What's the difference between copaiba and oleoresin?
Copaiba
Definition:
(n.) Alt. of Copaiva
Example Sentences:
Oleoresin
Definition:
(n.) A natural mixture of a terebinthinate oil and a resin.
(n.) A liquid or semiliquid preparation extracted (as from capsicum, cubebs, or ginger) by means of ether, and consisting of fixed or volatile oil holding resin in solution.
Example Sentences:
(1) Sudan black B stains oleoresin blue-black in epoxy-embedded material as well as in living tissue.
(2) In the first method a mixture of 70% of gum turpentine and 30% oleoresin is used as the main solution.
(3) A fixation procedure is proposed which preserves significantly more oleoresin in situ.
(4) The lipid soluble plant material known as oleoresins has proved useful both for diagnosis and treatment.
(5) This study reports seven Danish patients treated for many years under the diagnosis of photodermatitis, who eventually proved to suffer from Compsoitae oleoresin dermatitis.
(6) This case is believed to represent a contact dermatitis to oleoresins of Compositae plants; inhalants as a cause of systemic aggravation are not likely to be important in this patient.
(7) In addition to showing a low frequency of DH to trichophytin, the infected group also showed a significant reduction in their reactions to intradermal mumps skin test antigen and to a Rhus oleoresin patch test.
(8) Of sixty-nine examples of the photosensitivity dermatitis and actinic reticuloid syndrome, nine were found to be allergically sensitive to chrysanthemum oleoresin extract.
(9) To assess the possibility of interference from spice volatiles, the procedure was applied to 17 different spice oleoresins from 3 different manufacturers.
(10) Circulating and in situ lymphocyte subsets and Langerhans cells in four patients with compositae oleoresin dermatitis and increased ultraviolet A sensitivity before and during treatment with azathioprine were estimated.
(11) A quantitative gas chromatographic (GC) method is described for the determination of residual methylene chloride, ethylene dichloride, and trichloroethylene in spice oleoresins.
(12) Contact allergic sensitivity to oleoresin extracts from Compositae plants was found to be usually present in individuals suffering from the photosensitivity dermatitis and actinic reticuloid syndrome.
(13) A pinene cyclase was shown to be the major wound-inducible enzyme directly responsible for oleoresin monoterpene formation and was tentatively identified as a 62-kDa protein by SDS-PAGE.
(14) Pratically all oleoresin present in resin ducts and intercellular spaces, and much of that contained in epithelial and ray cells, is extracted in preparatory procedure for electron microscopy.
(15) The Sudan black B staining properties of oleoresin are similar to those of lipid, but it can be distinguished from tannin, which stains brown.
(16) Oleoresins of the tree balsam are thought to be the most likely cause of the symptoms designated as Christmas tree allergy.
(17) The production of the different forms of this spice as ground, specialty seasonings, and as the concentrated oleoresins through technologically advanced processes, proposed newer products, the standard to control quality of the different products, world production, trade, and prospects are reviewed in detail in this, Part II.
(18) Four patients with severe contact dermatitis resulting from compositae oleoresin were found to have increased sensitivity to ultraviolet light.
(19) Recoveries from oleoresins spiked at 30, 15, and 6 ppm ranged from 93 to 102%.
(20) The production of the different pungency forms, the processed seasonings, and the concentrated oleoresins, through technologically advanced processes and in specified standard grades, are critically reviewed.