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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Analeptic

Analeptic \An`a*lep"tic\, a. [Gr. ? restorative: cf. F. analeptique. See Analepsis.] (Med.) Restorative; giving strength after disease. -- n. A restorative.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
analeptic

1660s, "restorative, strengthening" (in medicine), from Greek analeptikos "restorative," from analambanein "to receive, take up in one's hands" (see analemma). Related: Analeptical (1610s).

Wiktionary
analeptic

a. 1 That restores or stimulates health. 2 Of or relating to analepsis (form of flashback). n. A restorative or stimulative medication, especially one used to overcome depression.

WordNet
analeptic
  1. adj. stimulating the central nervous system; "an analeptic drug stimulates the central nervous system"

  2. n. a medication used as a stimulant to the central nervous system

Wikipedia
Analeptic

An analeptic, in medicine, is a central nervous system stimulant. The term analeptic typically refers to respiratory analeptics (for example, doxapram). Analeptics are central nervous system stimulants that include a wide variety of medications used to treat depression, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ( ADHD), and respiratory depression. Analeptics can also be used as convulsants, with low doses causing patients to experience heightened awareness, restlessness and rapid breathing. The primary medical use of these drugs is as an anesthetic recovery tool or to treat emergency respiratory depression. Other drugs of this category are prethcamide, pentylenetetrazole, and nikethamide. Nikethamide is now withdrawn due to risk of convulsions. Analeptics have recently been used to better understand the treatment of a barbiturate overdose. Through the use of agents researchers were able to treat obtundation and respiratory depression.

Usage examples of "analeptic".

But it might be better if you got him to a vet and had him given an analeptic, a respiratory stimulant.

It must have a secret ingredient, she reckons, that adds to her sluggish blood a squirt of analeptic or even a stimulant.

The frequent vomiting made it impossible to administer remedies by the stomach, and, in spite of hypodermic injections and external application of analeptics, the boy died fifty hours after operation.