 2024, the ship experienced a technical issue that caused her to sail at reduced speed and was unable to make a port call in St. Thomas on September 25. After docking in Miami on September 28, Icon of the Seas sailed to Freeport, Bahamas, for maintenance. All cruises for the following weeks were canceled while Royal Caribbean repaired the fault.

2535) Citric Acid
Gist
Citric acid (C6H8O7) is a weak organic acid, naturally found in citrus fruits and manufactured via fermentation for widespread use as a preservative, flavoring agent, and cleaning agent. It offers health benefits like kidney stone prevention and enhanced nutrient absorption, though it can cause skin/eye irritation or tooth enamel erosion in high concentrations.
Citric acid is generally safe and recognized as safe (GRAS) by the FDA when consumed in normal food amounts. It is a weak acid found naturally in citrus fruits. However, high intake, particularly through supplements or concentrated additives, can cause health issues such as enamel erosion, stomach irritation, and rare allergic reactions.
Summary
Citric acid is an organic compound with the formula C6H8O7. It is a colorless weak organic acid. It occurs naturally in citrus fruits. In biochemistry, it is an intermediate in the citric acid cycle, which occurs in the metabolism of all aerobic organisms.
More than two million tons of citric acid are manufactured every year. It is used widely as acidifier, flavoring, preservative, and chelating agent.
A citrate is a derivative of citric acid; that is, the salts, esters, and the polyatomic anion found in solutions and salts of citric acid. An example of the former, a salt is trisodium citrate; an ester is triethyl citrate.
Details
Citric Acid is a weak acid with a chemical formula C6H8O7. It can occur in two forms – monohydrate or water-free (anhydrous). This acid is usually found in citrus fruits like lemons, oranges etc. It is considered as a tribasic acid. It is odourless, sour in taste, and appears as a white crystalline solid. It has a monoclinic crystal structure. This organic acid was isolated for the first time by chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele in the year 1784. Since it is similar in resemblance to table salt,it is sold in the market as sour salt.
Properties of Citric Acid – C6H8O7
Chemical formula : C6H8O7. Citric Acid
Molecular Weight/ Molar Mass : 192.124 g/mol
Density : 1.66 g/{cm}^{3}
Boiling Point : 310 °C
Melting Point : 153 °C.
Uses of Citric Acid
* It is used as an antioxidant
* It is used as a cleaning agent – as an ingredient in kitchen and bathroom cleaning solution
* It is used as an emulsifying agent in ice creams
* It is used to add a sour taste to soft drinks and other food items
* It used in shampoo
* It is used in sucrose crystallization in caramel
* It is used in food colouring
* It is used as a natural preservative
* It is used to remove the chalky deposit from evaporators, kettles, boilers etc.
Common Uses of Citric Acid
Food and Beverage: Acts as a preservative, antioxidant, and sour flavoring in candies, sodas, and jams.
Household Cleaning: Effectively removes limescale, rust, and soap scum, and acts as a disinfectant.
Pharmaceuticals/Cosmetics: Used as a pH adjuster in medicines, skin creams, and hair products.
Industry: Used as a cleaning agent for heavy machinery and a chelating agent.
Health Benefits and Nutrition
Kidney Stones: Helps prevent stone formation by making urine less favorable for stone development.
Mineral Absorption: Enhances the absorption of nutrients like calcium and magnesium.
Types of Citric Acid
Anhydrous: Contains no water in its crystalline structure.
Monohydrate: Contains one molecule of water for every molecule of citric acid.
Potential Side Effects and Risks
Skin/Eye Irritation: Concentrated powder or solution can cause irritation.
Tooth Decay: Regular consumption of acidic foods/drinks can erode tooth enamel.
Intolerance/Allergy: While rare, some individuals may have sensitivity.
Molecular Formula
C6H8O7.
Manufacturing
It is largely produced by fermenting sugars (such as molasses or corn starch) with Aspergillus niger (a type of mold).
Frequently Asked Questions - FAQa
Q1: What are the uses of citric acid?
A1: Citric acid is an organic compound that is found in citrus fruits. It is a natural preservative and is also used in foods and soft drinks to imbue an acidic (or a sour) flavour. It is essential in biochemistry as an intermediate in the cycle of citric acid, and thus occurs in the metabolism of almost every living organism.
Q2: Is citric acid dangerous?
A2: Naturally, citric acid is present in citrus fruits, but synthetic forms (generally made from a mold type) are widely added to foods, medications, supplements, and cleaners. While mold residues from the manufacturing process can in rare cases cause allergies, citric acid is generally considered to be a safe substance.
Q3: How to prepare a solution of citric acid?
