What's the difference between belch and extravasate?
Belch
Definition:
(v. i.) To eject or throw up from the stomach with violence; to eruct.
(v. i.) To eject violently from within; to cast forth; to emit; to give vent to; to vent.
(v. i.) To eject wind from the stomach through the mouth; to eructate.
(v. i.) To issue with spasmodic force or noise.
(n.) The act of belching; also, that which is belched; an eructation.
(n.) Malt liquor; -- vulgarly so called as causing eructation.
Example Sentences:
(1) Facebook Twitter Pinterest A bus belching smoke in Bogotá Pretty dirty.
(2) After this operation symptoms such as dysphagia, inability to belch and vomit, and gas bloating are frequently reported in the literature.
(3) It describes the advantages of maternal milk by attending the basic principles that should govern the children's feeding, the importance of free scheme breast-feeding to emotional development, as well as ventral and right side-lying position and belching to the prevention of accidents.
(4) Air pollution was not the most immediate of problems but the canopy of smoke that belched from industrial and domestic chimneys began to attract attention.
(5) The rapid acidification is caused by the massive amounts of carbon dioxide belched from chimneys and exhausts that dissolve in the ocean.
(6) Good results included the absence of reflux symptoms, pleasant swallowing, the preservation of a normal capacity for belching and vomiting, minimal flatulence, and a comfortable incision.
(7) The vehicle had started belching white smoke and making "popping noises".
(8) As the volcano continued to belch smoke above the town, people dusted off the ashes and rebuilt the North Kivu capital.
(9) Both controlled release metoclopramide and high and low dose domperidone significantly reduced symptoms of belching, flatulence, distension, heartburn, regurgitation, reflux, nausea and vomiting compared to baseline.
(10) We investigated the occurrence of new constipation, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, visible blood in stool, abdominal pain, black stools, belching, and flatus in 324 outpatients following upper or lower gastrointestinal tract barium procedures.
(11) The diagnosis of myocardial infarction by the nature of the resultant pain or discomfort was unreliable in contrast to the associated symptoms sweating, nausea, belching and vomiting.
(12) It takes away the authenticity.” Mau Mau was subject to one of the most high-profile acts of Olympic censorship, when his legal street painting of a zombie Ronald McDonald, clad in the logos of the Olympic sponsors and running with a Coke-branded torch belching clouds of black smoke, was hastily painted over by Ealing council .
(13) Subjective ratings of the severity of abdominal cramping, belching, flatulence, and diarrhea were lower during the first eight hours after challenge in lactase-treated subjects; ratings for bloating were lower during the next eight hours.
(14) Belching and passage of flatus were the most frequently reported symptoms after barium enema, both single- and double-contrast.
(15) Twelve have now been built, their slender white poles and delicate blades dwarfed by the massive cooling towers of Drax power station belching clouds of steam into the Yorkshire sky – old and new energy in striking juxtaposition.
(16) The appropriately titled Elektrownia Belchatow – a massive coal-fired power station – belched out 30,862,792 tonnes of CO 2 last year and by 2010 the whole generating facility will have grown by 20%.
(17) The time and pressure profiles of transient lower esophageal sphincter relaxations induced by gastric insufflation were similar to those relaxations seen with spontaneous postprandial gastroesophageal reflux and belching in dogs.
(18) Compared with normal subjects, achalasia patients were significantly less likely to have an esophageal belch for all volumes tested and were more likely to have an increase rather than a decrease in upper esophageal sphincter pressure in response to air injection.
(19) Reflux episodes were usually associated with belching.
(20) Eruptions belch from impacts of Grad rockets and tank shells across swaths of this dun-coloured city.
Extravasate
Definition:
(v. t.) To force or let out of the proper vessels or arteries, as blood.
Example Sentences:
(1) Significant increases in the extravasation of dye were observed in both animal groups sensitized with IgG1 and IgG2 antibodies.
(2) Moreover, 8 of 10 cats in the 10% HAES group showed extravasation of red cells.
(3) To determine if monokines might play a pathogenic role in this model, the present study evaluated the effects of a murine monokine preparation enriched in IL-1 bioactivity on selected events characterizing the early pneumotoxic response to monocrotaline, including pulmonary edema and protein extravasation, pulmonary vascular hyperreactivity, and enhanced lung tissue activity of the rate-limiting enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis, ornithine decarboxylase (ODC).
(4) Perforations of the left atrial or ventricular wall and extravasations of contrast medium during transseptal left heart catheterisation or angiocardiography can be eliminated by replacing the normally used transseptal catheters by Pigtail-catheters.
(5) Mitomycin C extravasation produces a painful indolent ulcer that does not have any tendency to heal.
(6) When given 30 min after acetic acid instillation SC-41930 prevented the rise in myeloperoxidase and dye extravasation observed in the acetic acid inflammed tissue.
(7) The inhibitory action of nicotine on plasma extravasation may contribute, in part, to the reported increased severity of arthritis in individuals who smoke.
(8) Two normal variants that could be confused with abnormalities were noted: (a) the featureless appearance of the duodenal bulb may be mistaken for extravasation, and (b) contrastmaterial filling of the proximal jejunal loop at an end-to-end anastomosis with retained invaginated pancreas may be mistaken for intussusception.
(9) Many instances of such extravasation in this age group have been described with lower urinary tract obstructions.
(10) injection become transiently embolized; within hours, however, they begin to extravasate from the blood capillaries.
(11) Analyses of local blood flow and albumin extravasation were made 7 days after implantation.
(12) These brains did not show any macroscopically evident Evans blue-albumin extravasation.
(13) There are a few reports of spontaneous peripelvic extravasation caused by a malignant tumor in Japanese literature.
(14) It results in extravasation of fibrinogen that clots to form fibrin, which serves as a provisional matrix and promotes angiogenesis and scar formation.
(15) The initial step in extravasation of neutrophils (polymorphonuclear leukocytes [PMNs]) to the extravascular space is adherence to the endothelium.
(16) This involvement is manifest in increased permeability of these vessels to plasma proteins and in highly augmented lymphatic drainage of the extravasated proteins from the renal interstitium.
(17) When administered at high concentrations (1 mg kg-1) methiothepin and metergoline decreased plasma protein extravasation in rat dura mater.
(18) Dacryocystography was done in 15 patients immediately following the lateral osteotomy, and there was no evidence of lacrimal sac injury or extravasation of the dye in any patient.
(19) who showed a direct relation between protein extravasation and the increase of water in extracellular vasogenic edema.
(20) The configuration of pigtail DSA catheters should reduce or prevent damage to vessel wall due to extravasation.