What's the difference between innards and viscus?

Innards


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Rather than the aesthetic, it was the innards that intrigued and inspired.
  • (2) Fifa 15 takes much better advantage of the PS4 and Xbox One’s number-crunching power, while finally ditching the legacy code from old consoles which could still be found in creaking away within Fifa 14's innards.
  • (3) Instead, the irritation simmers inside and causes terrible corrosive damage to a Brit’s innards.
  • (4) 4 Whirled in motion The iPhone 5's innards also include an M7 "motion coprocessor" designed to collect data from its accelerometer, gyroscope and compass.
  • (5) The building's exposed innards caused widespread palpitations when it was built in the 1980s and Stirk recalled "a very, very mixed reaction".
  • (6) It's difficult being a half-arsed feminist in a movement that seems to demand both your innards and your soul, but I think I've been pulling it off with panache.
  • (7) There were many times during Sky1's Pineapple Dance Studios when I observed Andrew "I'm A Triple Threat" Stone mooing on about the unknowable margins of his talent and thought quietly to myself, "This show would be better if Andrew was being attacked by slobbering dogs, or having his innards ruptured by a professional wrestler, or simply having machetes fired at his silly face while he sings Steppenwolf's Born To Be Wild."
  • (8) I wondered aloud – though I already knew the answer – whether his own coldness, a glacial disdain that could freeze a man's innards from 100 paces, was a similar act.
  • (9) This gives easy access to the Mac's innards: a major change for a company which traditionally encouraged consumers to leave system alterations to Apple professionals.
  • (10) Considering much of Brunton Park’s innards require reconstructive surgery – Everton had to change in temporary buildings in the car park – and a new playing surface was needed, the club’s ability to host Roberto Martínez’s team appeared a miracle in itself.
  • (11) More interesting is what Paczkowski says of the new iPad mini, which "will be upgraded with a retina display and also likely see the A7 incorporated into its innards".
  • (12) The sleekness of the gadgets that dominate our lives gives little hint of the chaos that lies beneath – not just their innards, which include rare-earth materials such as neodymium (magnets) and europium (which makes your phone glow), but their backstories.
  • (13) For all three trace elements, a decrease of their concentration with increasing age could be observed in the individual parts (blood, adipose tissue, innards, meat, bones) and in the whole body.
  • (14) The content of nucleic acids is especially high in the innards of veal, pork and beef.
  • (15) Prince’s ability to provoke an audience was illustrated when he supported the Rolling Stones in San Francisco, and was pelted with shoes and chicken’s innards.
  • (16) Their photographs capture what has become a topos of post-war urban ruination: the exposed innards of buildings.
  • (17) A geyser of liquefied innards exploded from the pig.
  • (18) From a vantage point to the south of the site it is easy to see the mangled innards of reactor buildings No 3 and 4 and, behind them, the vinyl shroud covering the No 1 reactor – the first unit to suffer a hydrogen explosion last March.
  • (19) A sample of the weapon effects in Destiny – some of the more exotic examples do serious damage The start point is “Rocket Yard”, a techno burial ground littered with the rusting innards of old spacecraft, which provide handy cover points for the opening exchanges.
  • (20) Others rip upwards, allowing the fat red, purple and grey of the innards to spill onto the flagstones.

Viscus


Definition:

  • (n.) One of the organs, as the brain, heart, or stomach, in the great cavities of the body of an animal; -- especially used in the plural, and applied to the organs contained in the abdomen.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Four cases of right lower quadrant abscess, each a clinical diagnostic dilemma, were recognized as abscesses surrounding a perforated viscus by application of the "coffee bean" sign on sonographic examination.
  • (2) attack of pain, retroperitoneal hematoma, hemoperitoneum, rupture into a hollow viscus, infective aneurysm.
  • (3) Ancillary evidence of a devitalized viscus in a baby who appears to have complete gastric outlet obstruction should suggest the diagnosis of gastric infarction.
  • (4) Small fistulae may not be suspected when overshadowed by other complications of ulcer disease such as bleeding or perforated viscus.
  • (5) Four cases with a total of six episodes of pneumoperitoneum were identified where viscus perforation was not documented.
  • (6) Physicians should suspect child abuse when children have unexplained injuries (especially young children with hollow viscus injuries) even when other signs of child abuse are absent, and they should suspect hollow viscus injury in abused children.
  • (7) These hemorrhagic pseudo-cysts are very often associated with chronic pancreatitis; they may rupture into a hollow viscus, the peritoneal cavity or into Wirsung's duct.
  • (8) The most accurate predictors of blunt hollow viscus injury were peritoneal lavage (91%, n = 14) and abdominal tenderness (50%).
  • (9) According to definition, administration of antibiotics in a perforated hollow viscus or an open fracture is not a prophylaxis.
  • (10) If the diagnosis of perforated hollow viscus can be eliminated with considerable certainty, then conservative management with careful observation and monitoring may avoid unnecessary surgery, so long as other causes of pneumoperitoneum have been ruled out.
  • (11) This relatively simple surgical procedure may prove valuable for the correction of neonatal atresia of the esophagus; in particular, when done upon the cranial stump, it affords primary anastomosis of the viscus without undue tension even in cases of faulty esophageal continuity involving a length of several centimeters.
  • (12) The diagnosis of the spinal injury was frequently delayed when abdominal viscus injury occurred together with a flexion-distraction spinal injury.
  • (13) Internal gall bladder fistulas with a hollow viscus following dislocation of a gallstone into the intestine represent one of the late sequelae of cholelithiasis.
  • (14) At all laser energies the depth of tissue vaporization was significantly greater at the higher tissue pressure with perforation of the viscus occurring at laser energies above 10 J.
  • (15) It is after the third day that complication develop related at one and the same to the past history, classical in such patients, (tobacco, chronic bronchitis, alcoholism) and the ectopic position of an abdominal viscus.
  • (16) The spinal sensory fields of each viscus were defined using three determinations: craniocaudal extent, principal innervation field, and peak innervation field.
  • (17) All five subsequently were proved to have a perforated viscus.
  • (18) Three cases of traumatic rupture of a subperitoneal hollow viscus are reported : two duodenal lesions and one rectal wound.
  • (19) Hence ampicillin fails appreciably to penetrate the obstructed viscus in obstructive biliary tract disease, and it is unlikely to be effective in treating infection associated with this.
  • (20) We conclude that PCD can be successfully performed as the initial treatment for IAA associated with a perforated viscus, obviating the first stage of the traditional two-stage surgical approach.