Neurotoxin
Any substance that is capable of causing damage to nerves or nerve tissue. For example, arsenic and lead are neurotoxins.
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- Neurotransmitter
A chemical that is released from a nerve cell which thereby transmits an impulse from a nerve cell to another nerve, muscle, organ, or other tissue. A neurotransmitter is a messenger of neurologic information from one cell to another.
- Neutral foot type
The most common type of foot. A runner with a neutral type of foot lands on the heel and rolls forward during the gait cycle until the impact is distributed evenly across the forefoot.
- Neutral posture
The posture when the joints are not bent and the spine is aligned and not twisted. Working in neutral postures is preferable to working while twisting the back or bending the wrists.
- Neutropenia
Neutrophils have “neutral” subtle granules; Eosinophils have prominent granules that stain readily with the acid dye eosin; and Basophils have prominent granules that stain readily basic (nonacidic) dyes. This classification dates back to a time when certain structures could be identified in cells by histochemistry, but the functions of these intracellular structures were still not […]
- Neutropenia, severe congenital (SCN)
Kostmann’s disease or syndrome, infantile genetic agranulocytosis and genetic infantile agranulocytosis.