What's the difference between sanatorium and sanatory?

Sanatorium


Definition:

  • (n.) An establishment for the treatment of the sick; a resort for invalids. See Sanitarium.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The authors elaborated differentiated complexes of rehabilitative treatment for patients with spastic hemiparesis, normal or decreased tone, as well as for patients with transient disorders of cerebral circulation in conditions of a cardiological sanatorium.
  • (2) In the therapeutic schedule of a great sanatorium, primarily specialized in the treatment of bronchial and asthmatical diseases to the effect of a rehabilitation, a new speciality for the treatment of the symptom cough-Contrapect-was tested.
  • (3) The present study deals with urinary free and total hydroxyproline (HOP) in a group of adults between 63-93 years old, admitted in a sanatorium for geriatries.
  • (4) On admission to National Musashi Sanatorium, three years after the first symptoms' appearance, she presented restless walking, insomnia, memory loss, weakness of concentration, and high degree of disorientation.
  • (5) The author describes problems of psychiatric intensive care and its contemporary structure in the catchment area of the psychiatric sanatorium in Opava.
  • (6) 124 capable men who had survived large focal myocardial infarction underwent a 24-day course of treatment in a cardiological sanatorium situated in climatic conditions of low mountains (1600 m above the sea level).
  • (7) The authors analyzed a group of 52 case-sheets from hospitalized patients with the objective to provide protective in-patient treatment in the sanatorium in Havlíckův Brod.
  • (8) Intradermal immunization of 229 chronic neuropsychic patients in Gura Ocnitzei Sanatorium, Dîmbovitza County, where a typhoid fever outbreak burst, was performed with a freeze-dried typhoid vaccine, suspended in purified and concentrated tetanic anatoxin.
  • (9) Children with cardiovascular dysfunction on sanatorium treatment underwent adaptation which proceeds without pathological shifts and depends on initial functional status of a child.
  • (10) Part I: From the Era of Sanatorium Treatment to the Present pulls together data from yellowed-with-age reports on tuberculosis and vital statistics, historical accounts, and modern computer files, to document the changes in tuberculosis incidence and mortality over past decades to the present.
  • (11) This paper presents observations over 18 cosmonauts who participated in space flights of 75 days to 12 months and stayed in a sanatorium in the city of Kislovodsk thereafter.
  • (12) Widespread screening for HIV infection began 3 years ago, and persons identified as infected have been sent to a sanatorium located in a Havana suburb.
  • (13) A survey of long-term hospitalised Zulu psychiatric patients at Ekuhlengeni Sanatorium, Umbogintwini, Natal, revealed a 31% incidence of neuroleptic-related abnormal movements.
  • (14) The system of staged rehabilitation of chronic bronchitis (CB) sufferers implies a sanatorium treatment stage involving climate, exercise, physical, psychological treatments, etc.
  • (15) Sanatorium treatment and conditioning inhibited sensitivity to meteorological factors in rheumatic children by 60 and in healthy children by 83%.
  • (16) Of the remainder, 5% of the home patients and 6% of the sanatorium patients died of tuberculosis, 4% in each series had bacteriologically active disease at five years and 90% and 89%, respectively, had bacteriologically quiescent disease at that time.
  • (17) Stimulated by positive reports of patients who were treated with CO2-gas injections during a sanatorium stay in the CSSR and after evaluation of the literature, we began with the CO2-gas injection in our patients in 1983.
  • (18) The sanatorium had 14 beds, operating theaters for aseptic and septic surgeries, the most modern devices, instruments, roentgenograph and electric light (17 years before Split was supplied with electricity).
  • (19) Long before the epidemic of lung cancer, or the possibilities of correction for cardiac disease, development of thoracic surgery was closely intertwined with the history of the sanatoriums.
  • (20) Bandits have taken over.” In the sanatorium kitchen volunteers were making lunch.

Sanatory


Definition:

  • (a.) Conducive to health; tending to cure; healing; curative; sanative.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The observation was carried out on a group of 138 patients with a past history of acute myocardial infarction for a period of 5 years, after hospital and sanatorial treatment under the conditions of out-patient department.
  • (2) Control of the trainability of sweating in 23 patients during six weeks in the Kneipp cure sanatory.
  • (3) The early development of the spa which for a certain time was fused with the Beringerbrunnen in Suderode is characterized by the activities of several engaged sanatory physicians whose spectre of task allows insights in the balneological organisation of the 19th century.
  • (4) Clinico-physiological investigations indicate that ballistocardiography may serve to control the effectiveness of sanatorial and health resort rehabilitation and to determine the mechanism of action of the physical factors involved.
  • (5) The application of this effective, free of side effects, undangerous, economic method easily to be learned which is suitable for the autotherapy and sanatory therapy is recommended for the alleviation of pain.
  • (6) The action of the drug is studied in a series of 32 obesity individuals under sanatorial conditions and normocaloric diet, over a period of twenty seven days.
  • (7) The most controversial of the program's measures has been the treatment of HIV antibody-positive persons (both asymptomatic and clinically ill) through what Cubans term a "sanatorial regimen," consisting of admission into an institutional setting where both preventive and curative treatment is offered, and where residents have limited contact with their families, neighborhoods, friends, and the rest of society.
  • (8) After prosthetics of the aortal valve 30 patients underwent bicycle ergometry training at the sanatorial stage of rehabilitation.
  • (9) Difficulties arose during a stay in sanatories, hospitals and old age homes.
  • (10) It comprises a continuous course of early mobilisation during clinical treatment, immediately following group exercise treatment after clinical treatment, then a sanatory cure and a continuing life-long group training.
  • (11) A sanatorial and health resort rehabilitation was carried out in patients after myocardial infarction.
  • (12) The author describes his personal experience in the joint treatment of patients with chronic forms of schizophrenia and patients who were registered in neuropsychiatric dispensaries (for endogenous psychoses in the past, organic brain lesions of a different etiology, etc) in one department and referred during the phase of an unstable remission for the so-called sanatorial treatment.
  • (13) Changes in the serum activity of the lysosome enzyme beta-N-acetyl glucos aminidase are studied in 85 patients with varying degree alimentary overweight, undergoing treatment under sanatorial conditions with regimes including physical loading and a variety of diets: "free of carbohydrates" according to Atkins (31 cases), poor in fats (16 cases) and rich in fats (38 cases).

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