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  2. Superplasticizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superplasticizer

    Superplasticizers allow reduction in water content by 30% or more. These additives are employed at the level of a few weight percent. Plasticizers and superplasticizers also retard the setting and hardening of concrete. [1] According to their dispersing functionality and action mode, one distinguishes two classes of superplasticizers:

  3. List of diagnoses characterized as pseudoscience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_diagnoses...

    Conditions that are not widely recognized, about which there is an ongoing debate within the scientific and medical literature. Functional disorders are a set of conditions that cannot be explained by structural or biochemical abnormalities. [3] These raise challenges around diagnosis and treatment, with debate around whether they are psychogenic.

  4. Plasticizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasticizer

    PVC, used extensively in sewage pipes, is only useful because of plasticizers. [1]A plasticizer (UK: plasticiser) is a substance that is added to a material to make it softer and more flexible, to increase its plasticity, to decrease its viscosity, and/or to decrease friction during its handling in manufacture.

  5. Superplasticity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superplasticity

    Examples of superplastic materials are some fine-grained metals and ceramics. Other non-crystalline materials (amorphous) such as silica glass ("molten glass") and polymers also deform similarly, but are not called superplastic, because they are not crystalline; rather, their deformation is often described as Newtonian fluid .

  6. Functional disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_disorder

    Functional disorders can affect the interplay of several organ systems (for example gastrointestinal, respiratory, musculoskeletal or neurological) leading to multiple and variable symptoms. Less commonly there is a single prominent symptom or organ system affected.

  7. Multiple chemical sensitivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_chemical_sensitivity

    For example, in 1996 the International Programme on Chemical Safety proposed calling it idiopathic environmental illness, because of their belief that chemical exposure may not the sole cause, [7] while another researcher, whose definition includes people with allergies and acute poisoning, calls it chemical sensitivity. [9]

  8. Pathognomonic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pathognomonic

    An example is the hypersegmented neutrophil, which is seen only in megaloblastic anemias (not a single disease, but a set of closely related disease states). More often a test result is "pathognomonic" only because there has been a consensus to define the disease state in terms of the test result (such as diabetes mellitus being defined in ...

  9. Arteriolosclerosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arteriolosclerosis

    "Onion-skin" renal arteriole. This is a type of arteriolosclerosis involving a narrowed lumen. [4] The term "onion-skin" is sometimes used to describe this form of blood vessel [14] with thickened concentric smooth muscle cell layer and thickened, duplicated basement membrane.