ETYMOLOGY OF THE WORD THERMAESTHESIA
From New Latin, from therm- + Greek aisthēsis feeling.
10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «THERMAESTHESIA»
Discover the use of
thermaesthesia in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
thermaesthesia and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Thermaesthesia : To the data of warmth and cold the same aplies as to those of
pressure. We distinguish between, e.g., the warm body which "touches" us or
warmth coming "from without," in the case of radiant heat, or when, in an
experiment, ...
2
The Origins of English Words: A Discursive Dictionary of ...
... dhes theorem: dhes theory: dhes therapeutic: dhar theravada: aus there: t, to
thereomorphic: ghuer Thereva: ghuer theriac: ghuer therianthropic: ghuer, nert
Theridiidae: ghuer therm: guher thermae: guher thermaesthesia: guher thermal: ...
Joseph Twadell Shipley, 2009
3
Blackwell's Nursing Dictionary
... A device for measuring small changes in temperature. thermoaesthesia (ther'
mo-es-tha'zi'a): The ability to recognize sensations of heat and cold and to
distinguish between them. Also called thermaesthesia. thermoanaesthesia ...
Dawn Freshwater, Sian Masiln-Prothero, 2013
4
Hypertension and Brain Mechanisms
During the 'cold pressor test', immersion into ice-water of the left hand (in which
thermaesthesia was unimpaired) showed an increase of the systolic pressure
from 170 to 225 mm Hg (Fig. 2). Immersion of the right hand, in which there was
no ...
W. De Jong, A. P. Provoost, Alvin Philip Shapiro, 2011
The area of analgesia and thermanesthesia following resection of a number of
contiguous roots is always larger than the area of tactile anaesthesia. Sometimes
the resection of two contiguous roots produces analgesia and thermaesthesia, ...
6
The Dictionary of Psychology
See ANTHROPOMORPHISM. thermaesthesia thermoesthesia thermal
discrimination An ahility to detect changes in temperatures. Although some
animals. for example. snakes. are ahle to locate prey hy differences of a fraction
of a degree ...
7
Scottish Medical and Surgical Journal
... forearm and back of the hand (Brain, January 1905, for photographs of the
hand). Stimulation with cotton wool (for mere contact), with all forms of heat and
cold (thermaesthesia), the most widely-separated compass-points, the prick of a
pin, ...
8
Acta physiologica Scandinavica
Many early authors were in favour of bladder thermaesthesia (Griffiths 1894-95,
Schwarz 1915, McLelland & Goodell 1943, Retief 1950), while the sceptics
maintained that the thermaesthesia is confined to the distal urethra innervated by
...
9
International Classification
THERMAESTHESIA - the cognitive process taking place (consciously or not) in
the linguistic mind of the individual when he/she perceives or comprehends a
word; a process of energy consumption in "warming" any part of the word nature;
...
10
Knowledge Organization
THERMAESTHESIA - the cognitive process taking place (consciously or not) in
the linguistic mind of the individual when he/she perceives or comprehends a
word; a process of energy consumption in "warming" anypart of the word nature;
...