A3: Combine citric acid crystals (sometimes referred to as sour salt) with 1 or 2 pints of distilled boiling water per pound of citric acid to form the citric acid solution. Put the crystals of citric acid in a non-metal bowl and gradually pour the boiling water into the bowl, stirring with a non-metal spoon.
Additional Information
Citric acid is a colourless crystalline organic compound belonging to the family of carboxylic acids, present in practically all plants and in many animal tissues and fluids. It is one of a series of compounds involved in the physiological oxidation of fats, proteins, and carbohydrates to carbon dioxide and water.
Citric acid was first isolated from lemon juice by Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele in 1784 and is manufactured by fermentation of cane sugar or molasses in the presence of a fungus, Aspergillus niger. It is used in confections and soft drinks (as a flavouring agent), in metal-cleaning compositions, and in improving the stability of foods and other organic substances (by suppressing the deleterious action of dissolved metal salts).
Citric acid is an important natural compound that has been known since the late 18th century. The pioneering Swedish–German chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele isolated it from lemon juice in 1784. It has since been found in other citrus fruits, pineapples, and even animal tissues.
Citric acid is a major industrial chemical, produced at >2 million t/year worldwide. Its main source is not from fruit, but from the fermentation of crude sugars (e.g., molasses and corn starch) by the mold Aspergillus niger. It has a myriad of uses, mostly in foods and pharmaceuticals; these uses include acidifying agent/pH adjustment, antioxidant, flavoring agent, and as metal salts in dietary supplements. In industry and domestic applications, citric acid is a chelating and buffering agent in many cleaning products and a starting material for synthesizing citrate esters, itaconic acid, acetonedicarboxylic acid, and other compounds.
Biochemists are familiar with the citric acid cycle, which is a major life process in all respiring organisms. Also called the Krebs cycle or the tricarboxylic acid cycle, the process begins with sugar-derived pyruvate, which enzymatically generates acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) to start the cycle. Acetate released from acetyl-CoA reacts with oxaloacetic acid produced at the end of the previous cycle to form citric acid; this is followed by several steps, during which an oxidation reaction releases energy to the body in the form of adenosine triphosphate.
Many scientists contributed to the discovery and establishment of the citric acid cycle. The two key researchers were Albert Szent-Györgyi at the University of Szeged (Hungary) and Hans Adolf Krebs at the University of Sheffield (UK); they were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1937 and 1953, respectively.

2472) Hideki Yukawa
Gist:
Work
Atomic nuclei consist of protons and neutrons held together by a strong force. Hideki Yukawa assumed that this force is borne by particles and that there is a relationship between the range of the force and the mass of the force-bearing particle. In 1934, Yukawa predicted that this particle should have a mass about 200 times that of an electron. He called this particle a “meson”. Mesons’ existence was verified in later experiments.
Summary
Yukawa Hideki (born January 23, 1907, Tokyo, Japan—died September 8, 1981, Kyōto) was a Japanese physicist and recipient of the 1949 Nobel Prize for Physics for research on the theory of elementary particles.
Yukawa graduated from Kyōto Imperial University (now Kyōto University) in 1929 and became a lecturer there; in 1933 he moved to Ōsaka Imperial University (now Ōsaka University), where he earned his doctorate in 1938. He rejoined Kyōto Imperial University as a professor of theoretical physics (1939–50), held faculty appointments at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey (U.S.), and at Columbia University in New York City, and became director of the Research Institute for Fundamental Physics in Kyōto (1953–70).
In 1935, while a lecturer at Ōsaka Imperial University, Yukawa proposed a new theory of the strong and weak nuclear forces in which he predicted a new type of particle as those forces’ carrier particle. He called it the U-quantum, and it was later known as the meson because its mass was between those of the electron and proton. American physicist Carl Anderson’s discovery in 1937 of a particle among cosmic rays with the mass of the predicted meson suddenly established Yukawa’s fame as the founder of meson theory, which later became an important part of nuclear and high-energy physics. However, by the mid-1940s, it was discovered that Anderson’s new particle, the muon, could not be the predicted carrier particle. The predicted particle, the pion, was not discovered until 1947 by British physicist Cecil Powell, but, despite Yukawa’s successful prediction of the pion’s existence, it also was not the carrier particle of the nuclear forces, and meson theory was supplanted by quantum chromodynamics.
After devoting himself to the development of meson theory, Yukawa started work in 1947 on a more comprehensive theory of elementary particles based on his idea of the so-called nonlocal field.
Details
Hideki Yukawa (23 January 1907 – 8 September 1981) was a Japanese theoretical physicist who received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1949 "for his prediction of the existence of mesons on the basis of theoretical work on nuclear forces."
