What's the difference between coryza and lochia?

Coryza


Definition:

  • (n.) Nasal catarrh.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Inactivated infectious coryza vaccines containing different adjuvants were administered to 6-week-old chickens as a single dose containing 10(8) colony-forming units of Haemophilus paragallinarum HP31.
  • (2) The Kl challenges in the two sensitive patients precipitated urticaria, angioedema, polymyalgias, conjunctivitis, and coryza.
  • (3) Furthermore, it is proposed that the term turkey coryza be used to refer to the disease induced by this bacterium.
  • (4) Six laboratory experiments were designed to determine whether poults infected with the nonpathogenic Bordetella avium-like (BAL) bacteria would develop immunity to B. avium (BA), the causative agent of turkey coryza.
  • (5) Clinical studies indicated that the most frequent complaints with 229E infections were sore throat, coryza and cough, and the most frequent findings were pharyngeal injection, coryza and fever.
  • (6) Drug kinetics and residue elimination data of a sulphachloropyridazine-trimethoprim preparation were compared using infectious coryza-affected (IC) fowl and healthy chickens.
  • (7) Three Hpg strains were isolated from different chickens affected with infectious coryza.
  • (8) On the basis of own experiences and experimental data obtained in the Landesveterinäruntersuchungsamt Koblenz, pigeon coryza apparently is a symptom rather than a clearly defined disease.
  • (9) Strains of Bisgaard taxon 31, isolated from chickens in South Africa suffering from a respiratory disease with clinical symptoms and gross lesions similar to infectious coryza, showed great phenotypical similarities with Haemophilus paragallinarum infection except for NAD requirement, beta-galactosidase activity and maltose fermentation.
  • (10) Monovalent and combination bacterins of HG and MG were tested to determine their efficacy against chronic complicated infectious coryza.
  • (11) The results show that type B strains are pathogenic and constitute a distinct immunotype and thus a Coryza vaccine should contain three serotypes to obtain a broader protection against all serotypes.
  • (12) There was no correlation between season of coryza or changes in season and the onset of nasopharyngitis, except for a slightly greater occurrence during mid summer and mid winter.
  • (13) The epidemiology of 16 cases of infectious coryza, an upper respiratory tract disease of chickens caused by Haemophilus paragallinarum, was investigated in a retrospective study.
  • (14) This study represents the first application of sensitive biotyping and fingerprinting techniques to outbreaks of infectious coryza.
  • (15) The cross-protection afforded by three inactivated infectious coryza vaccines was evaluated.
  • (16) Protection against transient and chronic coryza was provided by a combination MG-HG bacterin.
  • (17) Other presenting signs and symptoms included stridor (57.5%), chest wall retraction (38%), coryza and wheezing (18.5%) and tracheal tug (15%).
  • (18) In 80 patients with Pneumocystis pneumonitis, the intial signs and symptoms of infection were usually fever and cough, followed by tachypnea and coryza.
  • (19) The efficacy of experimental inactivated infectious coryza vaccines produced by a commercial vaccine manufacturer was evaluated.
  • (20) Typically, the child is younger than 12 months and has a 2 to 8 hour prodrome of coryza and fever before developing the cellulitis on the cheek.

Lochia


Definition:

  • (n. pl.) The discharge from the womb and vagina which follows childbirth.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Symptomatology perceived incorrectly as abnormal: a) In pregnancy: Frequent urination: 17 per cent, morning nausea in the 1st trimester: 9 per cent, emotional instability: 21 per cent, Braxton Hicks contractions: 41 per cent, and b) Postpartum period: Decreased quantity in lochia rubra: 9 per cent, non-fetid lochia alba: 43 per cent, calostrum: 20 per cent.
  • (2) The symptom most frequent were fever (100), foul-smelling lochia (61.1%) and uterine tenderness (60%).
  • (3) Cytologic analysis of lochia in 118 puerperae helped distinguish 5 types of cytograms.
  • (4) b) In puerperium: Increased quantity in lochia rubra: 17 per cent, fever: 22 per cent, fetid lochia: 28 per cent, and c) In breastfeeding: Breasts red and warm: 48 per cent, fever: 30 per cent, nipple fissures: 70 per cent.
  • (5) Results of the serological examinations of blood, collected simultaneously with the lochia samples, correlated fairly well with those obtained microscopically.
  • (6) Of the lochia samples collected from 210 cows and heifers within 12-24 h after parturition or abortion, 10.9% were bacteriologically positive.
  • (7) Cases were significantly more likely to have foul lochia (51.1% vs. 20%; p = .005) and abdominal pain (77.1% vs. 46.7%; p = .02).
  • (8) The median total duration of lochia was 33 days, lochia rubra 4 days and lochia serosa 22 days.
  • (9) Passage of lochia in the urine, instead of through the cervix has not been described in the literature.
  • (10) Characteristics that identify normal lochia are reviewed, as are important nursing assessment parameters.
  • (11) BHV4 was isolated from the lochia from 55% of the animals on farm A and 66% of those on farm B.
  • (12) Each woman completed a diary sheet describing the colour and duration of her lochia for up to 60 days post partum.
  • (13) The clinical picture was preceded by skin rash which became a pyoderma, and ended up as desquamation; there were several alterations: hepatic, renal, hematological (disseminated intravascular coagulation) and digestive (gastroenteritis); and Staphylococcus aureus (coagulase positive) was isolated from the skin, lochia, coproculture; and they were negative to this microorganism the ones from blood, urine and pharynx.
  • (14) The strains from the lochiae and placenta as well as those from the organs of sheep were detected already as primocultures on commonly used blood agar, the other strains after varying periods of cold enrichment and subsequent inoculation on a solid selective medium with nalidixic acid and acriflavin.
  • (15) The phases of lochia were divided according to the classical description; lochia rubra, serosa and alba.
  • (16) From October 1977 to May 15, 1989 in Slovakia 39 strongly haemolytic strains of L. ivanovii were isolated from a woman after delivery of a stillborn foetus--from the lochiae, placenta and rectal smear, from five symptom-free subjects from the faeces, from the rectal smears of two sheep, from the intestinal contents in the portion of the terminal ileus from 28 free living small terrestrial mammals, one strain from meat--beef steak, from the lungs, liver and kidneys of a dead young sheep and one strain from silage.
  • (17) 213 lochia samples and 196 urine samples from pregnant women have been examined.
  • (18) The duration of lochia was shorter in parous women and women with smaller babies.
  • (19) A history of foul lochia (p less than 0.01) and abdominal pain (p = 0.02) were associated with postpartum endometritis.
  • (20) The effect of the sulfonamide in the drug "Solupront" is impaired after application in the uterus in order of the quick absorption, of distribution and excretion and also in order of dilution by lochia and by interaction with p-aminobenzoic acid.

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