What's the difference between adenose and glandulous?
Adenose
Definition:
(a.) Like a gland; full of glands; glandulous; adenous.
Example Sentences:
(1) Diaphanoscopy showed a high sensitivity towards haemorrhagic cysts, early age fibroadenomas, adenosic dysplasia, haematomas as well as carcinomas.
(2) Multivariate discriminant analysis using these two variables correctly classified 86% of the cases, with three adenoses and two carcinomas misclassified.
(3) While previous experiments have led us to conclude that the epinephrine receptor is uncoupled from the adenylate cyclase, it seems that the adenosine receptor is either precoupled to the enzyme or forms a long-lived intermediate of adenosing-receptor-enzyme complex.
(4) Hematoxylin and eosin stained paraffin sections of 18 sclerosing adenoses and 18 tubular carcinomas were studied using a TAS Plus image analysis system.
(5) Validity of the discriminant rules was supported by classification using measurements from a separate, independent set of cases (ten sclerosing adenoses and nine tubular carcinomas).
(6) This technique is suggested when epithelial proliferative pictures in adenose-cystic mastopathy seem to reach serious histopathological levels.
Glandulous
Definition:
(a.) Containing glands; consisting of glands; pertaining to glands; resembling glands.
Example Sentences:
(1) Differences were observed in the affinity of some lectins to the epithelium of the intercryptal lining of the rabbit appendix, to the epithelium hemming the glandules and crypts of the domes of Peyer's patches.
(2) First prevention is respect of the frail glandules and their vascularisation, obliging a particular, precise and bloodness surgery.
(3) The bundles of the muscle fibres passing in two planes perpendicular to each other alternate with stripes of the interstitium, seromucinous glandules and connective tissue septa with elastic fibres separating the groups of cross-striated muscle fibres of various diameters.