exudation

NOUN
  1. a substance that oozes out from plant pores
  2. the process of exuding; the slow escape of liquids from blood vessels through pores or breaks in the cell membranes
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How To Use exudation In A Sentence

  • They cleaned the broken wound of its exudations with a lotion of woundwort and sanicle, and dressed it with a paste of the same herbs with betony and the chickweed wintergreen, covered it with clean linen, and swathed the patient's wasted trunk with bandages to keep the dressing in place. An Excellent Mystery
  • The clinical manifestations of hypertensive encephalopathy are due to increased cerebral perfusion from the loss of blood-brain barrier integrity, resulting in exudation of fluid into the brain.
  • They are curious why the body and its exudations are denied to them as a map, why if men write about the body they are extolled, why when women write sex they are accused of being obscene.
  • The selected symptoms were pain, lachrymation, photophobia, exudation, pruritis, vascular dilation, oedema and analysis of macrophotographs of conjunctival capillarograms.
  • The perfume emanated by the exudation of the Amytis agallochum issues out of the bodies. The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 4 Books 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18
  • Examples are plant root respiration, the sloughing of dead material from roots, root exudation, and the growth and respiration of microorganisms intimately associated with plant roots. Effects of changes in climate and UV radiation levels on function of arctic ecosystems in the short and long term
  • Glandular secretion is stimulated with no alteration in plasma exudation.
  • The leading object, then, to be accomplished in the treatment of the first stage of encephalitis, meningitis, or cerebritis, and before a dangerous degree of effusion or exudation has taken place, is to relieve the engorgement of the blood vessels and thereby lessen the irritation or excitability of the affected structures. Special Report on Diseases of the Horse
  • I am of the opinion that there is no specific inflammatory exudation at all, but that the exudation we meet with is composed essentially of the material which has been generated in the inflamed part itself, through the change in its condition, and of the transuded fluid derived from the vessels. The World's Greatest Books — Volume 15 — Science
  • Degranulation via cytolysis involves eosinophil rupture and exudation of cellular contents, making eosinophils difficult to stain and recognize histologically.
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