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Breast Neoplasms Prevention And Control United States   2
Breast Neoplasms Psychology   11
Breast Neoplasms Psychology Personal Narratives : Gee, Elizabeth D.,  1992 1
Breast Neoplasms Psychology Popular Works   3
Breast Neoplasms Rehabilitation : Keitel, Merle A.  2000 1
Breast Neoplasms Rehabilitation Popular Works   2
Breast Neoplasms Surgery : Anstett, Patricia,  2016 1
Breast Neoplasms Therapy   7
Breast Neoplasms Therapy Popular Works : Hirshaut, Yashar.  2008 1
Breast Popular Works : Love, Susan M.  2005 1
 

Breast Prosthesis Implantation -- See Breast Implantation


Surgical insertion of an inert sac filled with silicone or other material to augment the female form cosmetically.
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Breast Prosthesis Internal -- See Breast Implants


Implants used to reconstruct and/or cosmetically enhance the female breast. They have an outer shell or envelope of silicone elastomer and are filled with either saline or silicone gel. The outer shell may be either smooth or textured.
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Breast Reconstruction -- See Mammaplasty


Surgical reconstruction of the breast including both augmentation and reduction.
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Breast Tumors -- See Breast Neoplasms


Tumors or cancer of the human BREAST.
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Breast Tumors Drug Therapy : Bazell, Robert.  1998 1
Breast Tumors Personal Narratives : Ireland, Jill,  1987 1
Breast Tumors Popular Works   2
Breast Tumors Psychology Popular Works : Weiss, Marisa C.  1997 1
 

Breastfed -- See Breast Feeding


The nursing of an infant at the breast.
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Breathing -- See Respiration


The act of breathing with the LUNGS, consisting of INHALATION, or the taking into the lungs of the ambient air, and of EXHALATION, or the expelling of the modified air which contains more CARBON DIOXIDE than the air taken in (Blakiston's Gould Medical Dictionary, 4th ed.). This does not include tissue respiration (= OXYGEN CONSUMPTION) or cell respiration (= CELL RESPIRATION).
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Breathing Exercises -- See Also Yoga


A major orthodox system of Hindu philosophy based on Sankhya (metaphysical dualism) but differing from it in being theistic and characterized by the teaching of raja-yoga as a practical method of liberating the self. It includes a system of exercises for attaining bodily or mental control and well-being with liberation of the self and union with the universal spirit. (From Webster, 3d ed)
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Breathing Exercises   13
Breathing Exercises Popular Works   2
 

Breathing Sounds -- See Respiratory Sounds


Noises, normal and abnormal, heard on auscultation over any part of the RESPIRATORY TRACT.
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Breeding : Harris, Beth J.  1993 1
Breeding Popular Works : Beauchamp, Richard G.  2002 1
Bresslau Helene 1879 1957   2006 1
Breuer Josef 1842 1925 : Breger, Louis,  2009 1
Breuer Josef 1842 1925 Studien Uber Hysterie : Skues, Richard A.,  2006 1
 

Bridges California -- See Also the narrower term Golden Gate Bridge (San Francisco, Calif.)


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Bridges New York State -- See Also the narrower term Brooklyn Bridge (New York, N.Y.)


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Bridgman Laura Dewey 1829 1889 : Gitter, Elisabeth,  2001 1
 

Brief Advice -- See Crisis Intervention


Brief therapeutic approach which is ameliorative rather than curative of acute psychiatric emergencies. Used in contexts such as emergency rooms of psychiatric or general hospitals, or in the home or place of crisis occurrence, this treatment approach focuses on interpersonal and intrapsychic factors and environmental modification. (APA Thesaurus of Psychological Index Terms, 7th ed)
  1
 

Brief Interventions -- See Crisis Intervention


Brief therapeutic approach which is ameliorative rather than curative of acute psychiatric emergencies. Used in contexts such as emergency rooms of psychiatric or general hospitals, or in the home or place of crisis occurrence, this treatment approach focuses on interpersonal and intrapsychic factors and environmental modification. (APA Thesaurus of Psychological Index Terms, 7th ed)
  1
 