Early life and education
Hideki Yukawa was born on 23 January 1907 in Tokyo, Japan, and grew up in Kyoto with two older brothers, two older sisters, and two younger brothers. He read the Confucian Doctrine of the Mean, and later Lao-Tzu and Chuang-Tzu. His father, for a time, considered sending him to technical college rather than university since he was "not as outstanding a student as his older brothers." However, when his father broached the idea with his middle school principal, the principal praised his "high potential" in mathematics and offered to adopt Ogawa himself in order to keep him on a scholarly career. At that, his father relented.
Ogawa decided against becoming a mathematician when his high school teacher marked his exam answer as incorrect when Ogawa proved a theorem but in a different manner than the teacher expected. He decided against a career in experimental physics in college when he demonstrated clumsiness in glassblowing, a requirement for experiments in spectroscopy.
In 1929, Ogawa graduated from Kyoto Imperial University, where he was a lecturer from 1932 to 1939. During this period, he was interested in theoretical physics, particularly in the theory of elementary particles. In 1933, he became Lecturer and Assistant Professor of Physics at Osaka Imperial University.
Career and research
In 1935, Yukawa published his theory of mesons, which explained the interaction between protons and neutrons at Osaka Imperial University, and was a major influence on research into elementary particles.
In 1938, Yukawa received a doctorate from Osaka Imperial University for his predictions regarding the existence of mesons and his theoretical work on the nature of nuclear forces. These research achievements were the reason he was later awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics.
In 1939, Yukawa was appointed Professor of Theoretical Physics at Kyoto Imperial University. In 1949, he became a visiting professor at Columbia University, the same year he received the Nobel Prize in Physics—after the discovery by Cecil Powell, Giuseppe Occhialini, and César Lattes of Yukawa's predicted pi meson in 1947. Yukawa also worked on the theory of K-capture, in which a low energy electron is absorbed by the nucleus, after its initial prediction by G. C. Wick.
In 1946, Yukawa founded the journal Progress of Theoretical Physics, and published the books Introduction to Quantum Mechanics (1946) and Introduction to the Theory of Elementary Particles (1948).
In 1953, Yukawa became the first Director of the Research Institute for Fundamental Physics (now the Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics), a position he held until his retirement in 1970.
Activism
In 1955, Yukawa joined ten other leading scientists and intellectuals in signing the Russell–Einstein Manifesto, calling for nuclear disarmament.
Yukawa was one of the signatories of the agreement to convene a convention for drafting a world constitution; subsequently, a World Constituent Assembly convened to draft and adopt a Constitution for the Federation of Earth.
Personal life and death
In 1932, he married Sumi Yukawa. In accordance with Japanese customs, since he came from a family with many sons—but his father-in-law, Genyo, had none—he was adopted by Genyo and changed his family name from Ogawa to Yukawa. The couple had two sons, Harumi and Takaaki.
Owing to increasing infirmity, in his final years he appeared in public in a wheelchair. He died of pneumonia and heart failure on 8 September 1981 at his home in Sakyo-ku, Kyoto, at the age of 74. His tomb is in Higashiyama-ku, Kyoto.
Solo violinist Diana Yukawa is a close relative of Hideki Yukawa.

Spectroscopy
Gist
Spectroscopy is the study of the interaction between matter and electromagnetic radiation, analyzing how substances absorb or emit light to identify their composition, structure, and physical properties. By analyzing spectral "fingerprints," this technique is critical in chemistry, astronomy, medicine (e.g., MRI), and material science to determine molecular structures and elemental composition.
Spectroscopy is the study of how matter interacts with electromagnetic radiation (light, UV, infrared, X-rays). It measures the absorption, emission, or scattering of radiation by substances, creating a unique spectrum that serves as a "fingerprint" to identify chemical composition, structure, and physical properties.
Summary
Spectroscopy is the study of the interaction between matter and electromagnetic radiation. This can either involve the absorption of radiation by the sample, or the emission of radiation from the sample. In a typically emission spectrum, the variation of the intensity of the emitted radiation with frequency is measured. In the Department, we use and study a wide range of spectroscopic techniques, which give information about a huge number of different materials. We also study the theory of spectroscopy computationally.
Some spectroscopy techniques access the average or typical properties of a material, whilst others are employed inside a microscope and can give very local information. Examples of spectroscopy techniques used in a transmission electron microscope include electron energy loss spectroscopy used to study the local compositions of materials, whilst in the scanning electron microscope we use cathodoluminescence spectroscopy to understand the light emission properties of semiconductors and other structures and in the scanning tunneling microscope spectroscopic techniques give insights into electronic structure. Solid state NMR provides a sensitive probe of material structure, and is sensitive to local order and the dynamics of the system.
