What's the difference between bloodless and exsanguinous?
Bloodless
Definition:
(a.) Destitute of blood, or apparently so; as, bloodless cheeks; lifeless; dead.
(a.) Not attended with shedding of blood, or slaughter; as, a bloodless victory.
(a.) Without spirit or activity.
Example Sentences:
(1) 2 The use of labetalol intravenously produced hypotension and a bloodless operating field in patients undergoing plastic surgery and in those undergoing radical surgery for the removal of carcinoma.
(2) It is then suggested that this method bloodless drainage may be successfully carried out in cases of accidental lesion of the oesophagus without perforation of parietal pleura, caused by peroral endoscopic manoeuvres or dilatation of oesophageal anatomical and functional strictures.
(3) With careful refinements in the pump oxygenator and a nonblood prime, bloodless open heart surgery may be performed almost routinely.
(4) The suture described is simple, easy, quick, bloodless, anchored to three points in the cervical musculature and is passed deep to the cervical blood vessels.
(5) Always performed under local anesthetic with a practically bloodless field, this surgery never induced any general complication.
(6) Canine gastroduodenopancreatic blocks were isolated and perfused ex vivo with oxygenated bloodless fluorocarbon emulsion.
(7) The studies were carried out under the conditions of acute and chronic experiment as the arteria pressure was recorded by blood and bloodless method.
(8) Things start getting out of control when Rocket's younger gang target the clients of a sleazy motel and the raid, intended to be bloodless, becomes a killing spree.
(9) Endotoxin induced large increases in pulmonary artery pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance, alveolar-arterial O2 gradient, alveolar dead-space ventilation, postmortem gravimetric lung weight of bloodless lung, albumin and total protein concentrations in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, and the number of neutrophils recovered from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid.
(10) Our results demonstrate that bloodless cardiac surgery on bypass is feasible in children as shown in this special group of children of Jehovah's Witnesses.
(11) Red storm Lucas’s films have always been rather bloodless.
(12) There appears to be no evidence supporting the idea that bloodless hypothermic perfusion permanently damages human kidneys or increases the chances of rejection.
(13) The carbon dioxide laser facilitates resection by providing a bloodless field, and reduces the possibility of viral seeding of the conjunctiva by sterilizing the operative site and sealing the lymphatics.
(14) As an aid to accomplishing a safe and bloodless dissection, these vessels have been described--the deep inferior epigastric vein, the iliopubic vein, the rectusial vein, the retropubic vein and the communicating rectusio-epigastric vein, and their relationship into a venous circle.
(15) We developed a novel method which enables bloodless exposure of the levator veli palatini muscle in rat in order to investigate the physiological properties of this muscle.
(16) Performance of a vascular anastomosis or repair requires meticulous, gentle technique and a bloodless operative field.
(17) From these results two equations were derived, one for each of the upper and lower limbs, which give the minimum tourniquet pressures to produce bloodless fields.
(18) Deaths from uncontrollable hemorrhage might be prevented by arresting the circulation under protective hypothermia to allow resuscitative surgery to repair these injuries in a bloodless field.
(19) The concentration of cefotiam (CTM) in the serum and the bloodless lung with time is discussed.
(20) The use of a bloodless solution and high pressure to accelerate microporous membrane oxygenator (MMO) failure was investigated.
Exsanguinous
Definition:
(a.) See Exsanguious.
Example Sentences:
(1) Exsanguination of lung donors decreased the concentration of circulating PMN significantly, and they virtually disappeared from the perfusate within minutes after start of lung perfusion.
(2) Predominantly during the first year of experience, 10 dogs died as a consequence of technical problems such as exsanguinations after 1 mm.
(3) Following the five-day infusion, rats were exsanguinated under ether anesthesia and mononuclear cells (MNC) harvested from the peripheral blood.
(4) However, an increase in fluid volume of the extravascular space accelerated postmortem glycolysis in pigs exsanguinated under stress.
(5) We determined ethane production rates in rats (group I) ventilated with hydrocarbon-free air (HFA) before and after exsanguination.
(6) We studied the relationship between bronchoconstriction and the degree of trapping in saline-filled lungs isolated from guinea pigs postmortem after rapid exsanguination.
(7) Once diffuse pulmonary infiltration and massive hemoptysis appear, the prognosis is poor; death from pulmonary exsanguination is likely to occur.
(8) Thus, level of free water in muscle at exsanguination may control postmortem metabolism regardless of other antemortem extra- and intramuscular factors.
(9) A correlation of the data obtained in bio-histoenzymatic studies on the liver condition after various terms of compression of the hepato-duodenal ligament allowed a conclusion as to irreversible changes in the liver after 50 minutes of exsanguination.
(10) The conclusion is drawn that, to avoid these two complications, arthroscopists should routinely exsanguinate the extremity and inflate the pneumatic tourniquet when using this type of pump.
(11) Acute, exsanguinating hemorrhagic cystitis secondary to cyclophosphamide therapy, radiation therapy, or an infiltrating bladder tumor may be managed successfully with intravesical Formalin therapy.
(12) Penetrating injuries to the common and internal carotid artery carry the unique potential for irreversible neurologic damage, respiratory collapse, and exsanguination.
(13) Diagnosis must be established before exsanguination occurs.
(14) Despite the array of hemorrhage models, animal species and experimental designs, it seems clear that naloxone with or without volume replacement has no place in the treatment of rapidly exsanguinating traumatized patients.
(15) Four lambs were exsanguinated by severing the subclavian artery while simultaneously infusing intravenous saline solution to mimic resuscitation attempts.
(16) An increased understanding of the physiologic importance of splenic function must now be weighed against the life-threatening risk of exsanguinating splenic hemorrhage.
(17) The bleeding was performed in different ways towards complete exsanguination or into a reservoir kept at a constant pressure of 35 mmHg.
(18) On Days 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11, three virus-inoculated and two uninoculated controls were anesthetized, exsanguinated, and decapitated, and the lower jaw was removed.
(19) At various times up to 72 hours after injection mice were exsanguinated and splenectomized.
(20) The duration of the observed EEG silence implies that, from the ethical point of view, exsanguination might safely be performed within 1 min after the moment when the animal is removed from the high concentration CO2.