10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «HYDRAEMIA»
Discover the use of
hydraemia in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
hydraemia and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Stedman's Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and ...
hyaloid. hydraemia. hy-a-loid (Wa-loyd) SYN hyaline, [hyalo- + G. eidos,
resemblance] hy-a-loid ar-ter-y (hfa-loyd ar'ter-e) The terminal branch of the
primordial ophthalmic artery, which forms in the embryo an extensive ramification
in the ...
Thomas Lathrop Stedman, 2005
2
The Medical Chronicle: A Monthly Record of the Progress of ...
I have suggested the hypothesis, that in the majority of the cases at least, the low
percentage in cases without oedema was due to "simple" anaemia, in those with
oedema to anaemia plus hydraemia : in other words, that hydraemia and ...
3
Metabolism and Practical Medicine
This alteration in the blood is identical with that which was formerly expressed by
the term “ hydraemia,” a word which has since been erroneously used to express
other abnormalities of the blood, such as a simple diminution of the blood cells.
Karl Harko von Noorden, 1907
4
Australian Nurses' Dictionary
See MOLE. hydraemia(hie'dreemi· )amodificationofthe bloodin which there is an
excess of plasma in relation to the cells. A degree of hydraemia is physiological
in pregnancy. hydralazine(hie'dral 'zeen)a vaso-dilatorand antihypertensive ...
Jennie King, Rhonda Hawley, 2012
5
A treatise on the principles and practice of medicine
It is the diminution in the amount of albumen which forms the chief element in
hydraemia. Less emphasis is laid in this connection upon the loss of blood-
corpuscles, although, as has been mentioned already, anaemia and hydraemia
are ...
6
Special Report Series: National Health Insurance
hydraemia was present,- which terminated with the disappearance of the
oedema, but showed no definite relationship to the pressure, which remained at
approximately the same level, during a period in which the hydraemia fell very ...
Great Britain. Medical Research Committee, 1919
7
The Chambers Dictionary
n hydraemia or (esp NAm) hydremia (hi- lire 'mi-i; Gr haima blood) wateriness of
the blood. - adj hydragogue (hi drj-gog, -gog; Gr agogos bringing; med} removing
water or serum. — n a drug with that effect. n hydrangea (M-dran'ja or ...
8
Friedberger & Fröhner's veterinary pathology
General remarks — Hydraemia of sheep — Hydremia of cattle. General Remarks.
— There are three forms of hydraemia : (1) A mechanical form caused by
engorgement of blood due to heart failure, and to diseases of the lungs, kidneys
and ...
Franz Friedberger, Eugen Fröhner, Matthew Horace Hayes, 1913
9
A Treatise on the Principles and Practice of Medicine: ...
By hydraemia is understood a relative or an absolute increase in the amount of
water in the blood in proportion to the solid ingredients. It is the diminution in the
amount of albumen which forms the chief element in hydraemia. L*ss emphasis
is ...
10
Physiological chemistry
The causes of hydraemia, that is to say of a great excess of water in the blood,
and especially in the serum, are sufficiently obvious from the preceding
observations. Hydraemia, like dropsy, is only the consequence of an abnormal
state of ...
Karl Gotthelf Lehmann, 1855