Theoretical spectroscopy, typically based on first principles density functional theory (DFT) computations, can provide a link between the material structure and the spectra measured. These calculations can aid the design of experiments, or assist in structure solution.
Details
Spectroscopy is the field of study that measures and interprets electromagnetic spectra as it interacts with matter. In narrower contexts, spectroscopy is the precise study of color as generalized from radiated visible light to all bands of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Spectroscopy, primarily in the electromagnetic spectrum, is a fundamental exploratory tool in the fields of astronomy, chemistry, materials science, and physics, allowing the composition, physical and electronic structure of matter to be investigated at the atomic, molecular and macro scale, and over astronomical distances.
Historically, spectroscopy originated as the study of the wavelength dependence of the absorption by gas phase matter of visible light dispersed by a prism. Current applications of spectroscopy include biomedical spectroscopy in the areas of tissue analysis and medical imaging. Matter waves and acoustic waves can be considered forms of radiative energy, and recently gravitational waves have been associated with a spectral signature in the context of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO).
Introduction
Spectroscopy is a branch of science concerned with the spectra of electromagnetic radiation as a function of its wavelength or frequency, as measured by spectrographic equipment and other techniques, in order to obtain information concerning the structure and properties of matter. Spectral measurement devices are referred to as spectrometers, spectrophotometers, spectrographs or spectral analyzers. Most spectroscopic analysis in the laboratory starts with a sample to be analyzed. A light source is sent through a monochromator to spatially separate the colors before passing a selected frequency band through the sample, then the output is captured by a photodiode. For astronomical purposes, the telescope must be equipped with the light dispersion device. There are various versions of this basic setup that may be employed.
Spectroscopy began with Isaac Newton splitting light with a prism; a key moment in the development of modern optics. Therefore, it was originally the study of visible light that we call color. Following the contributions of James Clerk Maxwell, this study later came to include the entire electromagnetic spectrum. Although color is involved in spectroscopy, it is not equivalent to the absorption and reflection of certain electromagnetic waves that give objects or elements a sense of color to our eyes. Rather, spectroscopy involves the splitting of light by a prism, diffraction grating, or similar instrument, to display a particular discrete line pattern called a "spectrum", which is unique for each different type of element or molecule. Most elements are first put into a gaseous state to allow the spectra to be examined, although today other methods can be used for different phases of matter. Each element that is diffracted by a prism-like instrument displays either an absorption spectrum or an emission spectrum depending upon whether the element is being cooled or heated.
Until recently all spectroscopy involved the study of line spectra and most spectroscopy still does. Vibrational spectroscopy is the branch of spectroscopy that studies the spectra, which are caused by vibrations of molecules. However, the latest developments in spectroscopy can sometimes dispense with the dispersion technique. In biochemical spectroscopy, information can be gathered about biological tissue by absorption and light scattering techniques. Light scattering spectroscopy is a type of reflectance spectroscopy that determines tissue structures by examining elastic scattering. In such a case, it is the tissue that acts as a diffraction or dispersion mechanism.
Spectroscopic studies were central to the development of quantum mechanics. The first useful quantum atomic models, including Bohr model, the Schrödinger equation, and Matrix mechanics, reproduced the spectral lines of hydrogen. These equated discrete quantum jumps of the bound electron in a hydrogen atom to the discrete hydrogen spectrum. Max Planck's explanation of blackbody radiation involved spectroscopy because he was comparing the wavelength of light using a photometer to the temperature of a Black Body. Spectroscopy is used in physical and analytical chemistry because atoms and molecules have unique spectra. As a result, these spectra can be used to detect, identify and quantify information about the atoms and molecules.
Spectroscopy is used in astronomy and remote sensing on Earth. Most research telescopes have spectrographs. The measured spectra are used to determine the chemical composition and physical properties of astronomical objects, such as their temperature, elemental abundances, velocity, rotation, magnetic field, and more. An important use for spectroscopy is in biochemistry. Molecular samples may be analyzed for species identification and energy content.
Additional Information
Spectroscopy is the study of the absorption and emission of light and other radiation by matter, as related to the dependence of these processes on the wavelength of the radiation. More recently, the definition has been expanded to include the study of the interactions between particles such as electrons, protons, and ions, as well as their interaction with other particles as a function of their collision energy. Spectroscopic analysis has been crucial in the development of the most fundamental theories in physics, including quantum mechanics, the special and general theories of relativity, and quantum electrodynamics. Spectroscopy, as applied to high-energy collisions, has been a key tool in developing scientific understanding not only of the electromagnetic force but also of the strong and weak nuclear forces.
