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"decompression" Definitions
  1. a reduction in air pressure; the act of reducing the pressure of the air
  2. a reduction in air pressure on a person who has experienced high pressure while diving deep underwater
  3. (computing) the process of expanding computer data to its normal size so that it can be read by a computer

142 Sentences With "decompression"

How to use decompression in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "decompression" and check conjugation/comparative form for "decompression". Mastering all the usages of "decompression" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Shoemaker's operation was for nerve decompression and pronator teres repair.
Dr. Jannetta performed the first microvascular decompression operation in 1966.
The middle-out bit comes toward the end of the decompression bit.
But Bahbah finds time for decompression in her own, un-rigid way.
Chapman offered some packing tips: bring chest seals, needle-decompression kits, and tourniquets.
In 1954, another Comet crashed after takeoff from Rome following an explosive decompression.
Know you're interested in something like spinal decompression, which involves stretching the spine?
It's decompression sickness, and is entirely the result of human interference into their habitat.
A hyperbaric chamber is used if a diver experiences decompression sickness (AKA "the bends").
It resulted in its decompression and, as consequence, the space rocket lost its attitude control.
The US Navy also uses hyperbaric oxygen therapy to treat decompression sickness or diver's disease.
Formally known as microvascular decompression, it is familiarly known among surgeons as the Jannetta procedure.
Dr. Spence recommended a laminectomy, or decompression surgery, to relieve pressure on the spinal cord.
Severe decompression sickness from being in the caissons frequently confined him to a sickroom during construction.
Alarm bells, hissing decompression, his glass face mask scrubbed white in an instant—he doesn't care.
However, that rapid decompression creates a blast wave that will travel down as well as up.
One person offered examples of nerve decompression surgery, repairs of knee ligament tears, and wrist surgeries.
At deeper depths, Mr. Trumper and other urchin divers risk decompression sickness, which can be deadly.
The process, also known as myofascial decompression, is thought to increase blood circulation and release muscle tension.
The waves of all these decompression explosions will resonate in the pipe, making a pulsing explosive eruption.
As time allows decompression to occur, an ability post-Thanksgiving to eventually peacefully discuss policy is possible.
The odd-looking marks are from an ancient Chinese massage therapy technique called myofascial decompression, or cupping.
"It resulted in its decompression and, as consequence, the space rocket lost its attitude control," the agency wrote.
Kesha and her boyfriend Brad Ashenfelter were in full decompression mode after landing Saturday in Turks and Caicos.
A portable decompression chamber helps scientists protect fish from injury when they are brought to the ocean's surface.
Ingram underwent thoracic outlet decompression surgery, performed by Dr. Hugh Gelabert at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.
I have nerve damage in my left leg, hip and mid-lower back from spinal cord decompression surgeries.
Also an ancient Chinese massage therapy, cupping, or myofascial decompression, uses a suction cup-like tool increase blood circulation.
Other common weeknight decompression techniques included spending time surfing the internet, changing into comfy clothes, and having a meal.
"We were passing through about 32,000 feet when we had a large bang and a rapid decompression," he said.
"It resulted in its decompression and, as consequence, the space rocket lost its attitude control," the investigation committee reported.
It was a clear sign of decompression sickness, an often-fatal ailment that results when animals are rapidly depressurized.
One day homeWhen Yang gets his one day a week off the campaign, he&aposs unsurprisingly in decompression mode.
A release from the club on Wednesday said the surgeons performed a subacromial decompression, acromioplasty and posterior labral repair.
It's just another ugly and obnoxious troubled pop tune from the decompression chamber of general malaise, with lit synth hooks.
Today, microvascular decompression is a standard treatment for trigeminal neuralgia, resulting in complete relief in some 90 percent of cases.
Hundreds of others have been treated for decompression sickness — "the bends" — and other injuries related to the sea cucumber harvest.
If heat pads and stretching aren't cutting it, try an inversion table, which can help release pain through spinal decompression.
Make sure, though, to set aside time for decompression and necessary rest, because messiness and debauchery are in the cards.
Sometimes frightened whales bolt toward the surface and die of decompression sickness—the bends—or of an arterial gas embolism.
