gangrene

listen to the pronunciation of gangrene
English - Turkish
{f} kangren ol
kangren

Şiddetli bir donmanın ardından kangrenle enfekte olduktan sonra Tom'un ayağı kesilmek zorunda kaldı. - Tom's foot had to be amputated after it had become infected with gangrene following a severe frostbite.

(Diş Hekimliği) ileri derecede kan dolaşımı yetersizliğine, travmaya veya enfeksiyona bağlı bölgesel doku nekrozu
tlb kangren
x kangren ol/kangren yap
i., tıb. kangren
{i} yozlaşma
f kan gren etmek veya olmak gangrenous s kangren olmuş
(Tıp) Gangren: Dokuların içindeki bütün hayat tezahürlerinin sona ermesi, dokunun ölmesi
{f} kangren olmak
{f} kangren yapmak
{i} ahlâki bozulma
kangrenli
yenirce
gas gangrene
gazlı kangren
gangrenous
{s} kangrenli
gangrenous
(Tıp) Gangrenli
gangrenous
(sıfat) kangrenli
gangrenous
(Biyoloji) kangren
pulmonary gangrene
(Tıp) akciğer gangreni
English - English
A damaging or corrupting influence

Women should earn equal wages with men for equal work done. Child marriages and polygamy are a gangrene on society.

The necrosis or rotting of flesh, usually caused by lack of blood supply

If gangrene sets in, we may have to amputate the foot.

{f} suffer from gangrene; cause gangrene
{n} a mortification
{v} to mortify, to rot
the name given to the condition where the flesh decays and dies
massive death of tissue, e g , of an extremity
the localized death of living cells (as from infection or the interruption of blood supply)
A term formerly restricted to mortification of the soft tissues which has not advanced so far as to produce complete loss of vitality; but now applied to mortification of the soft parts in any stage
The death of body tissue It is most often caused by a loss of blood flow, especially in the legs and feet
the death of tissue on a large scale May be caused by certain bacteria which spread rapidly through tissues, or by an inadequate blood supply
death of large amounts of body tissue
(gas gangrene) The infection of dead tissue causing, in the case of gas gangrene, foul smelling gas
necrotic tissue; a mortified or gangrenous part or mass
To produce gangrene in; to be affected with gangrene
{i} death or rotting of body tissue (caused by faulty circulation, disease, etc.)
Death or decay of tissue in a part of the body---usually a limb
a death of body tissue that usually occurs when there has been an interruption of blood supply, followed by bacterial invasion
Gangrene is the decay that can occur in a part of a person's body if the blood stops flowing to it, for example as a result of illness or injury. Once gangrene has developed the tissue is dead. a condition in which your flesh decays in part of your body, because blood has stopped flowing there as a result of illness or injury (gangraena, from gangraina). Localized soft-tissue death (necrosis) from prolonged blood-supply blockage. It can occur in atherosclerosis, diabetes mellitus, or decubitus ulcer, and after severe burns or frostbite. In dry gangrene, gradual blood-supply decrease turns the part discoloured and cold, then dark and dry. Treatment requires improving blood flow. Moist gangrene comes from a sudden blood-supply cutoff. Bacterial infection causes swelling, discoloration, and then a foul smell. Along with antibiotics, tissue removal may be needed to prevent spread, which can be fatal. A more virulent form, gas gangrene, is named for gas bubbles under the skin produced by a highly lethal toxin from clostridium bacteria. The wound oozes brownish, smelly pus. Infection spreads rapidly, causing death. All dead and diseased tissue must be removed and antibiotics given; an antitoxin can also be used
Death of tissue combined with putrefaction
undergo necrosis; "the tissue around the wound necrosed"
the death of body tissue, most often caused by a lack of blood flow and infection It can lead to amputation
tissue death due to loss of blood supply; may be caused by injury or infection
Massive tissue death due to injury, disease, or failure of blood supply
sphacel
gas gangrene
(pathology) a deadly form of gangrene usually caused by Clostridium bacteria that produce toxins that cause tissue death; can be used as a bioweapon
gas gangrene
Gangrene occurring in a wound infected with bacteria of the genus Clostridium, especially C. perfringens, and characterized by the presence of gas in the affected tissue
gangrened
infected with gangrene, gangrenous
gangrenous
Indicative of or afflicted with gangrene

The medic worried that Private Johnson's wounded leg was looking more gangrenous.

gangrenous
{a} mortified, corrupted, rotten
To gangrene
gangrenate
dry gangrene
Gangrene that develops as a result of arterial obstruction and is characterized by mummification of the dead tissue and absence of bacterial decomposition
dry gangrene
(pathology) gangrene that develops in the presence of arterial obstruction and is characterized by dryness of the dead tissue and a dark brown color
gangrenous
Gangrenous is used to describe a part of a person's body that has been affected by gangrene. patients with gangrenous limbs
gangrenous
suffering from tissue death
gangrenous
{s} of or pertaining to gangrene, of or pertaining to death of bodily tissue; afflicted with gangrene, affected with tissue death
gangrenous
Affected by, or produced by, gangrene; of the nature of gangrene
gangrene

    Hyphenation

    gan·grene

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    [ 'ga[ng]-"grEn, ga[ng]-', 'gan- ] (noun.) 1543. From Latin gangraena (“gangrene”), from γάγγραινα (gaggraina, “gangrene”), from γραίνειν (grainein, “gnaw”).
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