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exudate |
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exudate /ex·u·date/ (eks´u-dāt) a fluid with a high content of protein and cellular debris which has escaped from blood vessels and has been deposited in tissues or on tissue surfaces, usually as a result of inflammation.
Exudate The type of pleural effusion that results from inflammation or other disease of the pleura itself. It features cloudy fluid containing cells and proteins.
exudate [eks′yoo͡dāt] Etymology: L, exsudare, to sweat out fluid, cells, or other substances that have been slowly exuded, or discharged, from cells or blood vessels through small pores or breaks in cell membranes. Perspiration, pus, and serum are sometimes identified as exudates. exudate (eks´ōōdāt), n the outpouring of a fluid substance, such as exudated suppuration or tissue fluid. exudate, purulent (eks´ōōdāt pyūr´ n pus or suppuration that exudes from the gingival tissues and contains a mixture of enzymes, dead tissue, bacteria, and leukocytes, primarily neutrophils. exudates, gingival,
n the outpouring of an inflammatory exudate from the gingival tissues. exudate a fluid with a high content of protein and cellular debris which has escaped from blood vessels and has been deposited in tissues or on tissue surfaces, usually as a result of inflammation. It may be septic or nonseptic. See also exudative.
exudate A liquid or semisolid which has been discharged through the tissues to the surface or into a cavity. Exudates in the retina are opacities that result from the escape of plasma and white blood cells from defective blood vessels. They usually look greyish-white or yellowish and are circular or ovoid in shape. They are sometimes classified into three groups according to size: (1) punctate hard exudates, which often tend to coalesce. They are found in diabetic retinopathy, Coats' disease, etc.; (2) exudates of moderate size, such as 'cotton-wool or soft exudates' as, for example, in branch/central retinal vein occlusion, hypertensive retinopathy, etc. These 'exudates' have ill-defined margins and are actually areas of ischaemia containing cytoid bodies, unlike hard exudates which are generally lipid deposits; (3) larger exudates, as found in the severe forms of retinopathy.
exudate Internal medicine A cell and protein-rich fluid that extravasates from the capillaries. See Hard exudate, Pleural exudate, Waxy exudate. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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Skin biopsy specimens were collected for histologic examination, and swabs of the exudates were submitted for bacterial culture. Its technology sloughs and absorbs exudates from wet wounds and ulcers. We also employed an in situ lung compartment approach that targeted four specific compartments [focusing on PM found in airway exudates, macrophages (M[PHI]) in the airspaces (airspace-M[PHI]), interstitial-M[PHI], and lymph node-M[PHI]]. |
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