If there was one thing he didn't need, it was a face full of skin irritant. |
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Whether your eczema is due to an irritant, such as detergent, or due to an allergen, such as nickel, care and treatment of your skin is the same. |
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Although it can be an irritant to those with asthma or respiratory disease, it is not known to pose any toxic hazard. |
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The welding process produces a complex mixture of irritant gases, coarse metal particulates, and fine metal oxide fume. |
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Indeed, for many years environmental concerns were treated as an irritant by most officials in charge of lending operations. |
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Irritant contact dermatitis is a skin reaction caused by the direct effect of an irritant substance on the skin. |
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It can have an irritant effect on the gastrointestinal mucosa, and in large doses will act as an emetic. |
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Hydrogen sulfide is highly toxic and can be rapidly fatal, inasmuch as it acts as both an irritant and an asphyxiant. |
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Ammonia is an irritant gas with a sharp odor, both as a natural and a manufactured chemical. |
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Skin testing will not be useful in identifying the potential for these irritant substances to cause symptoms. |
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Warm, arid and scented it may have been, but it was an irritant nevertheless. |
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The worker must avoid areas of high irritant exposure and wear adequate respiratory protection. |
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For such people, smoking is a significant irritant, worsening the symptoms of scratchiness and stinging or burning of the eyes. |
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Contact dermatitis, irritant or allergic, can involve the pinna as well as the external auditory canal. |
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Lesion onset usually occurs in a pattern related to the skin irritant or allergen initiating the reaction. |
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It is a powerful irritant which, if inhaled, can cause severe circulatory and respiratory failure. |
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The most important treatment is identifying and removing the irritant or allergen. |
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Cigarette smoke is a short term respiratory irritant that should be avoided altogether by people with asthma. |
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Ozone is a highly reactive gas that is regulated in the outside air as a lung irritant. |
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The local irritant effects of cacodylic acid are minimal compared to those of arsenic. |
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Reports of the possible spread of West Nile virus to Florida are a reminder that mosquitoes are no mere summertime irritant. |
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The most likely irritant in emollient creams is the stabiliser propylene glycol. |
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My lungs are so badly scarred that the smallest irritant can cause me to have trouble breathing. |
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An irritant was injected into the left hind paw of the pups to induce swelling. |
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That said, Braff has always seemed like a minor irritant, and I never gave any real thought to why he bugged me. |
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When the throat gets irritated or blocked, it can close around the irritant making it difficult to breathe. |
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Contact dermatitis in the ear canal can result from almost any local irritant, including topical anti-infective agents and anesthetics and other topical preparations. |
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The author has done justice to the chapters covering specific poisons such as corrosive poison, irritant poisons, neurotoxic poisons, cardiovascular poisons and asphyxiants. |
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Another constant irritant for the judge was poor media reporting. |
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Whenever the Brazilian fleets arrive on the Tagus, British navy vessels and merchantmen already lie in wait, a continual irritant to Portuguese port authorities. |
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Although irritant dermatitis, candidiasis, or secondary bacterial infections may produce superficial erosion and plaques of the perineal skin, they do not cause ulceration. |
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It's a chemical irritant and it burns the lining of the spider vein. |
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Many, if not most, non-smokers find tobacco smoke an unpleasant irritant. |
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Chlorine has a disagreeable odor and may be a respiratory irritant. |
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An even smaller minority goes and returns so frequently that these lines can be an irritant. |
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Hop features the voice of Russell Brand, an irritant who appropriately enough is about to spread like a rash over the US charts. |
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It does have some irritant properties, but nothing like cigarette smoke, and it doesn't have the high level of carcinogens. |
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Perhaps it's the irritant properties in the stage smoke that Robert West mentioned. |
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John Githongo is an irritant, a troublemaker – in fact, every corrupt dictator's worst nightmare. |
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It can cause severe irritant dermatitis which can lead to open sores, secondary infection, and can exacerbate eczema. |
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For the parties that have representation in the House, this would certainly be an irritant, but it would by no means be catastrophic for them. |
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Benzyl benzoate is irritant and not recommended for children. |
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The contact lens wearer has to be strongly motivated to learn to adapt to this irritant and develop the ocular tolerance necessary for comfortable lens wear. |
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In addition to its asphyxiant properties, hydrogen sulfide also acts as an irritant to the eyes and mucous membranes. |
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What should be a service to the community is seen as a major irritant. |
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Honeysuckle fruits contain valerianic acid and xylostein, which are irritant. |
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Any agent extravasated in high enough concentration may be an irritant. |
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We can imagine what the major irritant is and the whole underlying principle of this bill, that is that the government seeks to intrude into provincial jurisdictions. |
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The tests use in-vitro cell culture to evaluate the potential skin-irritancy of chemicals, by providing a realistic representation of the properties of human skin to identify irritant and non-irritant chemicals. |
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Any substances which are potentially comedogenic, photosensitive, irritant or likely to have other undesirable effects are never used in our products. |
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There was, however, one small irritant that kept surfacing now and again: the use of the word superannuate in FSNA's English tag line, Federal Superannuates National Association. |
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Formaldehyde is actually quite a potent sensitiser, so you can quickly become allergic to it and it's certainly a nasty respiratory irritant. |
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An occupational history is crucial in assessing the probability of being exposed to a respiratory sensitiser or irritant. |
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Colleagues and friends may appreciate some notes from abroadthough I have sometimes wondered whether they act as an irritant if overdoneor are too wordy. |
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Riding on un-authorized trails is also an irritant. |
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The exclusion of potentially irritant substances. |
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Like poison ivy or oak, swimmer's itch is a reaction of the skin to an irritant. |
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Do wear goggles and hand protection when handling hydrated lime as it can be an irritant to some people. |
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Though primarily a powerful irritant, it can asphyxiate in high concentrations or prolonged exposure. |
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The many different types, colours and shapes of pearls depend on the natural pigment of the nacre, and the shape of the original irritant. |
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Chlorine is a skin and mucous membrane irritant that is used to make water safe for bathing or drinking. |
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Chlorine is a respiratory irritant that attacks mucous membranes and burns the skin. |
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It is a highly flammable irritant which is volatile and soluble in water. |
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However, castor oil, which is converted to ricinoleic acid in the gut, is an irritant that may induce premature labor. |
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For thread veins and spider veins, there's microsclerotherapy using fine needles to inject an irritant and induce scarring. |
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But the character at the centre of this one-woman show is thoroughly unlikable and more irritant than rogue. |
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Because cabazitaxel is neither a vesicant nor an irritant, it may be administered via either a central or peripheral line. |
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In staffing firm Randstad USA's survey of employee pet peeves, office gossip was the top vote-getter, with 60 percent of respondents citing it their primary irritant. |
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It is blamed on exposure to calcium oxalate, chelidonic acid or alkaloids such as lycorine in the sap, either due to a direct irritant effect or an allergic reaction. |
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It is a colorless, odorless gas that is normally mixed with another chemical warning agent, chloropicrin, which has a very noticeable odor and irritant properties. |
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In this section, I acknowledge that NR accelerators, such as carbamates, thiurams and thiazoles, are well known to elicit Type IV and irritant reactions in humans. |
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