What's the difference between evacuatory and purgative?
Evacuatory
Definition:
(n.) A purgative.
Example Sentences:
(1) So, in these patients there was predominantly a left colon dysfunction and the called outlet obstruction syndrome, likely related to their evacuatory habits.
(2) Esophagoscintigraphy with labeled liquid and solid food was performed in 34 patients without subjective complaints and signs of disease of the esophagus in the patient history permitting the determination of quantitative and qualitative characteristics of normal motor-evacuatory function of the esophagus and lower esophageal sphincter (LES) under the most physiological conditions using mixtures of labeled natural food ingredients as compared to routine methods.
(3) With the aim of restoration of motor-evacuatory function of the stomach and intestine, the acupuncture was used in 220 patients with purulent peritonitis.
(4) The authors consider that disturbed motor-evacuatory function of the stomach and small intestine is responsible for the development of dumping-syndrome after SPV as well as the width of gastroduodenal anastomosis in draining operation which must be not more than 2-2.5 cm.
(5) after the drug injection showed disorders of renal evacuatory function of a varied degree of expression in all 24 patients.
(6) The main role in the appearance of secondary ulcers is attached to evacuatory disorders.
(7) Typical changes in the vascular, secretory and evacuatory segments of renograms were noted.
(8) Radionuclide gastroscopy conducted in patients with vast purulent wounds and sepsis disclosed reduced motor-evacuatory function of the stomach and the rate of its fractional emptying, that supports the necessity of continuous administration of nutrient mixtures by a drip method.
(9) Into the large intestine the pathogen penetrates from the above situated departments of the intestine, which was most often observed in impairment of the evacuatory function of the stomach; moreover, the possibility of elimination of Sonne Shigella, as well as products of their desintegration, by the large intestine wall was shown.
(10) The paper is concerned with preliminary evaluation of a method of condensed imaging during processing of the results of dynamic esophageal scintigraphy to detect motor evacuatory function of the esophagus.
(11) In cirrhotic patients the hemodynamic study was done before and after an evacuatory paracentesis, following which an improvement in cardiac function was shown, with significant increments in heart-beat volume, cardiac output, ventricular work, and ejection fraction.
(12) The operation led to disturbance in co-ordination between evacuatory function of the stomach and that of duodenum, and also had the depressive effect on intestinal emptying.
(13) The dynamics of recovery of the motor-evacuatory function of the gastrointestinal tract after operation on organs of the abdominal cavity was studied in 102 patients.
(14) The compensation of the stomach evacuatory function under these conditions was provided by a significant increase of the enterogastric reflex.
(15) When performing the selective proximal vagotomy the operations draining the stomach were shown to aggravate the existing disturbances of the motor-evacuatory function of the stomach, to result in the development of the dumping syndrome, duodenogastral reflux.
(16) Evacuatory function of the gastroduodenal system was investigated in healthy persons and in patients using a gamma-camera.
(17) Microscopic examination of the gastric juice obtained on an empty stomach detects congestion and impaired evacuatory function of the stomach.
(18) On the ground of clinical observations, studies on the motor-evacuatory functions of the gastro-intestinal tract and its regulation values in dynamics a differentiated dietotherapy and a special complex of exercise therapy have been devised for patients with chronic colites and enterites marked by predominance of constipation.
(19) Among basic principles of this dietotherapy were: the content of all nutrients corresponding to physiological standards with the amount of protein increased up to 135 g, creating conditions conducive to sparing of the stomach, pancreas, liver and biligenic organs through exclusion of strong stimulators of the digestive and bile secretion glands, of substrates irritating the liver, regulation of the motor-evacuatory function of the gastro-intestinal tract by a graded increase in the amount of cellular membranes, progressively rising parallel with weakening of the symptoms pointing to irritation of the gastro-intestinal tract organs.
(20) This association would be considered as a former tool in ascitic pancreatic patients, evacuatory punction or delayed surgery been relegated to a conservatory treatment failure or when primary pathology indicate it.
Purgative
Definition:
(a.) Having the power or quality of purging; cathartic.
(n.) A purging medicine; a cathartic.
Example Sentences:
(1) The timely discovery of the cause of the disease leads to the discontinuance of the use of diuretics and purgatives and to complete recovery.
(2) The effectiveness of short-term, low-dose, preoperative oral administration of neomycin and erythromycin base combined with vigorous purgation in reducing the incidence of wound infections and other septic complications of elective colon and rectal operations has been studied in a prospective, randomized, double-blind, clinical trial.
(3) These results agree with recent observations on the effects of senna in rats and mice, and do not support earlier claims that myenteric neurons are killed by anthraquinone purgatives.
(4) This paper reported the results of clinical observation on a treatment with Semen Persical decoction for purgation with addition (SPDPA) in type II diabetes mellitus.
(5) E. hortense adult worms were recovered from one patient after a treatment and purgation.
(6) The standard preparation for cleansing the colon usually involves dietary restrictions, purgatives, and enemas.
(7) The purgative activities of 18 different dihydroxyanthracene derivatives, including free anthraquinones and anthrones, were investigated by determining their influence on the water, sodium and potassium absorption in the gastrointestinal tract by direct injection of the solutions in Tyrode to the rat colon in situ.
(8) Some cultural groups also have a tradition of giving purgatives to the newborn, a practice which exacerbates the dehydration effects of not breastfeeding.
(9) Rats and mice were given purgative doses of sennosides in their drinking water for 4 and 5 months, respectively.
(10) These actions can lead to a new dark age of "chemotherapeutic blood letting and purgatives" under the guise of higher ethical purposes.
(11) Poor prognosis was most commonly linked to use of purgatives.
(12) 140 patients were prepared with conventional enema and purgatives and a Neomycin-metronidazole prophylaxis.
(13) Compared to women who had never used purgatives, current purgative users were 4.1 times more likely to smoke (44% vs 11%) and 2.7 times as likely to use drugs (33% vs 12%).
(14) Purgatives, emetics, opium, cinchona bark, camphor, potassium nitrate and mercury were among the most widely used drugs.
(15) Purgation was induced by oral administration of arecoline and the purge examined for cestodes.
(16) From pseudocarps of R. wichuraiana, three quercetin glycosides, isoquercitrin, hyperin and quercetin 3-O-beta-D-glucuronide were isolated similarly, but no purgative components of R. multiflora were detected.
(17) The prevalence of binge-eating more than once a week, together with self-induced vomiting or purgative use, was 3.6% in the nursing school students, 2.1% in the college women, and 2.9% in the total sample.
(18) In many groups, substitute prelacteal feeds were given, while in others, practices such as the use of purgatives exacerbated the risk of dehydration in the infant.
(19) In mice experimentally invaded by H. nana it was shown that the water extraction of breadfruit tree substance is rather less effective than its ethanol extraction and has some purgative action, which increases the therapeutic effect.
(20) Twenty percent had at some time used diet pills, but only 4% were currently users; 13% had at some time used purgatives (vomiting, laxatives, or diuretics), but only 5% were current users.