How To Use Hyperpyrexia In A Sentence
-
Methods: The antipyretic effect of XNJI and its influence on central febrile medium were observed in rabbit model of hyperpyrexia caused by rabbit hemorrhagic fever virus(RHFV).
-
Fever, or pyrexia, refers to a rise of up to 40.5°C and hyperpyrexia to a greater rise.
-
Sometimes it rises as high as 106° or 108° F. -- _cerebral hyperpyrexia_
Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities—Head—Neck. Sixth Edition.
-
OTHER NAMES: Heat hyperpyrexia, sunstroke, thermic fever.
THE NATURAL REMEDY BIBLE
-
Later, signs of increased intra-cranial tension develop: unconsciousness deepening into coma, paralysis of ocular muscles, rapid pulse, Cheyne-Stokes respiration, and sometimes hyperpyrexia.
Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities—Head—Neck. Sixth Edition.
-
A patient-consent form warning of hyperpyrexia after a procedure, for example, might be translated to an abnormally high fever.
Taking Medical Jargon Out of Doctor Visits
-
OTHER NAMES: High temperature, hyperpyrexia, hyperthermia.
THE NATURAL REMEDY BIBLE
-
For example, a patient taking neuroleptics who relapses to stimulant medications is at risk of hyperpyrexia.
-
Cardiovascular collapse, hyperpyrexia, and sudden death have been reported in such patients.
The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry
-
I believe that it has also been fashionable in the so called cases of hyperpyrexia to immerse the patient in a bath varying in temperature from 60° to 98° Fahr.
Scientific American Supplement, No. 299, September 24, 1881
-
The term hyperpyrexia is used when the temperature shows a tendency to remain at
Philosophy of Osteopathy
-
Stuporous patients are unable to eat or drink and, if untreated,, can develop severe dehydration, hemoconcentration, hyperpyrexia, ketosis, and eventually cardiovascular collapse and death.
The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry
-
If the atmosphere is as warm or warmer than the skin during times of high humidity, the blood is brought to the surface of our body and it cannot lose its heat, resulting in a condition called hyperpyrexia.
Donna Henes: It's Not the Heat: It's the Humidity