What's the difference between necrobiosis and necrobiotic?

Necrobiosis


Definition:

  • (n.) The death of a part by molecular disintegration and without loss of continuity, as in the processes of degeneration and atrophy.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Towards the end of the observation period erosions of cartilage, pannus formation and periarticular foci of purulent necrobiosis were found.
  • (2) The identity between necrobiosis lipoidica with other chronic granulomatous diseases and the possible treatment of this benign but long-term process is briefly discussed.
  • (3) RN tended to show homogeneous, eosinophilic necrobiosis, giant cells within palisaded foci, and significant stromal fibrosis; while lesions of SGA showed pale, edematous necrobiosis, an absence of giant cells, and lesser degrees of fibrosis.
  • (4) In one out of the three dogs with combined operation, scattered foci of necrobiotic sinus node cells and necrobiosis of the medial smooth muscle cells in sinus node arteries were also observed.
  • (5) These findings support a vascular origin of necrobiosis lipoidica, involving reduced vascular perfusion combined with diffusion block.
  • (6) However, it has not been associated previously with necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum (NBL), a rare skin manifestation of diabetes mellitus.
  • (7) Statistically significant hypoxia was found in the area of necrobiosis lipoidica, which was even more pronounced in the inflamed border.
  • (8) Cortisone-herapin and cortisone-maltose tetrapalmitate (MTP) treatments induced focal areas of tumor necrosis and necrobiosis, whereas cortisone alone caused necrobiosis.
  • (9) A diabetic patient is described presenting psoriasis, necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum, granuloma annulare, and vitiligo and with a history of recurrent erysipelas and mycotic infections.
  • (10) In patients with portal cirrhosis, sclerotic changes rather than necrobiosis was observed in the pancreas.
  • (11) A case of necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum (NLD) in a 12-year-old male patient is described.
  • (12) Finally, in six elliptical biopsies extending into clinically normal skin, we demonstrated that the inflammatory infiltrate of necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum extended from the lesion into apparently normal skin surrounding clinically active lesions.
  • (13) Our report describes a 52-year-old female patient with bilateral foci of necrobiosis lipoidica in pretibial scars.
  • (14) Results of an open trial of platelet inhibitor treatment for necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum suggest the possible importance of abnormal platelet function in this disease.
  • (15) Common features included extensive hyaline necrobiosis and foreign-body giant cells.
  • (16) We confirmed that cutaneous anesthesia is usually present in the necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum lesions.
  • (17) Liver function test showed signs of moderate necrobiosis with impaired biliary acid metabolism.
  • (18) The associations between the granulomatous disorders of the skin, especially necrobiosis lipoidica, sarcoidosis and granuloma annulare, are discussed.
  • (19) A statistically significantly higher number of these cells was found within the epidermis in necrobiosis lipoidica compared with granuloma annulare and normal skin.
  • (20) Tissue hypoxia and an infection, arising against this background, lead to the expansion of necrobiosis and to the occurrence of trophic ulcers.

Necrobiotic


Definition:

  • (a.) Of or pertaining to necrobiosis; as, a necrobiotic metamorphosis.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Several stages in its histogenesis may be discerned: I. focal necroses of hepatic cells associated with their invasion with lister Listeria; 2. appearance of cellular elements around the foci of necroses with subsequent formation of granulemas consisting mainly of leucocytes and lymphoid cells; 3. development of necrobiotic changes in the central areas of granulemas with concomitance of exudative processes; 4. organization of necrotic foci with subsequent scarring.
  • (2) necrobiotic and dead cells, cell debris and phagosomes appear electively fluorescent.
  • (3) The following findings were obtained from pathomorphological examination of the myocardium of 100 pigs which had died on transport: Degenerative or necrobiotic changes of certain myocardial fibres were recorded from 73 per cent of all cases, usually in the form of granular degeneration (60 per cent).
  • (4) This effect was not connected with hypofunction of the thyroid gland and the testes, as their excision (in rats without hypophysectomy) did not prevent the development of necrobiotic changes in the adrenal cortex.
  • (5) Although the walls of the vessels in the superficial layers of the dermis showed a positive staining with antifibrinogen and complement, those around the necrobiotic areas were negative in most of the cases.
  • (6) Epithelioid sarcoma (ES) occasionally may be confused, both clinically and histologically, with isolated necrobiotic granulomas (ING), leading to misdiagnosis and potential mismanagement of these conditions.
  • (7) In the case of active cirrhosis, the necrobiotic processes observed might be due to changes in the structures providing cellular metabolism.
  • (8) In one out of the three dogs with combined operation, scattered foci of necrobiotic sinus node cells and necrobiosis of the medial smooth muscle cells in sinus node arteries were also observed.
  • (9) The histopathology of material obtained by an open-lung biopsy revealed rheumatoid necrobiotic nodules.
  • (10) We reviewed 32 cases of necrobiotic xanthogranuloma and 16 cases from the world literature.
  • (11) The epithelium of the tubules at sites of microlite localization underwent necrobiotic changes, sometimes it was desquamated, and the walls of the tubules were represented only by a markedly thickened basal membrane.
  • (12) Necrobiotic material stains more deeply eosinophilic or basophilic; degradation of collagen is discernable, and there is often evidence of cell death.
  • (13) We speculate that increased serum immunoglobulins complexed with lipid may be deposited in the skin, leading to a foreign body giant cell reaction and the subsequent characteristic histopathologic features of necrobiotic xanthogranuloma.
  • (14) Although the majority of plasma cells were normal in appearance, cells with abnormal ultrastructure were frequently observed, including cells with distended rough endoplasmic reticulum, cells with cytoplasm entirely engorged with immunoglobulin, and necrobiotic cells.
  • (15) The degenerative-necrobiotic alterations of myocardial fibres which had been observed in the context of death on transport are interpreted as a result of hypoxaemic or hypoxic conditions accompanying acute shock-type circulatory failure in pigs.
  • (16) A woman of 39 presenting with a conjunctival swelling with a necrobiotic xanthogranulomatous histology suffered from a series of destructive cutaneous lesions of similar histology for 20 yr. She had a paraproteinemia and developed myelomatosis.
  • (17) Necrobiotic xanthogranuloma is a destructive dermal and subcutaneous xanthogranuloma that most frequently involves the face (periorbital region) and trunk.
  • (18) In contrast to D. sibericus, development of D. murinus and R. tsutsugamushi in cells is characterized by severe irritation of the infected cells early in the infection, a greater speed of movement of rickettsiae and their active release from the affected cells, as well as the development of necrobiotic changes in the latter.
  • (19) Pathomorphological lesions of communicating ans surface veins and microcirculatory bed depend upon the features of lesions in magistral veins and result in the development of chronic venous insufficiency with the syndrome of regional capillary trophic changes leading to edema, dystrophic, necrobiotic, and sclerotic lesions.
  • (20) A single administration of carminomycin, ribomycin or olivomycin in LD50 or treatment of the experimental animals with these antibiotics for 10 days in the therapeutic doses equal to 10 per cent of the LD50 induced distrophic and necrobiotic changes in the liver.

Words possibly related to "necrobiosis"

Words possibly related to "necrobiotic"