"We were passing through about 32,000 feet when we heard a large bang and a rapid decompression," Ellisor told 13803/20.
The water in the caves doesn't seem to be deep enough for decompression sickness to be much of a worry here.
Two years later, Turkish Airlines Flight 981, another DC-10, also suffered decompression when its cargo door blew off mid-flight.
The facility - comprising several interconnected modules including a greenhouse and a mock decompression chamber - opened its doors to the public on Wednesday.
By 2008, after Ramin had exhausted what seemed like all her options, she elected to have a "minimally invasive" nerve decompression procedure.
A Mars mission will take all kinds, and everyone onboard, regardless of background, should probably know how to deal with decompression (etc.).
Bank executive Jennifer Riordan, 43, was killed when she was partially pulled through the gaping hole as the cabin suffered rapid decompression.
Famously, when building the tunnel leading up to the Brooklyn Bridge, at least five workers died from "the bends," or decompression sickness.
There are a few spaces at Satellite designed for holistic healing and decompression, like the Soothing Center, curated by Jesse Bandler Firestone.
"Penny was born with hydrocephalus and we thought after having the decompression surgery that would be the end of it," explains Jolé, 38.
Southwest Airlines Flight 2700 made an emergency landing at Philadelphia International Airport on Tuesday after suffering a catastrophic engine failure and cabin decompression.
Had the incident occurred minutes later, once the plane reached cruising altitude, the resultant explosive decompression would almost certainly have killed all aboard.
An engine broke up in flight, the debris shattered a window and the rapid decompression nearly sucked out a passenger, who later died.
If they burst inside the cranial cavity, the victim could have suffered ministrokes, causing brain damage similar to the effects of decompression sickness.
Cockpit pressure can sometimes swing up or down by 2,000 feet without warning, and this is a prime suspect in causing decompression sickness.
After decompression, the fishes temporarily occupied makeshift kiddie-pool aquariums in hotel rooms before they were packed and shipped by air to California.
We can fix social attitudes toward people with dwarfism all we want, and spinal decompression procedures will neither be obviated nor become pleasant.
Wrapping up — or kicking off — your day off with some decompression time can boost your mood, ultimately leading to a more productive week.
These are, naturally, acoustic waves—waves of alternating compression and relative decompression in some material—propagating along the surface of an elastic material.
The airline also needs to improve training on handling burst tyres, engine fires, emergency decompression and traffic collision avoidance system warnings, the regulator added.
" It proves to be a harbinger of doom: Many of the laborers — and Roebling himself — would be stricken with decompression sickness or "caisson disease.
Over the past century, atmospheric diving suits have been developed and improved in hopes of preventing the dangerous effects of decompression sickness, aka the bends.
The messages could also have been prompted by rapid decompression of the aircraft, which can produce condensation that the plane's sensors could mistake for smoke.
On August 27, 2016, the aircraft suffered an uncontained engine failure, where parts of the engine penetrated the fuselage of the aircraft, causing a decompression.
Fortunately, he was able to squeeze back into the Volga module before his breathable air ran out, and before heatstroke and decompression sickness overtook him.
For fish, since they've spent their whole lives down there, we have decompression chambers that we put them in and then seal at that depth.
"I think we'll all need a good decompression from politics after this because it's been a lot, but I could never say never," she said.
From what I've heard from aerial yoga converts, the practice has myriad physical benefits such as spinal decompression, pain- and stress-relief and core muscle strengthening.
According to a study released by Google, Brotli has the top compression and decompression speeds and smallest sizes in most cases compared to other compression algorithms.
But we've found a decompression talk over a substantial sandwich (reason to visit the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor: Zingerman's Delicatessen) is our digestive limit.
Bank executive Jennifer Riordan, 43, was killed when she was partially pulled through a gaping hole next to her seat as the cabin suffered rapid decompression.
Dive computers are small devices, often worn like wristwatches, that let divers track and calculate important information, such as when they need to take a decompression stop.
And, in 1989, per FAA, a Boeing 747-122 also suffered a serious breakdown due to "explosive decompression," resulting in the ejection and deaths of nine people.
