| 释义 | 
		Definition of botulinum toxin in English: botulinum toxin(also botulinus toxin) nounˌbɒtjʊˈlʌɪnəmˌbäCHəˌlīnəm ˈtäksən another term for botulin  Example sentencesExamples -  Pedal botulinum toxin injection is unacceptable to most patients and some doctors.
 -  Any botulinum toxin would now also be so much sludge.
 -  Significantly higher patient satisfaction was reported in the botulinum toxin type A group than the placebo group.
 -  What shocked bird conservationists was that symptoms of the two spoonbills were different from those infected by the C. botulinum toxin.
 -  The full potential of the botulinum toxin will probably be known within the next five years, but as its injection into spastic muscles is a simple procedure, the intervention may well eventually be used in general practice.
 -  The prospect of having needles inserted into my face didn't fill me with joy, but it sounded a lot less scary than injecting a botulinum toxin into the offending areas.
 -  Very small amounts of botulinum toxin can lead to botulism, a descending paralysis with prominent bulbar symptoms and often affecting the autonomic nervous system.
 -  Well, yes, it is a chemical toxin; its proper name is botulinum toxin.
 -  But despite the protests the party went ahead, with more than 40 satisfied guests leaving with a few glasses of wine, some party food and a spot of the deadly botulinum toxin inside them.
 -  An antibody against botulinum toxin is available, which binds to the toxin and inactivates it.
 -  The public has become more aware of treatments such as botulinum toxin type A and hyaluronic acid because of the media attention they have received.
 -  In some patients botulinus toxin can be injected in the muscles of the dominant arm.
 -  The disorder can be treated with drugs or injections of the poison botulinum toxin, that temporarily weakens the muscles involved, but even ‘dinosaur doses’ did not help.
 -  Today botulinum toxin is widely known as a pharmaceutical agent with multiple uses and has been propelled into the public eye after it was widely reported in the lay press as an antiwrinkle drug for facial cosmetic enhancement.
 -  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and some state health departments keep a supply of antitoxin against botulinum toxin.
 -  For example, someone who buys canned or dried milk would run a much lower risk of getting poisoned by botulinum toxin in milk.
 -  At eight weeks, nine of 15 patients in the botulinum toxin group and two of 16 patients in the saline group reported pain relief exceeding 50 percent.
 -  The most commonly known are bacteria such as anthrax, plague, and tularemia, and toxins such as botulinum toxin.
 -  Clostridium botulinum, the bacteria which produces botulinum toxin, is a normal soil bacterium.
 -  Endocytosis is also used as a route of access into the cell by rogue invaders: certain toxins, such as botulinum toxin, or enveloped viruses, such as the influenza virus.
 
    Definition of botulinum toxin in US English: botulinum toxin(also botulinus toxin) nounˌbäCHəˌlīnəm ˈtäksən another term for botulin  Example sentencesExamples -  Significantly higher patient satisfaction was reported in the botulinum toxin type A group than the placebo group.
 -  The most commonly known are bacteria such as anthrax, plague, and tularemia, and toxins such as botulinum toxin.
 -  The public has become more aware of treatments such as botulinum toxin type A and hyaluronic acid because of the media attention they have received.
 -  At eight weeks, nine of 15 patients in the botulinum toxin group and two of 16 patients in the saline group reported pain relief exceeding 50 percent.
 -  Well, yes, it is a chemical toxin; its proper name is botulinum toxin.
 -  Pedal botulinum toxin injection is unacceptable to most patients and some doctors.
 -  Today botulinum toxin is widely known as a pharmaceutical agent with multiple uses and has been propelled into the public eye after it was widely reported in the lay press as an antiwrinkle drug for facial cosmetic enhancement.
 -  The full potential of the botulinum toxin will probably be known within the next five years, but as its injection into spastic muscles is a simple procedure, the intervention may well eventually be used in general practice.
 -  The prospect of having needles inserted into my face didn't fill me with joy, but it sounded a lot less scary than injecting a botulinum toxin into the offending areas.
 -  What shocked bird conservationists was that symptoms of the two spoonbills were different from those infected by the C. botulinum toxin.
 -  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and some state health departments keep a supply of antitoxin against botulinum toxin.
 -  But despite the protests the party went ahead, with more than 40 satisfied guests leaving with a few glasses of wine, some party food and a spot of the deadly botulinum toxin inside them.
 -  Any botulinum toxin would now also be so much sludge.
 -  Clostridium botulinum, the bacteria which produces botulinum toxin, is a normal soil bacterium.
 -  For example, someone who buys canned or dried milk would run a much lower risk of getting poisoned by botulinum toxin in milk.
 -  The disorder can be treated with drugs or injections of the poison botulinum toxin, that temporarily weakens the muscles involved, but even ‘dinosaur doses’ did not help.
 -  Very small amounts of botulinum toxin can lead to botulism, a descending paralysis with prominent bulbar symptoms and often affecting the autonomic nervous system.
 -  In some patients botulinus toxin can be injected in the muscles of the dominant arm.
 -  Endocytosis is also used as a route of access into the cell by rogue invaders: certain toxins, such as botulinum toxin, or enveloped viruses, such as the influenza virus.
 -  An antibody against botulinum toxin is available, which binds to the toxin and inactivates it.
 
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