Spectroscopic techniques have been applied in virtually all technical fields of science and technology. Radio-frequency spectroscopy of nuclei in a magnetic field has been employed in a medical technique called magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to visualize the internal soft tissue of the body with unprecedented resolution. Microwave spectroscopy was used to discover the so-called three-degree blackbody radiation, the remnant of the big bang (i.e., the primeval explosion) from which the universe is thought to have originated (see below Survey of optical spectroscopy: General principles: Applications). The internal structure of the proton and neutron and the state of the early universe up to the first thousandth of a second of its existence are being unraveled with spectroscopic techniques using high-energy particle accelerators. The constituents of distant stars, intergalactic molecules, and even the primordial abundance of the elements before the formation of the first stars can be determined by optical, radio, and X-ray spectroscopy. Optical spectroscopy is used routinely to identify the chemical composition of matter and to determine its physical structure.
Spectroscopic techniques are extremely sensitive. Single atoms and even different isotopes of the same atom can be detected among {10}^{20} or more atoms of a different species. (Isotopes are all atoms of an element that have unequal mass but the same atomic number. Isotopes of the same element are virtually identical chemically.) Trace amounts of pollutants or contaminants are often detected most effectively by spectroscopic techniques. Certain types of microwave, optical, and gamma-ray spectroscopy are capable of measuring infinitesimal frequency shifts in narrow spectroscopic lines. Frequency shifts as small as one part in {10}^{15} of the frequency being measured can be observed with ultrahigh resolution laser techniques. Because of this sensitivity, the most accurate physical measurements have been frequency measurements.
Spectroscopy now covers a sizable fraction of the electromagnetic spectrum. The table summarizes the electromagnetic spectrum over a frequency range of 16 orders of magnitude. Spectroscopic techniques are not confined to electromagnetic radiation, however. Because the energy E of a photon (a quantum of light) is related to its frequency ν by the relation E = hν, where h is Planck’s constant, spectroscopy is actually the measure of the interaction of photons with matter as a function of the photon energy. In instances where the probe particle is not a photon, spectroscopy refers to the measurement of how the particle interacts with the test particle or material as a function of the energy of the probe particle.
An example of particle spectroscopy is a surface analysis technique known as electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) that measures the energy lost when low-energy electrons (typically 5–10 electron volts) collide with a surface. Occasionally, the colliding electron loses energy by exciting the surface; by measuring the electron’s energy loss, vibrational excitations associated with the surface can be measured. On the other end of the energy spectrum, if an electron collides with another particle at exceedingly high energies, a wealth of subatomic particles is produced. Most of what is known in particle physics (the study of subatomic particles) has been gained by analyzing the total particle production or the production of certain particles as a function of the incident energies of electrons and protons.
The following sections focus on the methods of electromagnetic spectroscopy, particularly optical spectroscopy. Although most of the other forms of spectroscopy are not covered in detail, they have the same common heritage as optical spectroscopy. Thus, many of the basic principles used in other spectroscopies share many of the general features of optical spectroscopy.

Command Quotes - I
1. I can no longer obey; I have tasted command, and I cannot give it up. - Napoleon Bonaparte
2. If we command our wealth, we shall be rich and free; if our wealth commands us, we are poor indeed. - Edmund Burke
3. Heroism on command, senseless violence, and all the loathsome nonsense that goes by the name of patriotism - how passionately I hate them! - Albert Einstein
4. We cannot command Nature except by obeying her. - Francis Bacon
5. We can't command our love, but we can our actions. - Arthur Conan Doyle
6. Providence has its appointed hour for everything. We cannot command results, we can only strive. - Mahatma Gandhi
7. Yeah, I wasn't chosen to be first. I was just chosen to command that flight. Circumstance put me in that particular role. That wasn't planned by anyone. - Neil Armstrong
8. I cannot command winds and weather. - Horatio Nelson.
Q: Did you hear about the Italian chef that died?
A: He pasta way.
* * *
Q: What do Italians eat on Halloween?
A: Fetuccini A-fraid-o.
* * *
Q: What would you get if you crossed pasta with a snake?
A: Spaghetti that wraps itself around a fork.
* * *
Q: What does Arnold Schwarzenegger say before eating pasta?
A: PASTA LA VISTA BABY.
* * *
Q: What do you call a fake noodle?
A: An impasta.
* * *
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#6026. What does the adjective frantic mean?
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#2609. What does the medical term Bilateral cingulotomy mean?
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2749.
Dialysis
Gist
Dialysis is a life-sustaining medical treatment that filters waste, excess water, and toxins from the blood when kidneys fail. It acts as an artificial kidney to manage end-stage renal disease or acute kidney injury. The two main types are hemodialysis (an external machine) and peritoneal dialysis (using the abdominal lining), usually required 3–7 times a week.