The New York Times spoke to an industry analyst, who said that the smoke detected could also have been condensation — which would indicate decompression of the plane.
"We were passing through about 32 thousand feet when we heard a large bang and a rapid decompression," recalls Ellisor in a clip from the sit-down.
In an exclusive sneak peek at the season premiere of Terra's Little Family, the parents prep Penny for spinal decompression surgery and can't help but get emotional.
In the second season premiere of Little Women: Terra's Little Family, Jolé opened up to viewers about what she went through as Penny underwent spinal decompression surgery.
Once again, the failure caused parts of the engine to pierce the aircraft fuselage, creating a decompression and leading to the death of one of the passengers aboard.
"You lose track of time," said Angel Gamboa, a diving fisherman who suffered spinal cord decompression after spending about three hours gathering sea cucumbers off the Yucatán coast.
From a foyer (which Mr. Muser, 45, described as "a decompression chamber") guests will proceed down a hallway so narrow that it almost demands they walk single-file.
Forward Kyle Anderson, who averaged 8.0 points and 5.8 rebounds in 43 games (40 starts) last season, is still recovering from thoracic outlet decompression surgery performed in April.
Mr. Jasper said Fly-Tot's maker was working to modify the product to reduce that likelihood and the risk the device might block decompression vents on the floor.
It does have legitimate medical uses, such as treating decompression sickness among divers, but for-profit treatment centers make unsupported claims that it can treat multiple other diseases.
And the higher the planes go, the higher the pressure differential, making explosive decompression — and the breaking apart of an aircraft — far more likely at 2321,2111 feet than 21997,22002.
He suspects that the positive results patients experience with the decompression procedure may be due at least in part to the requirement that the joint be rested after surgery.
It's basically a portable decompression chamber, protecting fish from the same damage that humans experience when we dive deep into the ocean and return too quickly to the surface.
According to Magness, "social recovery" allows for decompression and creates a "transition phase to go from high stress to allowing your body to rest," he tells New York magazine.
In more serious cases, such as those that cause high blood pressure in the brain or impaired consciousness, decompression surgery to alleviate pressure on the brain may be required.
In theory, that means people who enter the glass room, through a decompression chamber, share all of their bacteria and viruses with every other person who has occupied the space.
The compound is complete with mock decompression chambers, space suits, living modules, greenhouses, and even a replica of the black monolith featured in the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey.
"Now we have shown that the onset of the process of decompression, which releases the gas bubbles that power the eruption, starts less than a year before eruption," said Gualda.
But the decompression also highlights how Westworld talks an enormous game but has yet to truly prove itself as anything other than the Most Important Show on Television (in theory).
Vacation is, in the end, about decompression from daily life, and overplanning causes exhaustion, which can make it difficult to deal with one another at the end of the day.
Oddly, despite adaptations allowing the whales to dive at great depths, some showed signs of decompression illness, the same condition that affects some scuba divers when they ascend too quickly.
Other operations that have continued to be performed despite negative research findings include spinal fusion (to ease pain caused by worn disks), and subacromial decompression, which in theory reduces shoulder pain.
It's pretty likely that if that object had hit some other part of the fuselage, it would also have pierced it and led to a similar rapid decompression of the aircraft.
"While episodes of decompression sickness typically accompany a noticeable loss of cabin pressure by the aircrew, the cause of most physiological episodes is not readily apparent during flight," the testimony says.
In 1988, a Boeing 737-200 blew open after, per the Federal Aviation Agency, "an explosive decompression occurred," killing a flight attendant who was pulled from the plane, and injuring eight others.
While working offshore, "saturation" divers like him must live at the pressure they will be diving at, to avoid decompression sickness, or "the bends", an illness caused by leaving depth too quickly.
For example, if the data in the message was compressed to increase the transmission rates, for instance, it would be next to impossible to manually perform the decompression steps without a computer.
Additional vulnerabilities in the app decompression process then allowed an attacker using a crafted archive to overwrite any file in the app's sandbox, ultimately leading to the delivery of a malicious payload.
