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A condition in which insufficient or no oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged on a ventilatory basis
Answer for the clue "A condition in which insufficient or no oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged on a ventilatory basis ", 8 letters:
asphyxia
Alternative clues for the word asphyxia
Word definitions for asphyxia in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 The loss of consciousness due to the interruption of breathing and consequent anoxia. Asphyxia can be result from choking, drowning, electric shock, injury. 2 The loss of consciousness due to the body's inability to deliver oxygen to its tissues, either ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Asphyxia or asphyxiation is a condition of severely deficient supply of oxygen to the body that arises from abnormal breathing . An example of asphyxia is choking . Asphyxia causes generalized hypoxia , which affects primarily the tissues and organs. There ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1706, "stoppage of pulse, absence of pulse," from Modern Latin, from Greek asphyxia "stopping of the pulse," from a- "not" (see a- (3)) + sphyzein "to throb." Obsolete in its original sense; the transferred sense of "suffocation" is from 1778, but it is ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Asphyxia \As*phyx"i*a\, Asphyxy \As*phyx"y\, n. [NL. asphyxia, fr. Gr. ?; 'a priv. + ? to throb, beat.] (Med.) Apparent death, or suspended animation; the condition which results from interruption of respiration, as in suffocation or drowning, or the ...
Usage examples of asphyxia.
But it was asphyxia, it was immediate death, if the result of this last attempt should prove fruitless.
In fact, two dangers were to be feared when Dick Sand should be going over the cataract: asphyxia by the water, and asphyxia by the air.
In these conditions, it seems that a man would have some chance of escaping the double asphyxia, even in descending the cataracts of a Niagara.
There was some livor mortis, or lividity, that had settled into her thighs and buttocks, and the lividity was a deep purple color, which would be consistent with asphyxia, which in turn was consistent with the rope around her neck.
He may have twisted the rope to get her undivided attention, he may even have sexually stimulated her while he was causing sexual asphyxia, a trick he may have learned from her .
The glottis may be inflamed, and if there is danger of asphyxia, tracheotomy may have to be performed.
The Ephemerides records a birth as having occurred during asphyxia, and also one during an epileptic attack.
In his later statistics Morisani gives 55 cases with 2 maternal deaths and 1 infantile death, while Zweifel reports 14 cases from the Leipzig clinic with no maternal death and 2 fetal deaths, 1 from asphyxia and 1 from pneumonia, two days after birth.
Schenck details the history of a case in which the pulse ceased for three days and asphyxia was almost total, but the patient eventually recovered.
Hippocrates speaks of asphyxia from a serpent which had crawled into the mouth.
Taylor relates the history of a case of asphyxia in which he produced a successful issue by extracting one gallon of blood from his patient during twelve hours.
This man died in 1802 at the age of fifty, asphyxia being the precursor of death.
It was while going afoot to South Asphyxia, the home of my childhood, that I found both my parents on their way to the Hill.
After release from prison, his crimes escalated to the murder of three young women by asphyxia.
In the cases of strangulation, or asphyxia, one always sees petechial hemorrhages on the conjunctiva.