- hemorrhages
- кровотечения
English-Russian small dictionary of medicine. Г.Ю. Бельман, А.Е. Бойков.. 2015.
English-Russian small dictionary of medicine. Г.Ю. Бельман, А.Е. Бойков.. 2015.
hemorrhages — n. profuse flow of blood, bleeding v. bleed heavily, suffer a hemorrhage … English contemporary dictionary
Duret hemorrhages — Du·ret hemorrhages (du raґ) [Henri Duret, French neurological surgeon, 1849–1921] see under hemorrhage … Medical dictionary
Duret hemorrhages — small, linear hemorrhages in the midline of the brainstem and upper pons caused by traumatic downward displacement of the brainstem … Medical dictionary
flame-shaped hemorrhages — large hemorrhagic spots in the eyeground; called also flame spots … Medical dictionary
steroid purpura — hemorrhages found beneath the skin of the upper and lower limbs owing to attrition of dermal and vascular connective tissue from long term treatment with adrenocortical steroid hormones; it is identical in appearance to purpura senilis … Medical dictionary
Shaken baby syndrome — Classification and external resources ICD 9 995.55 MedlinePlus 000004 … Wikipedia
Cerebral hemorrhage — Classification and external resources File:Intracerebral heamorrage Cerebral hemorrhage ICD 10 I61, P10.1 … Wikipedia
retinopathy — Noninflammatory degenerative disease of the retina. [retino + G. pathos, suffering] arteriosclerotic r. r. distinguished by attenuated retinal arterioles with increased tortuosity, copper or silver wire appearance, perivascular sheathing,… … Medical dictionary
Cerebral contusion — Classification and external resources CT scan showing cerebral contusions, hemorrhage within the hemispheres, subdural hematoma on the left, and skull fractures[1] … Wikipedia
blood disease — Introduction any disease of the blood, involving the red blood cells (erythrocytes (erythrocyte)), white blood cells (leukocytes (leukocyte)), or platelets (platelet) (thrombocytes) or the tissues in which these elements are formed the bone … Universalium
Fever — Although a fever technically is any body temperature above the normal of 98.6 degrees F. (37 degrees C.), in practice a person is usually not considered to have a significant fever until the temperature is above 100.4 degrees F (38 degrees C.).… … Medical dictionary