Brief Treatment -- See Crisis Intervention


Brief therapeutic approach which is ameliorative rather than curative of acute psychiatric emergencies. Used in contexts such as emergency rooms of psychiatric or general hospitals, or in the home or place of crisis occurrence, this treatment approach focuses on interpersonal and intrapsychic factors and environmental modification. (APA Thesaurus of Psychological Index Terms, 7th ed)
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Brill Zinsser Disease -- See Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne


The classic form of typhus, caused by RICKETTSIA PROWAZEKII, which is transmitted from man to man by the louse Pediculus humanus corporis. This disease is characterized by the sudden onset of intense headache, malaise, and generalized myalgia followed by the formation of a macular skin eruption and vascular and neurologic disturbances.
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Brills Disease -- See Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne


The classic form of typhus, caused by RICKETTSIA PROWAZEKII, which is transmitted from man to man by the louse Pediculus humanus corporis. This disease is characterized by the sudden onset of intense headache, malaise, and generalized myalgia followed by the formation of a macular skin eruption and vascular and neurologic disturbances.
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Briquet Syndrome -- See Somatoform Disorders


Disorders having the presence of physical symptoms that suggest a general medical condition but that are not fully explained by another medical condition, by the direct effects of a substance, or by another mental disorder. The MEDICALLY UNEXPLAINED SYMPTOMS must cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other areas of functioning. In contrast to FACTITIOUS DISORDERS and MALINGERING, the physical symptoms are not under voluntary control. (APA, DSM-V)
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Britanyah -- See Great Britain


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Britena -- See Great Britain


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British Arctic Regions Discovery And Exploration : Beattie, Owen.  1988 1
British Columbia   3
 

British Solomon Islands -- See Melanesia


The collective name for the islands of the Pacific Ocean northeast of Australia, including NEW CALEDONIA; VANUATU; New Hebrides, Solomon Islands, Admiralty Islands, Bismarck Archipelago, FIJI, etc. Melanesia (from the Greek melas, black + nesos, island) is so called from the black color of the natives who are generally considered to be descended originally from the Negroid Papuans and the Polynesians or Malays. (From Webster's New Geographical Dictionary, 1988, p748 & Room, Brewer's Dictionary of Names, 1992, p344)
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Bro Chall -- See France


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Broca Aphasia -- See Aphasia, Broca


An aphasia characterized by impairment of expressive LANGUAGE (speech, writing, signs) and relative preservation of receptive language abilities (i.e., comprehension). This condition is caused by lesions of the motor association cortex in the FRONTAL LOBE (BROCA AREA and adjacent cortical and white matter regions).
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Brochures -- See Pamphlets


Printed publications usually having a format with no binding and no cover and having fewer than some set number of pages. They are often devoted to a single subject.
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Brodmann Area 8 -- See Frontal Lobe


The part of the cerebral hemisphere anterior to the central sulcus, and anterior and superior to the lateral sulcus.
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Brodmann Area 10 -- See Prefrontal Cortex


The rostral part of the frontal lobe, bounded by the inferior precentral fissure in humans, which receives projection fibers from the MEDIODORSAL NUCLEUS OF THE THALAMUS. The prefrontal cortex receives afferent fibers from numerous structures of the DIENCEPHALON; MESENCEPHALON; and LIMBIC SYSTEM as well as cortical afferents of visual, auditory, and somatic origin.
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Brodmann Area 11 -- See Prefrontal Cortex


The rostral part of the frontal lobe, bounded by the inferior precentral fissure in humans, which receives projection fibers from the MEDIODORSAL NUCLEUS OF THE THALAMUS. The prefrontal cortex receives afferent fibers from numerous structures of the DIENCEPHALON; MESENCEPHALON; and LIMBIC SYSTEM as well as cortical afferents of visual, auditory, and somatic origin.
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Brodmann Area 12 -- See Prefrontal Cortex


The rostral part of the frontal lobe, bounded by the inferior precentral fissure in humans, which receives projection fibers from the MEDIODORSAL NUCLEUS OF THE THALAMUS. The prefrontal cortex receives afferent fibers from numerous structures of the DIENCEPHALON; MESENCEPHALON; and LIMBIC SYSTEM as well as cortical afferents of visual, auditory, and somatic origin.
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