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patulous
patulous, a. (ˈpætjʊləs) [f. L. patul-us standing open, spread out, spreading, f. root of patēre to be open: cf. bibulus, crēdulus, etc.] 1. Open; expanded; opening rather widely.1616 T. Adams Taming of Tongue Wks. 1862 III. 15 The ear yet hears more than ever the eye saw, and by reason of its patul...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Patulous Eustachian tube
In addition, patulous Eustachian tube generally feels dry with no clogged feeling or sinus pressure. Patulous Eustachian tube is likely if brisk inspiration causes a significant pressure shift.
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Patulous eustachian tube: Treatment, causes, and symptoms
Symptoms. One of the main symptoms of patulous eustachian tube is distorted autophony, which means that a person is able to hear their own voice, breathing, or pulse. Usually, the brain blocks out ...
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patulent
ˈpatulent, a. rare. [app. f. L. patul-us spreading, patulous, with ending as in patent.] Open, expanded, gaping.1709 P. Blair in Phil. Trans. XXVII. 72 The Hairs are more loose and the Pores more patulent and obvious. 1803 Medical Jrnl. X. 435 Pressure would approximate the sides of the uterus, and ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Pleurotomella papyracea
The outer lip is excessively thin, slightly patulous below, but not at all above. Round the front of the siphonal canal it is not in the least patulous.
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patulicate
† ˈpatulicate, v. Obs. rare—0. [f. ppl. stem of med. or mod.L. patulicāre to open, spread out, f. patul-us patulous.] Hence † patuliˈcation.1656 Blount Glos., Patulicate, to be opened, or made wide. 1658 Phillips, Patulication, a being opened, or made wide.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Prostatic utricle
described the function of the utricle: "In coitus it so contracts that it draws upon the openings of the ejaculatory ducts, and thus renders them so patulous
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patulin
patulin Biochem. (ˈpætjʊlɪn) [f. L. patul-um, specific epithet of the mould, neut. of patulus (see patulous a.): see -in1.] A colourless crystalline antibiotic compound, C7H6O, that was obtained from the mould Penicillium patulum and afterwards found to be identical with clavacin and claviformin.194...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Margarites scintillans
The inner lip is straight, patulous, and right-angled at its junction with the base.
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Urosalpinx curtansata
The inner lip is patulous, slightly arched to the origin of the straight columella, with a thin edge parting the aperture from the umbilical fissure.
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Calliostoma simplex
The columella is cylindrical, slightly concave, patulous but not toothed at the base, interiorly ending in a flat layer of nacre, running over the basal
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Aforia staminea
The outer lip, which is thin, sharp, and patulous, leaves the body at a right angle and advances quite straight to the keel, above which lies the deep, , free, forward curve and a sinuous double sweep, first convex and then concave, to the point of the snout, where the edge is prominent, rounded, and patulous
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Leucosyrinx plebeia
but is contracted into the aperture, along the edge of which it is pretty straight with a somewhat oblique direction towards the left, and here it is patulous cut off, and slightly twisted in front, and running out at the point to a sharp edge along the siphonal canal, the point of which is then rounded and patulous
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Borsonia syngenes
rounded and open, and whose depth is due entirely to the great forward sweep of the lip below, where it projects like the pinion of a wing and is slightly patulous It curves in laterally to the origin of the siphonal canal, and then advances very straight and scarcely patulous to the rounded point of the shell.
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Autophony
Serous otitis media
Open or patulous Eustachian tube, allowing vocal or breathing sounds to be conducted into the middle ear
Superior canal dehiscence References
External links
Definition of Autophony
Painhealth.com - Definition of Autophony
emedicine Patulous Eustachian Tube
SCDS with Autophony
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