Corneal wound burn, more precisely called corneal incision contracture (CIC) or phaco wound burn, is a rare but serious complication that can happen during ...
Corneal Stromal Dystrophies are a family of rare, inherited eye disorders in which abnormal material—such as amyloid, hyaline, lipids or ...
Corneal neurotization is a microsurgical technique that brings healthy sensory nerve fibers back to a cornea that has lost its own innervation. Surgeons either ...
Corneal neovascularization (CNV) means that new blood vessels—tiny red threads—grow into the normally clear, avascular surface of your eye. These vessels creep ...
A corneal leukoma is a dense, white scar that develops in the normally clear front window of the eye—the cornea. Unlike the faint “nebula” or mid-grade ...
A corneal keloid is an uncommon, benign but potentially sight-threatening over-growth of fibrous scar tissue that sits on, or invades into, the normally ...
Corneal esthesiometry is the science of measuring how well the clear front window of your eye (the cornea) can feel touch, temperature, or pain. The cornea is ...
Production-failure monocytopenia is a condition where the body has an abnormally low number of monocytes in the blood because the bone marrow is not making ...
Monocytopenia means there are abnormally low numbers of monocytes in the blood. Monocytes are a type of white blood cell that help the body fight infections, ...
Monocytopenia means having too few monocytes in the blood. Monocytes are a type of white blood cell that help fight infections, clean up dead cells, and ...
Monocytopenia means your blood has too few monocytes, a type of white blood cell that patrols the bloodstream, moves into tissues, and turns into macrophages ...
Monocytes are frontline immune cells that circulate briefly, then move into tissues to become macrophages or dendritic cells that eat germs and help coordinate ...
Monocytes are a type of white blood cell your body uses to fight germs, clean up damaged tissue, and start healing. They circulate in blood, then move into ...
Monocytes are white blood cells that patrol the bloodstream, then move into tissues and become macrophages and some dendritic cells. They help your body ...
Combined monocytopenia refers to a condition in which a person has a persistently low number of monocytes in the blood—often together with deficiencies or ...
Isolated monocytopenia means a person has a lower-than-normal number of monocytes in the blood, and this decrease is not accompanied by major abnormalities in ...
Monocytes are a type of white blood cell made in the bone marrow. They circulate in the blood for about 1–3 days, then move into tissues and become macrophages ...
Transient monocytopenia is a short-term drop in monocytes that returns to normal once the trigger settles. This is common. It can happen during or soon after a ...
Relative monocytopenia means the percentage of monocytes is low compared with the other white cells, but the absolute monocyte number can still be normal. In ...
Absolute monocytopenia means the number of monocytes in the blood is abnormally low, specifically below about 0.2 × 10⁹/L (or <200 cells/µL). Monocytes are ...
Monocytes are a type of white blood cell that act as first responders in the immune system. They circulate in the blood, migrate into tissues, and become ...
Monocytes are a type of white blood cell made in the bone marrow. They circulate in the blood for about a day, then move into tissues where they mature into ...
Monocytes are a type of white blood cell that patrol the blood, enter tissues, and mature into macrophages and dendritic cells to help fight germs and clean up ...
Monocytes are a type of white blood cell made in the bone marrow that circulate in the blood and then move into tissues where they become macrophages and ...
Isolated monocytosis means that only the monocyte count in the blood is higher than normal, while other blood cells (like neutrophils, lymphocytes, platelets, ...
Clonal (primary) monocytosis means a person has too many monocytes in the blood because of a blood-forming stem cell clone—a group of bone-marrow cells ...
Reactive or secondary monocytosis means your blood has too many monocytes—a type of white blood cell—but the reason is not a blood cancer or primary bone ...
Persistent monocytosis means that a certain kind of white blood cell—monocytes—is too high for a long time. Normally adults have an absolute monocyte count ...
Transient monocytosis means your blood has more monocytes than usual for a short time. Monocytes are a kind of white blood cell that help fight infections, ...
Relative monocytosis means that the percentage of monocytes in your white blood cells is higher than normal, not because there are too many monocytes ...
Absolute monocytosis means your blood has more monocytes than the normal upper limit when counted as an absolute number, not just a percentage. Monocytes are a ...
Clonal or neoplastic monocytosis means that the body is making too many monocytes (a type of white blood cell) because their source—the blood-forming stem ...
Monocytes are one of the five types of white blood cells. They patrol the bloodstream, move into tissues when needed, and become macrophages or dendritic cells ...
Monocytosis means your blood has more monocytes than normal. Monocytes are one type of white blood cell. They patrol the blood, move into tissues, and turn ...
Severe high monocyte counts—known as monocytosis—refer to a persistently elevated level of monocytes (a type of white blood cell) in the bloodstream, typically ...
Monocytes are one type of white blood cell. They patrol your blood, then move into tissues to become macrophages and dendritic cells, where they help clean up ...
Monocytes are a kind of white blood cell that patrols the blood, then moves into tissues to become macrophages or dendritic cells—cells that help clean up ...
Monocytes are a type of white blood cell made in your bone marrow. They circulate in the blood for about one to three days, then move into tissues all over the ...