Dialysis is a procedure to remove waste products and excess fluid from the blood when the kidneys stop working properly. It often involves diverting blood to a machine to be cleaned.
Normally, the kidneys filter the blood, removing harmful waste products and excess fluid and turning these into urine to be passed out of the body.
Summary
Kidney dialysis[a] is the process of removing excess water, solutes, and toxins from the blood in people whose kidneys can no longer perform these functions naturally. Along with kidney transplantation, it is a type of renal replacement therapy.
Dialysis may need to be initiated when there is a sudden rapid loss of kidney function, known as acute kidney injury (previously called acute renal failure), or when a gradual decline in kidney function, chronic kidney failure, reaches stage 5. Stage 5 chronic renal failure is reached when the glomerular filtration rate is less than 15% of the normal, creatinine clearance is less than 10 mL per minute, and uremia is present.
Dialysis is used as a temporary measure in either acute kidney injury or in those awaiting kidney transplant and as a permanent measure in those for whom a transplant is not indicated or not possible.
In West European countries, Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States, dialysis is paid for by the government for those who are eligible. The first successful dialysis was performed in 1943.
Details
Dialysis is a treatment for people whose kidneys are failing. There are two types of dialysis: hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis. Both types perform the normal duties of your failing kidneys by filtering waste and excess fluid from your blood.
Overview:
What is dialysis?
Dialysis is a treatment for people whose kidneys aren’t working. When you have kidney failure, your kidneys don’t filter blood the way they should. As a result, wastes and toxins build up in your bloodstream. Common wastes include nitrogen waste (urea), muscle waste (creatinine) and acids. They usually leave your body when you pee. Dialysis does the work of your kidneys by removing waste products and excess fluids from your blood.
Why do people have to get dialysis?
People who have late-stage kidney disease, end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) or kidney failure may need kidney dialysis. The following diseases and conditions can damage your kidneys, leading to kidney disease:
* High blood pressure
* Diabetes
* Lupus
Some people develop kidney problems for unknown reasons. Kidney failure can be a long-term condition, or it can come on suddenly (acute) after a severe illness or injury. Acute kidney failure may recover.
There are five stages of kidney disease. In stage 5 kidney disease, healthcare providers consider you to be in kidney failure. At this point, your kidneys only function at less than 15% of their normal rate. You may need dialysis or a kidney transplant to stay alive. Some people undergo dialysis while waiting for a transplant.
Is going on dialysis serious?
Yes, going on dialysis is serious. If you need dialysis and choose not to start or decide to stop, toxins will build up in your blood (uremia). Kidney failure is fatal without treatment. If you have kidney failure, you may survive a few days or weeks without dialysis.
How common is dialysis?
Dialysis is common. Over 2 million people throughout the world treat kidney disease with dialysis or a kidney transplant.
Treatment Details:
What are the types of dialysis?
There are two types of dialysis:
* Hemodialysis
* Peritoneal dialysis
What is hemodialysis?
Hemodialysis is the most common type of dialysis. It utilizes a dialysis machine that:
* Removes blood from your body, usually from a vein in your arm
* Filters it through an artificial kidney (dialyzer)
* Returns clean blood to your body
You can get hemodialysis from a dialysis center or at home. Most people receive in-center hemodialysis at least three times per week. Depending on the type of at-home hemodialysis, you may need it three to seven days per week, and sessions may last between three and eight hours.
Before you start hemodialysis, a surgeon will enlarge some of the blood vessels (an artery and vein) in your arm to make dialysis access easier, as well as to allow blood to flow in and out of your body faster.
What is peritoneal dialysis?
Peritoneal dialysis uses the inner lining of your abdomen (peritoneum) to filter your blood. You add a dialysis solution (dialysate) into your peritoneum that helps the blood vessels in the area filter your blood. Afterward, you drain the solution into a bag outside of your body. Healthcare providers call this process an exchange.
There are two main types of peritoneal dialysis:
* Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). This type uses a bag that you put above your shoulder, and gravity slowly pulls the dialysate into your abdomen. The process takes about 30 minutes before you drain the solution into a bag. You must perform CAPD between three and five times each day.
* Automated peritoneal dialysis (APD). This type uses a machine to automatically add dialysate to your peritoneum and drain it. Each session consists of three to five exchanges. Most people perform APD while they’re asleep.
Before you start peritoneal dialysis, a provider will surgically insert a permanent soft tube (catheter) into your abdomen. They’ll teach you how to add the dialysate and later drain the solution through the catheter.
How long does dialysis last?
