What's the difference between phthisic and phthisis?

Phthisic


Definition:

  • (n.) Same as Phthisis.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Phthisical eyes of 2 patients revealed clinically unsuspected, partially necrotic and partially vital malignant melanomas of the uvea and extensive intraocular ossification.
  • (2) A white retrolental membrane is seen initially, later the eyes usually become phthisic.
  • (3) An abnormally small, shrunken choroidal blush can be seen with microphthalmia, extreme degrees of hyperopia, and in the phthisical eye.
  • (4) Implementing a DFG with the authors' method allows improvement in the enophthalmos concomitant with a phthisical globe.
  • (5) Twenty four per cent of hypotonous eyes and 4% of eyes with normal or elevated IOP became phthisical.
  • (6) In 3 eyes vision deteriorated to no light perception; 2 of them became phthisical.
  • (7) Exenteration of the phthisical eye and orbital contents showed an extensive pleomorphic adenocarcinoma of the nonpigmented epithelium of the ciliary body with extraocular extension.
  • (8) The two brothers of this patient both had phthisical left eyes, and those eyes were examined histopathologically.
  • (9) With the exclusion of one phthisical eye in each group final mean intraocular pressure in the ACTSEB group was 15.1 mm Hg, with a mean of 0.43 medications, and 14.4 mm Hg, with a mean of 0.95 medications, in the Molteno group.
  • (10) The majority of eyes in which the vitrectomy fluid was replaced with saline solution became phthisical.
  • (11) The right eye became blind and phthisical, and it was enucleated at the age of 42 years.
  • (12) Another case who had panophthalmitis prior to surgery became phthisic.
  • (13) Thirty (70%) of 43 eyes, which had follow-up of at least two months, became phthisical.
  • (14) It is suggested that a prolonged phthisical state of the eye is one condition wherein the mosaic pattern may become permanent and that, as a secondary event, this is followed by irregular calcification of Bowman's layer which particularly involves the ridges projecting into the epithelium.
  • (15) The end-stage ossification resulted in "phthisic bone" formation which completely filled the vitreous cavity in a manner very similar to the human condition of phthisis bulbi.
  • (16) These results suggest that the majority of severely-injured eyes become phthisical, but do not require removal for pain.
  • (17) This eye ultimately became phthisical and required enucleation because of chronic pain.
  • (18) The authors describe a new application using dermis-fat grafting either primarily or secondarily in conjunction with evisceration of selected phthisical globes.
  • (19) Three eyes eventually required enucleation for the relief of pain; one stabilized, and two others became phthisical.
  • (20) A hugh episcleral traumatic conjunctival inclusion cyst enveloping almost the whole eye, which appeared in the left phthisical eye of a young woman who sustained a perforating ocular injury a few years before enucleation, is described.

Phthisis


Definition:

  • (n.) A wasting or consumption of the tissues. The term was formerly applied to many wasting diseases, but is now usually restricted to pulmonary phthisis, or consumption. See Consumption.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Anatomic success (absence of phthisis bulbi, enucleation, or conjunctival flap) was achieved in 20 eyes (87%).
  • (2) The second cyst was excised by cryoextraction 6 weeks after the initial surgery, but the eye developed an inoperable retinal detachment and phthisis bulbi.
  • (3) However, when the ophthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve is affected, the ocular disease (ophthalmic zoster), although also usually mild and self-limited, may have severe complications (corneal scarring, glaucoma, iris atrophy, posterior synechiae, scleritis, motor disturbances, optic neuritis, retinitis, anterior segment necrosis, and phthisis bulbi and servere postherpetic neuralgia).
  • (4) While there is an apparent high complication rate, visual loss and phthisis cannot be ascribed directly to the procedure, since these are eyes with a poor prognosis.
  • (5) Two of the four individuals with intraocular extension presented with phthisis bulbi.
  • (6) On final examination, intraocular pressure in 16 (32%) of the eyes was greater than 26 mm Hg and in 17 (34%), less than or equal to 25 mm Hg; 17 (34%) developed phthisis bulbi.
  • (7) Two years later, with a visual acuity of hand motions and signs of phthisis bulbi, he had a vitrectomy that cleared the media to reveal a rhegmatogenous retinal detachment.
  • (8) The postoperative complications were glaucoma (23 eyes, 15%), phthisis (14 eyes, 8%), secondary pupillary membranes (11 eyes, 6%), and retinal detachment (six eyes, 3%).
  • (9) Fifteen years after a partial maxillectomy and radiation therapy for left antral carcinoma, a 53-year-old woman presented to the Eye Plastics and Orbit Service of the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, with phthisis and a large, black corneal lesion in the left eye.
  • (10) The major postoperative complication was phthisis bulbi, found in ten eyes (21%).
  • (11) None of the eyes has thus far been lost as a result of neovascular glaucoma or painful phthisis.
  • (12) An ocular prosthesis fitted over phthisis bulbi or a discolored blind eye of near normal size is a positive approach to improve the cosmetic appearance and psychological well-being of the patient.
  • (13) Of the total number of 17 eyes, 16 present retinoma, 1 phthisis bulbi.
  • (14) Retinoma and phthisis bulbi of retinoblastoma are rare entities found in retinoblastoma patients and their relatives.
  • (15) Enucleation or phthisis was observed in seven (54%) of the eyes in the nonvitrectomy group compared with only five (18%) in the vitrectomy group.
  • (16) Our results suggest that intraocular pressure and outflow are functions of both the intensity of irradiation and the surface area treated, and that each individual pressure head may require an optimal pars plana area of treatment of therapeutic degree to lower pressure and yet prevent overfiltration and phthisis.
  • (17) In the wake of the bacterial revolution after Robert Koch identified the tuberculosis bacillus, medical and public health professionals classified the various forms of consumption and phthisis as a single disease--tuberculosis.
  • (18) Complications included hyphema (18%), "kissing" choroidal effusion (6%), blocked tube (8%), flat anterior chamber (12%), cataracts (5%), Tenon's cyst (encapsulated bleb) (17%), uveitis (7%), phthisis bulbi (5%), and erosion of the silicone tube (1%).
  • (19) Several quis-treated eyes developed phthisis bulbi however, and thus could not be included among those assessed for eye weight and dimensional measurements.
  • (20) Severe complications included phthisis bulbi in 11% of cyclocryotherapy and severe visual loss in 20% with cyclodialysis and 14% with cyclocryotherapy.

Words possibly related to "phthisic"

Words possibly related to "phthisis"