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Blood circulation problem, some limb being broken
Answer for the clue "Blood circulation problem, some limb being broken ", 8 letters:
embolism
Alternative clues for the word embolism
Word definitions for embolism in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. an insertion into a calendar [syn: intercalation ] occlusion of a blood vessel by an embolus (a loose clot or air bubble or other particle)
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE pulmonary ▪ They said she had pulmonary embolism and 7 days later, she died. ▪ One patient in the control group died of pulmonary embolism . ▪ Doctors were forced to amputate her right leg, but Jennifer died when ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context pathology English) An obstruction or occlusion of an artery by an embolus, that is by a blood clot, air bubble or other matter that has been transported by the blood stream. 2 The insertion or intercalation of days into the calendar in order ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Embolism \Em"bo*lism\, n. [L. embolismus, from Gr. ? to throw or put in, insert; cf. ? intercalated: cf. F. embolisme. See Emblem .] Intercalation; the insertion of days, months, or years, in an account of time, to produce regularity; as, the embolism of ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
The embolism in Christian liturgy (from Greek ἐμβολισμός, an interpolation) is a short prayer said or sung after the Lord's Prayer . It functions "like a marginal gloss" upon the final petition of the Lord's Prayer (". . . deliver us from evil"), amplifying ...
Usage examples of embolism.
Fortunately, such vigorous effort also diminished the likelihood of embolisms forming in the legs.
Microxerography could detect even the smallest embolisms, but such dangers still had to be excised.
Air embolism was a feared complication that at times occurred no matter what one did, but the fact that it occurred so often and at an increasing frequency to Ballantine was always ignored.
If the needle goes a little too far, penetrates the lung, and if an air bubble then happens to be forced into a blood vessel and manages to travel all the way back to the heart without being absorbed, it is possible though extremely unlikely to get a sort of vapor lock in the valves of your heart-air embolism, the doctors call it.
If the needle goes a little too far, penetrates the lung, and if an air bubble then happens to be forced into a blood vessel and manages to travel all the way back to the heart without being absorbed, it is possible though extremely unlikely to get a sort of vapor lock in the valves of your heart - air embolism, the doctors call it.
There's no sense in any of us getting an air embolism after coming this far.
You could end up with an air embolism in your bloodstream that could conceivably kill you.
He swam upward, using strong, even strokes with hands and feet, exhaling in tiny spurts so the expanding gases in his lungs would not rupture the capillaries and force bubbles directly into his bloodstream, causing an air embolism.
That bad not been an experiment but an emergency rescue, and though the subject had been partly paralyzed by an air embolism, he had survived.
Those are such ailments as hardening of the arteries, coronary heart disease, embolisms, and almost all the many forms of cancer-diseases where one or another body mechanism suddenly goes haywire, without any visible cause.
Those are such ailments as hardening of the arteries, coronary heart disease, embolisms, and almost all the many forms of cancerdiseases where one or another body mechanism suddenly goes haywire, without any visible cause.
A fat embolism formed at the site of one of these breaks, passed up into his heart, and then apparently crossed over from one side of his heart to the other through a small congenital hole.
What was more, she could shoot him full of nightmarish narcotics with her built-in hyposprays, or else extend the needles from the fingernails of her other hand and give him a dose of bioengineered glandular secretions that would give him a cerebral embolism, fry his nerve synapses, and stop his heart, all at the same time.
All those Caesareans have, however, increased the mother's risk of death, hemorrhage, infection, pulmonary embolism, and Mendelson's syndrome.
In preliminary tests on human subjects, HGV-5 failed to dissolve clots in either myocardial infarctions or pulmonary embolisms.