Tracklist:Gary Numan - "Metal"Zoviet France - "Mohnomische 7"Prurient - "Dragonflies To Sew You Up"Lustmord - "Decompression"Wolf Eyes - "Human Animal"Cabaret Voltaire - "Nag, Nag, Nag"Coil - "Careful What You Wish For"Shapednoise ft.
She also recalls the "alarming" moment their trip was cut short after an experienced diver suffered from Bends, a decompression sickness, and had to be taken off the boat in a stretcher.
For many it was a world of their own, a decompression zone — home in a way that even their city residences might not be, because it had been built by people like them.
Hitch makes frequent use of a technique known as "decompression," in which the story is conveyed largely through visuals, without much dialogue, and brief moments are spread out across multiple pages of art.
But these files had a natural limitation: Most Zip decompression routines max out at a compression ratio of 1032-to-one, which meant that "Zip bombs" could only reach their true compression potential recursively.
Authorities will probably follow the same path as they did in 1989, when a United Airlines flight experienced rapid decompression after a cargo door failed, causing nine passengers to be sucked out to their deaths.
But the only HBOT use that's actually been cleared by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is treating decompression sickness, which is a condition that some divers get due to a change in barometric pressure.
And before anybody could even get in the plane, they needed to spent 20 minutes breathing in pure oxygen on the ground, in order to prevent them from getting decompression sickness while in the air.
To prepare for the stunt, which carries a risk of decompression sickness, or "the bends", during the 200 mph (320 kmh) fall, Cruise trained in a custom-built wind machine and used a special helmet.
A microvascular decompression craniotomy (MVD) is a three- to four-hour brain surgery that requires drilling a quarter-inch hole through the skull to wrap Teflon around the trigeminal nerve, insulating it from further compression.
Then you worry about decompression sickness, where all the nitrogen comes out of the solution in your blood, what scuba divers can get when they spend too much time at depth and come up too quickly.
There should be an element of decompression between where the weaker and stronger banks' subordinated debt trades as people are reminded of the risk and we have a more muscular ECB and SRB [Single Resolution Board].
One serious concern is the possibility that the boys could be at risk for decompression sickness, or the bends, if the air they have been breathing in the cave has been under pressure from the rising water.
The latter caused some pilots to suffer decompression sickness, comparable to what deep-sea divers can experience if they do not surface slowly enough for nitrogen to be removed from their bloodstream and expelled through their lungs.
"In case of a decompression or door failure, the passengers will be sucked out because of the difference in pressure pushing the passengers outside, which is why it is always recommended to wear seat belts," says Meo.
But the decompression really works for "The Choice," which largely takes place over a couple of hours (outside of the flashbacks, of course) and drills down into every little decision that led to the episode-closing battle.
"If they are single stall, they can be used as a decompression space for those who are hypersensitive to sensory and emotional stimuli and experience sensory overload," says Walsh, which is something that's common but stigmatized at shows.
Blending oxygen with other inert gases like hydrogen—a mix known as hydrox, one of many such cocktails—allows divers to go hundreds of meters deeper than hitherto possible, and with less decompression sickness and few "deco" stops.
"In the future, the Eurosystem can retreat as buyer in the market without risking an unwarranted decompression of the term premium," Coeure added, referring to the premium investors pay to hold longer dated papers instead of shorter maturities.
Whatever happened inside that complicated system of fuel and fire and whirling components, it resulted in the decompression of the cabin at about 32,27 feet and, later, the death of a passenger after she nearly flew out a window.
After I watched the film with a panel of ex-hardcore WoW players, we walked out of the theater hanging our heads in need of a decompression group therapy session to discuss the ways in which Warcraft failed us.
Cross him, and he will throw you to his man-eating iguanas, or explode your head in a decompression tank, or throw you into a vat of molten metal in front of a consortium of unfairly stereotyped Asian businessmen.
Stu Broce climbs into a spacesuit, spends an hour breathing pure oxygen to ward off decompression sickness, and thinks about the flavored goop he'll suck through a straw as he gazes at the curvature of the Earth from 70,000 feet up.
