What's the difference between colliquate and liquefy?
Colliquate
Definition:
(v. t. & i.) To change from solid to fluid; to make or become liquid; to melt.
Example Sentences:
(1) In the cases of colliquation without infection a close observation of the patient is necessary to choose the time for surgery.
(2) Wavy fiber and colliquative myocytolysis of non-specific ischemic lesions were seen only microscopically in both peripheral and subendocardial areas of infarcted foci.
(3) In the case of deep injuries primary necrectomy is recommended, firstly in colliquation necrosis, as well as in the cases, in which the absorption of the poisonous substance is to be feared of.
(4) Colliquative necrosis with cavitation was observed in middle-aged cases from the 3rd infarction day.
(5) Under both conditions--ageing and bleeding--the hepatocyte death (apoptosis and colliquative necrosis) occurs resulting from the progression of granular and hydropic degeneration.
(6) Our material presents two patterns of white matter lesions in the brain of newborns dying with the clinical diagnosis of intrauterine or perinatal pathology: (1) classical periventricular ischemic infarction resulting in coagulative necrosis and (2) diffuse periventricular colliquative necrosis, in some cases involving the center of the cerebral convolutions.
(7) Only in two bacteriological evidence was provided of the presence of mycobacteria tuberculosis in the preoperative punctate from colliquated lymph nodes but not in material obtained from the nodes.
(8) The structural basis of glycolic nephrosis and hepatosis was hydropic dystrophy of the nephrothelium of proximal and distal tubules and of hepatocytes of the centers of the liver lobules with outcome into colliquative necrosis through ballon dystrophy.
(9) Colliquative myocytolysis, in which edematous vacuolization with dissolution of myofibrils is the main early finding, without hypercontraction, anomalous bands, and myofibrillar rhexis.
(10) At 20Gy, the PSK group showed better histopathological response than the control group according to the Ooboshi-Shimosato classification, and the PSK group showed a smaller giant cell formation and more colliquative necrosis.
(11) Morphological studies showed that the resulting necrotization is represented most frequently by coagulation necrosis, less frequently by colliquating necrosis.
(12) Alterations characteristic of water metabolism disturbances (edema) up to the coagulation or colliquative necrosis development of individual cells are revealed in the muscular layer.
(13) The latter can be manifested as a monocellular colliquational necrosis, or as apoptosis.
(14) In the senile group the beginning of tissue breakdown was noted on the 5th day, but colliquative necrosis with cavitation was found on the 11th infarction day.
(15) Nowadays the clinical picture of the tuberculosis of the skin restricts essentially to the classical forms of the lupous, verrucous and colliquative tubervulosis of the skin, the specific etiology and pathogenesis of which are ascertained.
(16) Present-day clinico-epidemiological features are outlined: reduction in official cases, reversal of the ratio between colitis and hepatitis (the latter is on the increase), disappearance of acute dysenteric forms, less tendency to colliquative development in cases where the liver is involved, an involvement which is seen most frequently with an atypical chronic-type imprint.
(17) The following stages are distinguished in the progressing phase of pancreonecrosis: hemorrhagic pancreonecrosis when the proteolytic enzymes provoke a colliquation necrosis of the acinar tissue, fibrinoid necrosis of vascular walls and disturbances of the intravascular hemorheology resulting in the enhancement of destructive processes and hemorrhagic inhibition of tissues; fat pancreonecrosis in which lipolytic enzymes lead to the coagulation necrosis of the acinar and fat tissue while a non-completed proteolysis of necrotic tissues stipulates the intensity of the reactive inflammation.
(18) In the light of their personal histological documents, they emphasize the absolute biological inertia of this suture material, a property which, together with the capacity of not suffering the colliquative action of germs, means that multifilament stainless steel wires can be given full rights of domicile in colon surgery.
(19) retrahens capitis collique (RCCQ), testocervicis, and longus colli.
(20) The central parts of the necrosis become colliquative and are demarcted by leucocytes.
Liquefy
Definition:
(v. t.) To convert from a solid form to that of a liquid; to melt; to dissolve; and technically, to melt by the sole agency of heat.
(v. i.) To become liquid.
Example Sentences:
(1) About 35 million were egg-laying hens that provided 80% of the eggs for the breaker market – eggs broken then liquefied, dried or frozen to be used in processed foods like mayonnaise and pancake mixes, or sold to bakeries to make cakes, cookies and other products.
(2) The BBMs between Bosch and Rodriguez include references to code names for numerous banned substances, such as: Gummies (troches containing testosterone); Pink Food or Pink Cream (a transdermal cream containing testosterone); Blue or PM Cream (a transdermal cream containing testosterone); Liquid Soup or Red Liquid (a melted or liquefied form of a troche containing testosterone); and Cojete or Rocket (a subcutaneous syringe containing, among other things IGF1, [insulin growth factor].
(3) Results of the demonstration tests show that the system, which uses liquefied propane, successfully removed PCBs from contaminated sediments in New Bedford Harbor.
(4) These results indicate that if a clot in the subdural space causes the formation of neomembrane, and excessive fibrinolysis occurs, the subdural clot would not only liquefy, but also enlarge by continuous hemorrhage from the neomembrane.
(5) The vitreous between and above the vitreous-retinal attachments is always liquefied and structureless.
(6) Copper IUDs work by causing a general inflammatory response, reducing implantation, and by liquefying endometrial mucopolysaccharides thereby decreasing sperm transport and metabolism.
(7) The mechanism proposed for the passage of ghost cells to the anterior chamber is through a defect in the anterior hyaloid face, created as the vitreous liquefies and degenerates.
(8) It was not differentiated from C. perfringens in the nitrite motility test, but could be distinguished by its inability to liquefy gelatin.
(9) The lowest level of amylase did not alter these parameters significantly and was sufficient to liquefy 80 per cent of the viscous semen samples.
(10) Read more Reputex says the detailed rules confirm none of Australia’s top 20 emitting facilities – including brown coal-fired power stations Loy Yang A and B and Hazelwood, and new liquefied natural gas processing facilities such as Wheatstone, Gorgon, Itchys and Pluto – will be forced to reduce emissions.
(11) In addition, pepsin or pancrex V could be used to liquefy solidified feed.
(12) In inactive cases, the vitreous was often liquefied.
(13) He points out that if all the CO2 that is likely to be pumped into the air over the next 20 years were captured and liquefied it would fill Lake Michigan.
(14) It was found that the parts of the ejaculate taking more time to liquefy possessed higher concentration of protein than those of the parts liquefied earlier, a relation also appeared to exist with the whole ejaculates.
(15) It consists of drilling three or four small holes into the paraffin block, sealing this block at the extremity of a glass holder and, from the other extremity of the holder attached to a rubber hose, aspirating a liquefied mixture of charcoal-paraffin to fill these cylindrical holes.
(16) If you handle the butter too much with warm hands, it will liquefy.
(17) The source of the emboli was apparently a localized liquefying hematoma with necrotic muscle and fat in the left retroperitoneal space.
(18) Aliquots of the liquefying seminal fluid were removed at specific time points and further liquefaction inhibited with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS).
(19) In supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC), the mobile phase is a gas (e.g., carbon dioxide) maintained at its supercritical state--that is, above its critical temperature and pressure, above which it cannot be liquefied even with further increases in applied pressure.
(20) Human ejaculates after collecting as a whole, were almost equally divided into five fractions through liquefaction known vesicular, prostatic and testicular components were measured in these subsequently liquefied fractions.