
Life is full of multiple experiences, situations, and choices; both good and bad.
2. Existing concurrently in several parts of the body: Multiple myeloma is a malignant neoplasm of plasma cells in that they proliferate and invade the bone marrow which causes destruction of the bone and usually results in a pathological fracture and considerable pain of the bones.
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-ple, -pli, -plic, -plicat, -plicit, -plicate, -plication, -ply (page 5)

Some RFID readers use Time Division Multiple Access, or TDMA, meaning they read tags at different times to avoid interfering with one another.
The multiple hamartomas may appear in blood vessels, and in the lung and kidney.
Multiple hamartomas are not malignant, but they cause symptoms of an illness because of the spaces they occupy.
2. A cancer that begins in plasma cells.
Plasma cells are white blood cells which make antibodies. Antibodies are part of the immune system. They work with other parts of the immune system to help protect the body from germs and other harmful substances. Each type of plasma cell makes a different antibody.
Myeloma, like other cancers, begins in cells. Normally, cells grow and divide to form new cells as the body needs them.
When cells grow old, they die, and new cells take their place. In cancer, this orderly process goes wrong. New cells form when the body does not need them, and old cells do not die when they should. These extra cells can form a mass of tissue called a growth or tumor.
Myeloma begins when a plasma cell becomes abnormal and that abnormal cell divides to make copies of itself. The new cells divide again and again, making more and more abnormal cells. The abnormal plasma cells are myeloma cells.
In time, myeloma cells collect in the bone marrow where they may crowd out normal blood cells. Myeloma cells also collect in the solid part of the bone.
The disease is called multiple myeloma because it affects many bones. If myeloma cells collect in only one bone, the single mass is called a plasmacytoma or cancer of the plasma cells (white blood cells that produce antibodies).
As myeloma cells increase in number, they damage and weaken the bones, causing pain and often fractures. When bones are damaged, too much calcium is released into the blood, leading to loss of appetite, nausea, thirst, fatigue, muscle weakness, restlessness, and confusion.
Chemotherapy and bone marrow transplant are currently the primary treatments.
2. Several sets of terminals providing for the use of several electrodes.
2. A chronic illness caused by lesions in the white matter of the central nervous system that degenerate the myelin sheath (insulating layer surrounding vertebrate peripheral neurons), marked by a lack of muscle coordination, muscle weakness, speech problems, and abnormal neurological sensations which include: numbness, tingling, burning, prickling, and hyperesthesia (increased sensitivity), and visual impairments.
The cause of multiple sclerosis is unknown, but it is believed to be an autoimmune disorder, in which the body's immune system mistakenly attacks its own tissues as if they were foreign or not supposed to be there.
The symptoms of multiple scleroses vary, depending on which nerves of the brain and spinal cord lose their protective covers.
2. A visual perception of several images of a single object.
3. Having multiple vision; the seeing of one object as more than one.
Algorithms are used to make sure the readers attempt to read tags at different times.
Sunlight entering the top passes through successive cell barriers, each of which converts a separate portion of the spectrum into electricity, thus achieving greater total conversion efficiency of the incident light.