单词 | pathognomonic |
释义 | pathognomonicadj.n. Medicine. A. adj. Designating a sign or symptom, or (later) a laboratory finding, by which a disease may be diagnosed; specifically characteristic or indicative of a particular disease or disorder. With of, for. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > symptom > [adjective] indicatory1583 symptomatical1586 semiotical1588 pathognomonic1625 semiotic1625 pathognomonical1638 pathognomical1640 symptomical1656 pathognomic1684 symptomatic1698 assident1753 symptomatic1814 1625 J. Hart Anat. Urines i. ii. 19 The..absolute knowledge of the disease, by meanes of the signes Pathognomonicke, proper and peculiar to euery disease. 1693 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 17 720 This..hath no Pathognomonic Sign by which it is distinguish'd from other Fevers besides its Duration. 1759 Philos. Trans. 1758 (Royal Soc.) 50 613 It hath been thought, that a quick pulse is so essential..as to be a pathognomonic symptom of it. 1851 De Bow's Rev. Aug. 212 The pathognomonic symptoms of the complaint. 1859 Proc. Royal Soc. 10 p. iv His detection of the albuminous state of the urine as pathognomonic of disease of that organ. 1932 Glasgow Med. Jrnl. 118 145 The fluid..shows changes of a chemical nature which are often pathognomonic. 1949 H. Bailey Demonstr. Physical Signs Clin. Surg. (ed. 11) viii. 91 The escape of blood, however, is not pathognomonic of a fracture of the middle fossa. 1993 S. J. Ettinger Pocket Compan. Textbk. Vet. Internal Med. cxiv. 740 The leukogram is seldom pathognomonic for a given disease. B. n. A pathognomonic sign or symptom. Also in extended use. Usually in plural. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > symptom > [noun] entacha1375 symptom1398 accidenta1400 showerc1400 prognostic?a1425 grudgingc1440 prognosticationc1475 grudge1562 symptomates1583 grutchinga1637 annotation1644 pathognomic1683 pathognomonic1704 prognosis1706 modality1911 1625 J. Hart Anat. Urines i. ii. 14 Ioyne..as most pregnant..testimonies of the disease, these inseparable accidents of the same, commonly called pathognomonica.] 1704 J. Harris Lexicon Technicum I Pathognomonick, a Term in the Art of Medicine, is a proper inseparate Sign [etc.]. 1705 W. Wotton Reflections (ed. 3) 327 They are more accurate in describing the Pathognomonics, and more than just and nice in distinguishing the Species of Tumors and Ulcers, than our more refined Moderns are. 1725 N. Robinson New Theory of Physick 87 Those inseparable Symptoms we call its Pathognomonics or distinguishing Characters. 1870 H. T. Craven Milky White i. 6 I've been reading up the pathognomonicks of the human ear—for it's my opinion there's a good deal to be done in cases of deafness. 1926 G. Thomas in J. F. Dobie Rainbow in Morning 171 The dots..represent the monolinguist's representation of the pathognomonics of his ‘mizry’. 1962 P. Scott Birds of Paradise iii. ii. 162 Night after night he talked across the narrow space between our beds, describing the pathognomonics of the diseases whose progress we tried to arrest. DerivativesΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > symptom > [adjective] indicatory1583 symptomatical1586 semiotical1588 pathognomonic1625 semiotic1625 pathognomonical1638 pathognomical1640 symptomical1656 pathognomic1684 symptomatic1698 assident1753 symptomatic1814 1638 A. Read Treat. 1st Pt. Chirurg. x. 70 The only pathognomonicall signe of a true convulsion. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < adj.n.1625 |
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