It depends on the type of dialysis.
In-center hemodialysis takes about three to four hours to complete, and you’ll likely need it at least three times per week. Depending on the type of at-home hemodialysis, you may need it three to seven days per week, and sessions may last between three and eight hours.
Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis usually takes about 40 minutes, and you’ll likely need three to five sessions each day. Automated peritoneal dialysis may take eight to 12 hours, and you may need to do it every day.
Risks / Benefits:
What are the benefits of dialysis?
The primary benefit of dialysis is that it treats kidney failure by filtering waste products and excess fluid from your blood. Without dialysis — or a kidney transplant — kidney failure is fatal.
Both types of dialysis have distinct benefits. Talk to a healthcare provider — they can review both types of dialysis with you and recommend one that’s best for you and your lifestyle.
Can kidneys start working again after dialysis?
Dialysis can’t cure end-stage kidney disease or kidney failure. Unless you get a kidney transplant, you’ll need dialysis for the rest of your life.
What are the risks or complications of dialysis?
Both types of dialysis have risks. They both increase your risk of infection.
Hemodialysis may eventually lead to poor blood flow or a blockage from scar tissue or a blood clot. Rarely, the dialysis needle may come out of your arm, or a tube may dislodge from the machine. But a detection system will temporarily shut down the machine and alert medical staff to protect you from blood loss.
Peritoneal dialysis increases your risk of peritoneum inflammation (peritonitis). Over time, it can weaken your abdominal muscles and increase your risk of developing a hernia.
Talk to a healthcare provider about the complete list of risks or complications for each type of dialysis.
Is dialysis painful?
You may feel a slight pinch during hemodialysis when a healthcare provider inserts a needle. But the process isn’t painful.
Peritoneal dialysis isn’t painful. But the dialysate in your abdomen can make you feel bloated, cold and uncomfortable.
Recovery and Outlook:
What is life expectancy on dialysis?
Life expectancy varies from person to person, with some people living for many years on dialysis. Your outlook depends on many factors, including:
* Your age
* Your overall health
* The cause of your kidney failure
If you get a kidney transplant, you can stop dialysis when your new kidney starts working.
Will I have activity restrictions while I’m on dialysis?
Many people on dialysis continue to live active lives, including working, raising families and traveling. When you travel, a healthcare provider can help arrange for you to get dialysis at a center at your travel destination. If you’re doing peritoneal dialysis, you can take dialysis solution bags and a portable home dialysis machine (if necessary) with you.
If you use peritoneal dialysis, you may need to limit your exercise or certain physical activities when your abdomen fills with dialysate. Otherwise, exercise is OK for people on dialysis. Talk to your provider about specific activities and sports.
When To Call the Doctor:
When should I call a healthcare provider?
Call your healthcare provider if you experience:
* Trouble peeing
* Dizziness, fainting, unusual thirst (dehydration) or other signs of low blood pressure
* Nausea and vomiting
* Signs of infection, including a fever, chills, headache or oozing and discoloration at your catheter site
* Severe abdominal pain
* Signs of a hernia, such as an unusual bulge in your abdomen or groin.
Additional Information
Dialysis, in medicine, is the process of removing blood from a patient whose kidney functioning is faulty, purifying that blood by dialysis, and returning it to the patient’s bloodstream. The artificial kidney, or hemodialyzer, is a machine that provides a means for removing certain undesirable substances from the blood or of adding needed components to it. By these processes the apparatus can control the acid–base balance of the blood and its content of water and dissolved materials. Another known function of the natural kidney—secretion of hormones that influence the blood pressure—cannot be duplicated. Modern dialyzers rely on two physicochemical principles, dialysis and ultrafiltration.
In dialysis two liquids separated by a porous membrane exchange those components that exist as particles small enough to diffuse through the pores. When the blood is brought into contact with one side of such a membrane, dissolved substances (including urea and inorganic salts) pass through into a sterile solution placed on the other side of the membrane. The red and white cells, platelets, and proteins cannot penetrate the membrane because the particles are too large. To prevent or limit the loss of diffusible substances required by the body, such as sugars, amino acids, and necessary amounts of salts, those compounds are added to the sterile solution; thus their diffusion from the blood is offset by equal movement in the opposite direction. The lack of diffusible materials in the blood can be corrected by incorporating them in the solution, from which they enter the circulation.
Although water passes easily through the membrane, it is not removed by dialysis because its concentration in the blood is lower than in the solution; indeed, water tends to pass from the solution into the blood. The dilution of the blood that would result from this process is prevented by ultrafiltration, by which some of the water, along with some dissolved materials, is forced through the membrane by maintaining the blood at a higher pressure than the solution.
