What's the difference between papillate and papillose?
Papillate
Definition:
(v. t. & i.) To cover with papillae; to take the form of a papilla, or of papillae.
(a.) Same as Papillose.
Example Sentences:
(1) With the cultures of mycoplasmas obtained from the eyes of human patients suffering from sympathetic ophthalmia, it was possible to produce the same symptoms in chickens as were described by the author in 1950 in sympathizing and sympathized human eyes, namely: torpid uveitis and papillitis, which dragged on for months, and affected not only the inoculated right eye, but also, after 3 weeks and more, the untouched left eye.
(2) The acute retinal necrosis (ARN) syndrome is an increasingly occurring entity characterized by the triad of acute confluent peripheral retinitis with papillitis and anterior-chamber uveitis.
(3) Three important signs suggestive of a fungal etiology for choroiditis are discussed: location of the granuloma at the end of a macular arteriole, early leak of fluorescein to the vitreous body, and solitary papillitis.
(4) Ocular manifestations were: iridocyclitis in three eyes, vitreitis in one eye, retinitis or neuroretinitis in five eyes, papillitis in two eyes, optic perineuritis in two eyes, and retrobulbar optic neuritis in two eyes.
(5) "Stenosing papillitis" is a descriptive term for an anatomic deformity of the papilla of Vater that is characterized by narrowing of the lower end of the bile duct and the proximal end of the duct of Wirsung.
(6) Detection relied on a papillation technique that uses a combination of beta-galactosides to reveal blue Lac+ papillae.
(7) For this form the prognosis was primarily good under virustatic therapy with ganciclovir in contrast to primary CMC papillitis.
(8) Papillitis plays a double cause-effect role in PCS: as a primary chronic disease it may lead to cicatricial stenosis of the MDP, and, on the other hand, it may be a consequence of choledocholithiasis, cholangitis, and other diseases.
(9) In 8 cases, a porencephalic cyst subsequent to grade IV IVH (Papile's classification) was found; all had cerebral palsy and severe developmental deficit was present in 4.
(10) The omasum has more than 70 laminae which are papillated on the reticular end.
(11) In addition, based on choledochoscopic observations, as duodenal papillitis increased in severity, the incidence of an irregular shape at the end of the common bile duct during diastole increased.
(12) Judging from the length of the Vaterian bile duct and the degree of fibrosis observed in the biopsy specimens, duodenal papillitis was found to be more severe in Type III than in Type II.
(13) Pathological features of duodenal papillitis relative to cholelithiasis were analyzed in terms of dilatation of the bile duct, intracholedochal pressure, and histopathological pictures of papillitis, and the following conclusions were drawn: The principal causes of bile duct dilatation appeared to be pathological changes in the papilla per se; Papillitis accompanying choledocholithiasis with cholesterol stone were secondary to those gallstones evacuated from the gallbladder; Calcium bilirubinate stones seemed to be formed primarily as the result of papillitis.
(14) In fact, it was observed in 47 cases (54%) suffering from: retrobulbar optic neuritis (25 cases), papillitis (13 cases), optic disk edema (6 cases), optic chiasma syndrome (2 cases) and stasis papilla (1 case).
(15) Those showing good recovery of visual field defects were idiopathic optic neuritis which was subclassified into either papillitis or retrobulbar neuritis according to the ophthalmoscopic pathology of the optic disc.
(16) Using ultrasound PIVH was detected in 20 infants (41%); five grade I, seven grade II, two grade III, six grade IV (grading according to Papile et al.).
(17) SO pressure and the incidence of IRPWP were significant higher in patients with papillitis than those in patients without it.
(18) We examined ten patients from a consecutive series of 73 patients with either isolated cytomegalovirus papillitis or limited cytomegalovirus retinitis contiguous with the optic disk.
(19) Vascular disease, such as central vein occlusion, central arterial occlusion and ischaemic neuropathy were the underlying diagnoses in the second largest group (22%) and in 18% of cases inflammatory disease caused the papillitis.
(20) This report describes a patient in whom transient thermal papillitis, choroidal ischemia, and two small branch retinal arteriolar occlusions developed after dye red photocoagulation of an idiopathic peripapillary choroidal neovascular membrane.