Citations:extravasate

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English citations of extravasate

Adjective: "outside of a vessel"

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  • 1765, W. Watson, Philosophical transactions[1], page 241:
    This air was extravasate, had burst through the extremities of the bronchia and vesicular substance, and had insinuated itself throughout the whole substance of the lungs, in which it was detained by the membrane investing them.
  • 1912, George Alexander Gibson, Life of Sir William Tennant Gairdner[2], page 540:
    In this case the condition of the tubuli was in most part quite natural; in some, however, there was extravasate blood, and in others the epithelium had accumulated to a abnormal extent.
  • 2003, Gilda Cardeñosa, Breast imaging[3], page 342:
    This is extravasate silicone.

Noun

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  • 1895, Ernst Ziegler, General pathology, or, The science of the causes, nature and course of the ...[4]:
    The blood which has escaped from the capillaries is termed an extravasate; at the same time, for the various forms of haemorrhage there are a great variety ...
  • 1902, Adam Politzer, Milton Julius Ballin, Clarence L. Heller, A text-book of the diseases of the ear for students and practitioners[5], page 728:
    In a case of a gunshot fracture of the mastoid process, reported by Moos, in which there was no injury to the labyrinthine capsule, an extravasate of blood was found in the internal ear.
  • 2008, Hedwig Manz, The Art of Cupping[6], page 7:
    This process sucks the skin into the cup, causing hyperemia (strong circulation) at this spot, as well as an extravasate (bloody fluid that has leaked from the vessel and is present in the tissue).

Verb

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  • 1817, David Hoffman, A Course of Legal Study: Respectfully Addressed to the Students of Law in ...[7]:
    ... Coke, perhaps, with all his knowledge, is less entitled to this deference as his learning was too apt to extravasate. Fearne, and Hargrave, and Comyns, ...
  • 1834, Georges Cuvier, Edward Griffith, Charles Hamilton Smith, Edward Pidgeon, John Edward Gray, George Robert Gray, The Animal Kingdom Arranged in Conformity with Its Organization[8]:
    ... and even exterior, as in the porcelaines, increases, thickens, appears as it were to extravasate, and tends to diminish the aperture, ...
  • 1873, William Smellie, The Philosophy of Natural History[9]:
    ... the blood, the lymph, and other fluids extravasate, and produce all those symptoms which are commonly ascribed to a vitiation of the humors. ...
  • 1916, Albert Thomas Kinsley, A Text Book of Veterinary Pathology for Students and Practitioners[10]:
    After hemorrhage ceases or has been arrested the extravasate coagulates thus agglutinating and drawing the wound margins together. ...
  • 1950, Henry Louis Mencken, George Jean Nathan, The American Mercury[11]:
    The old brick house itself, sitting back in a yard almost as large as his own, seemed to extravasate a certain mellowness into the night. ...
  • 1961, Association for Academic Surgery (U.S.), The Journal of Surgical Research[12]:
    Table 4 shows the tendency for albumin to extravasate into tissues other than the lungs. It compares this tendency for extravasation with the tendency to ...
  • 1987, Thomas S. Edgington, Russell Ross, Samuel C. Silverstein, Perspectives in Inflammation, Neoplasia, and Vascular Cell Biology ...[13]:
    Of course, monocytes and poly- morphonuclear leukocytes generally extravasate through flat-walled postcapillary venules in inflamed tissues, and, ...
  • 2001, Emile E. Voest, Patricia A. D'Amore, Tumor Angiogenesis and Microcirculation[14]:
    Thus, the functional relationships between the proteins induced in endothelial cells by VEGF and the plasma proteins that extravasate as a consequence of ...
  • 2003, John S. Axford, Glycobiology and Medicine[15]:
    The latter allow circulating cells to extravasate in a tissue-specific manner and contribute to defining the cell homing selectivity, which is fundamental ...