The membranes first used in dialysis were obtained from animals or prepared from collodion; cellophane has been found to be more suitable, and tubes or sheets of it are used in many dialyzers. In the late 1960s hollow filaments of cellulosic or synthetic materials were introduced for dialysis; bundles of such filaments provide a large membrane surface in a small volume, a combination advantageous in devising compact dialyzers.
Dialysis—which was first used to treat human patients in 1945—replaces or supplements the action of the kidneys in a person suffering from acute or chronic renal failure or from poisoning by diffusible substances, such as aspirin, bromides, or barbiturates. Blood is diverted from an artery, usually one in the wrist, into the dialyzer, where it flows—either by its own impetus or with the aid of a mechanical pump—along one surface of the membrane. Finally the blood passes through a trap that removes clots and bubbles and returns to a vein in the patient’s forearm. In persons with chronic kidney failure, who require frequent dialysis, repeated surgical access to the blood vessels used in the treatments is obviated by provision of an external plastic shunt between them.

Mount Elbrus
Gist
Mount Elbrus is the highest peak in Europe, rising 5,642 meters (18,510 feet) above sea level in the Caucasus Mountains of Southwest Russia, near the Georgian border. It is a dormant twin-coned stratovolcano with 22 glaciers and is one of the world's prominent Seven Summits, popular with climbers, especially from June to September.
Mount Elbrus is located in Russia. It is situated in the southern part of the country, within the Caucasus Mountains in the Kabardino-Balkaria and Karachay-Cherkessia republics, near the border with Georgia. As the highest mountain in Europe at 5,642 meters (18,510 feet), it is a dormant volcano.
Summary
Mount Elbrus[a] is the highest mountain in Russia and Europe. It is a dormant stratovolcano rising 5,642 m (18,510 ft) above sea level, and is the highest volcano in Eurasia, as well as the tenth-most prominent peak in the world. It is situated in the southern Russian republic of Kabardino-Balkaria in the western extension of Ciscaucasia, and is the highest peak of the Caucasus Mountains.
Elbrus has two summits, both of which are dormant volcanic domes. The taller, western summit is 5,642 metres (18,510 ft); the eastern summit is 5,621 metres (18,442 ft). The earliest recorded ascent of the eastern summit was on 10 July 1829 by a Circassian man named Khillar Khashirov, and the western summit in 1874 by a British expedition led by F. Crauford Grove and including Frederick Gardiner, Horace Walker and the Swiss guide Peter Knubel.
Details
Mount El’brus is located in southwest Russia and is part of the Caucasus Mountains. It is the highest point in Russia as well as the highest point in all of Europe. It makes up part of the Prielbrusye National Park. El’brus is one of the Seven Summits of the world, which are the tallest mountains on each of the seven continents.
El’brus is an extinct volcano that is around 2.5 million years old. Its last known eruption was in 50 C.E. Ancient peoples called the mountain Strobilus, which in Latin means “pine cone,” due to the mountain’s twisted shape.
It has two peaks, each of which rises over 5,590 meters (18,000 feet). The climate of El’brus is generally cold. Even during summer, nighttime temperatures are around -8°C (18°F). It is even colder above the snow line. Much of El’brus is covered by ice, and 22 glaciers can be found on the mountain. Water from glacier melt feeds surrounding rivers. The east summit of the mountain was first reached by the Russian army on a scientific expedition in 1829. In 1874, climbers reached the west summit, the highest point of the mountain.
Today, El’brus is a major tourism center. People mainly travel to the mountain for skiing and hiking. Reaching the summit of El’brus is highly challenging and should only be attempted at certain times of year. However, out of the Seven Summits, El’brus is considered one of the easiest to climb thanks to a cable car system that carries climbers up to an elevation of 3,658 meters (12,500 feet). Most climbers reach the peak in less than a week, but El’brus still has a high amount of deaths—around 30 annually—relative to the number of climbers who attempt to summit each year.
Additional Information
Mount Elbrus is the highest peak of the Caucasus mountains, southwestern Russia. It is an extinct volcano with twin cones reaching 18,510 feet (5,642 metres) and 18,356 feet (5,595 metres). The volcano was formed more than 2.5 million years ago. Sulfurous gases are still emitted on its eastern slopes, and there are many mineral springs along its descending streams. A total area of 53 square miles (138 square km) of Elbrus is covered by 22 glaciers, which feed the Kuban River and some of the headwaters of the Terek. Elbrus is a major centre for mountaineering and tourism in the Caucasus region. In 1964 an extensive tourist and mountaineering base was opened, with large-scale sporting facilities.

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#6023. What does the noun microelectronics mean?
#6024. What does the noun microfilm mean?