Because of this, I was inspired to hang one in my garage gym and recommend it to anyone who gets relief from low-back decompression or simply wants to add a fun tool to their health and wellness arsenal at home.
In the docs, obtained by TMZ, Christy says she went under last November for a procedure called an anterior discectomy and spinal cord decompression, and during a couple post-op visits ... the doctors overseeing the matter misled her despite worsening symptoms.
You can use them to improve rotational and multiplanar strength and stability, scapular health, force production, and if you control your breathing and keep the intensity low, they can even be used as a decompression tool to help the body relax.
But since such detection doesn't exist in decompression tools at the moment, it created an opportunity for testing, and even then, the worst it did with many programs tested by Fifield and others (including LibreOffice and McAfee Antivirus) was cause them to timeout.
And the kind of cascading crisis faced by Flight 1380 on Tuesday — an engine explosion that exposes the cabin to the open air, causes a decompression and fatally pulls a passenger partially outside the plane — is even more rare and difficult to handle.
Luckily for us puny humans, most of us can't even get very far in the ocean to see all the monsters down there because of decompression sickness (which occurs around 320 feet below) and, well, eventual death (the water pressure is crazy down there, I hear).
Some never show symptoms or require little treatment beyond pain management, while those whose symptoms interfere with quality of life may undergo multiple decompression surgeries or placement of a shunt (a tube-like device) to channel the flow of cerebrospinal fluid and relieve pressure on the brain.
Cat squeals and psycho-beats in spastic decompression, mating cries broadcast by willing neanderthals into seas of gyrating, drunken filth, death metal is a guilty pleasure somewhere between the lines of masturbation and abstract expressionism; at times, even an embarrassment to those of us who play it.
That would make a lot of sense because the adult divers could talk the children through the dive as they go, checking in and making sure they were O.K. "The bends," or decompression sickness, is a medical condition brought about by nitrogen bubbles in a person's bloodstream.
The plane descended from 35,000 feet to 0003,000 feet in 10 minutes as is standard practice in a decompression event, according to FlightRadar24 data, then ascended and continued the flight at a peak altitude of 26,600 feet rather than heading to a nearby airport to land.
Industry experts said the decision to climb and continue the flight was unusual given the oxygen masks had already been deployed and there was a risk another decompression event could occur after the one-time supply of 12-20 minutes from the oxygen masks was used up.
A friend of mine calls this "decompression," a term borrowed from comic books, where stories are often slowed down to allow the artists and writers to focus on single moments or dramatic beats, often in panels that highlight, say, a man's eye narrowing as he stares at something.
As the bubblier half of the hosting team behind "Mythbusters," Savage has been seen testing such questions as whether a bullet fired through a plane window can cause explosive decompression and whether using a cellphone at a gas station can cause a caller to go up in flames.
Their recommendations are based on two systematic evidence reviews that included seven randomized controlled trials with 22019,014 patients, one focusing on the benefits and harms of so-called decompression surgery for rotator cuff disease and the other looking at whether the surgery produced meaningful improvements in pain, movement and quality of life.
Asked what might have happened, she pointed to "two early hypotheses" -- namely, that a fire on board the plane incapacitated everyone through smoke or fumes, or that a rapid decompression, perhaps because of a breach in a window, led to their deaths hours before the plane ran out of fuel and spiraled downward.
Westworld doesn't yet have the characters to completely pull this off — poor James Marsden continues to play a complete cipher as Dolores's sidekick/main squeeze Teddy — but its embrace of this kind of storytelling decompression keeps it from feeling like a watered-down Game of Thrones or Lost rip-off like it often did in season one.
And where that show's tendency toward decompression — the storytelling term for taking a plot and examining it in almost microscopic detail — eventually led it down a deep, deep hole, it had a couple of really good seasons when it found a way to tell compelling character stories within the framework of reiterating the same series of events from slightly different perspectives.
Preacher can get away with this because its moments of decompression are often a lot of fun — the raucous fight involving a chainsaw that proved to be a highlight of episode two comes to mind (see, I can do the "buzzing about big moments" thing, too!) — but after four episodes, I couldn't possibly tell you what Preacher is even about.

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