What's the difference between hematic and thematic?
Hematic
Definition:
(a.) Same as Haematic.
(n.) A medicine designed to improve the condition of the blood.
Example Sentences:
(1) The mean hematic lithium level has been considered insufficient to obtein the essential informations.
(2) Two clinical cases of hematic infiltration of the cornea after severe ocular contusions are reported.
(3) In this study fibrous nasal polyps, obtained from four patients, were analyzed by means of immunocytochemical methods for the presence of interstitial hematic cell infiltrate and HLA-DR molecule expression.
(4) Dopamine haemodynamic compensation attempt results in an increase of chloramphenicol hematic concentration in the sepsis liver group and the pharmacokinetics levels bear new deterioration.
(5) 5 out of 15 organs were found to contain a larger amount of interstitial hematic cells that were constituted mainly by macrophages and B cells, together with a small percentage of granulocytes and T cells.
(6) Hemorheological, hematic and hemodynamic parameters were analysed.
(7) The Authors describe the laparoscopic aspects of spontaneous human ovulation and correlate it with the evaluation of basal body temperature, the total urinary oestrogens, pregnanediol and urinary LH and some hematic values of 17-beta-estradiol, 17-alpha-Hydroxyprogesterone and rogesterone.
(8) Edemohemorrhagic lesions (EHL) presenting phenomena of capillary congestion with hematic extravasation and interstitial and intra-alveolar edema, without inflammatory involvement.
(9) This effect was concentration-dependent and was more pronounced in the cortex from immature animals, where a statistically significant inhibition was observed at EtOH concentrations as low as 50 mM, comparable to the hematic concentrations reached following in vivo administration of doses of ETOH able to induce developmental neurotoxicity.
(10) Hematic cyst of the orbit has been described in association with various diseases, but its pathogenetic mechanism remains unclear.
(11) Baz Mohammed Hemat, the provincial public health director, said two intelligence service officers had also been killed, and suggested that some casualties listed as civilians may have been members of the security forces.
(12) The authors report 4 cases of splenic complications occurring during chronic pancreatic disease and emphasize the vascular origin of the lesions observed in the spleen whether rupture, pseudo-cysts, hematic cysts, infarction or necrosis.
(13) Blood vessels filled with hematic cells were commonly present within the grafts.
(14) Under these circumstances the pathogenetic importance of alterations of the complex movements presented by the cardiac type during the course of septal development and, to an event greater extent, possible alterations of the embryonal hematic flow are underlined.
(15) Experiments with Sprague-Dawley rats (mature females weighing 500 to 160 g) have demonstrated the ability of immunoglobulins G to penetrate through the respiratory epithelial-hematic barrier.
(16) The action of this drug on hematic triglyceride level and on severity and frequency of the hypostenic dyspeptic symptoms and biliary colic is interesting from the viewpoint of new therapeutic prospects.
(17) Finally, in a similar case, anatomopathological study of the hematic material should also be carried out.
(18) The authors believe that the histological appearance may be affected by the functional phase of the tumor at the moment of surgery: with sphincters closed, meaning very little dilatation of the venous collection areas, or with sphincters open, meaning considerable dilatation of the venous collection areas due to increased hematic flow.
(19) In a series of 10 patients the hematic and plasmatic clearances of 99mTc-pyrophosphate (PYP) and 99mTc-metylene-diphosphonate (MDP) have been studied.
(20) In comparison with a control group, a significant decrease in the frequency of early appearance of inflammatory and hematic complications has been noted.
Thematic
Definition:
(a.) Of or pertaining to the theme of a word. See Theme, n., 4.
(n.) Of or pertaining to a theme, or subject.
Example Sentences:
(1) Thematic analysis of the dream series supports Jung's conceptualization of death and dying as being a critical stage of the individuation process, characterized by profound psychical development of a specific and purposeful nature.
(2) They failed, however, to assign thematic roles and adjectives in center-embedded relative sentences, and instead relied on nonsyntactic information.
(3) The provision of structure in the form of thematically related toy sets, instructions, and modeling did not reduce the discrepancy between demonstrated play behaviors of toddlers with SLI-E and their normally developing peers.
(4) Observing the temporal order in which patients pointed to the words they recognized permitted an assessment of the extent to which they clustered their responses either in terms of superordinate categories or along thematic lines.
(5) The fear is palpable in this place.” A cornerstone of the reforms is a restructuring around more than a dozen thematic “global practices” like health or trade, instead of regional teams.
(6) Thirdly we investigate his comprehension of semantically and thematically related nouns and verbs.
(7) Both arguments draw on subject matter in psychoanalysis, physics, evolutionary biology, common-sense psychology, history, and medicine to arrive at a fundamental caveat for all of the sciences: Even when the thematic kinship (or so-called "meaning connection") between events is indeed of very high degree, this fact itself does not license the inference of a causal linkage between these events.
(8) Concerning psychopathology probands with religious thematization in their psychosis had higher values of "grandiosity" in the IMPS (LORR), had more often experiences of immediate inspiration, evidence and clearness.
(9) A retrospective evaluation of stories told to three Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) cards by children at risk isolated six characteristics that were associated with functioning six to 10 years later.
(10) The various forms that these dreams take and their characteristic thematic content were described for 154 dreams by 60 dreamers.
(11) "Contagion from Greece is what I would call thematic," says Michael Saunders, an economist at Citigroup.
(12) Using a structured thematic apperception technique (the Tell-Me-A-Story [TEMAS] test) to measure attention to pictorial stimuli depicting characters, events, settings, and covert psychological conflicts, a study was conducted with 152 normal and 95 clinical Hispanic, Black, and White school-age children.
(13) Transfer of reasoning occurred from both initial problem types, particularly to problems of the same type; however, transfer occurred to a greater extent from abstract problems than from thematic problems.
(14) The new movie marks a partial return to the thematic territory of Rosetta , which concerned a teenage girl scrabbling around for menial jobs.
(15) Over the past year, more than a million people have taken part in 88 national consultations, 11 thematic debates and the global My World survey , organised by the UN, to share their views on future development priorities.
(16) Utilizing thematic predictors derived from cognitive and psychodynamic theories of depression, depressed subjects were differentiated from nondepressed subjects at a rate significantly greater than chance, p less than .001, with a highly respectable estimate of cross-validation shrinkage.
(17) Also, the thematic apperception test and Rorschach test as well as electroencephalographic examinations have been carried out on many of the patients included in this study.
(18) There are also connections with the Dark Tower series: the Overlook's Red Eye Lounge, some thematic concepts regarding the use and gathering of psychics, the suggestion that Danny's imaginary friend could be one of the Dark Tower's Twinners.
(19) In 2007 he was a convincing lead in Puppet Rapist , a five-part mock-cop show also scripted by Ford, which shares thematic stomping ground with Robot & Frank.
(20) Personality development as measured by Loevinger's Washington University Sentence Completion Test, The Friedman Developmental Level Scoring System for the Rorschach, The Urist Mutuality of Autonomy Scale, The Thematic Apperception Test, and indexes from a structured interview were able to discriminate between teenagers at high- and low-risk for pregnancy.