单词 | pulmonary |
释义 | pulmonaryadj.n. A. adj. 1. a. Of or relating to the lungs. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > respiratory organs > [adjective] > lungs spirital1568 pulmonic1661 pneumonic1668 pulmonary1668 pulmonical1670 pulmonal1748 pleuropulmonary1829 pneumogastric1838 cardiopulmonary1879 broncho-cavernous1890 pneumic1895 intrapulmonary1898 heart-lung1908 intrapulmonic1923 ventilatory1946 pulmonar1977 1668 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 3 833 This Niter..causeth a due fermentation, which he will have raised, not only in the Heart alone, but immediately in the Pulmonary vessels. 1703 T. Gibson Anat. Humane Bodies Epitomized (ed. 6) ii. 356 Fig. III. Expresses a piece of a Pulmonary Lobe, wherein the membranous Interstices being blown up, all the Lobules appear in their proper Figure. 1780 Philos. Trans. 1779 (Royal Soc.) 69 351 A larger animal imparts a greater quantity of its pulmonary air to the inflammable air. 1848 Quain's Elements Anat. (ed. 5) II. 1149 Each bronchial tube..enters a distinct pulmonary lobule, within which it undergoes still further division, and at last ends in the small cellular recesses named the air cells or pulmonary cells. 1878 Scribner's Monthly Nov. in F. G. Holland Scribner's Monthly 1878–79 (1879) 144/2 Wendell Phillips once characterized a man as one who had ‘pulmonary eloquence’. How many an eminent doctor has owed his distinction to a large chest, a resonant voice, and imposing manners! 1947 Nucleonics Dec. 6/2 Pulmonary ventilation alone is not sufficient to produce resuscitation. 1967 Canad. Med. Assoc. Jrnl. 1 July 3/1 A harsh pansystolic murmur was audible over the entire precordium, and radiated to the pulmonary area and to the back. 2001 S. Walton Out of It (2002) v. 216 The smoke from cannabis is absorbed through the bronchioles in the lungs into the pulmonary bloodstream. b. Zoology. Of respiration: performed by means of lungs. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > respiratory organs > [adjective] > lungs > carried on by pulmonary1787 pulmonal1856 1787 J. Skinner tr. F. Fontana Treat. Venom of Viper I. iii. v. 395 An animal may live very well, although deprived of its head... The pulmonary respiration [Fr. respiration pulmonaire], and the circulation of humours in the parts, are sufficient for this effect. 1826 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. III. xxviii. 50 Yet their [sc. birds'] respiration is perfectly pulmonary. 1922 Copeia No. 108. 53 It [sc. an Andean frog] is not greatly dependent upon pulmonary respiration. The cutaneous respiration is apparently adequate. 1999 Functional Ecol. 13 304/2 At hatching chicks are exposed to atmospheric oxygen, and metabolic rate increases in association with the onset of pulmonary respiration. c. Zoology. Of the nature of, resembling, or having the function of a lung; spec. designating the respiratory organ of a pulmonate gastropod mollusc. Frequently in pulmonary sac. ΚΠ 1792 New Syst. Nat. Hist. III. 535 The interior organization of this genus [sc. the fly, Musca]..presents two pulmonary sacs of a white colour, arranged longitudinally along the body. 1794 E. Darwin Zoonomia I. xxxviii. 470 The placenta is a pulmonary organ like the gills of a fish. 1834 Penny Cycl. II. 232/1 The external apertures of these, termed spiracles,..are transverse chinks, corresponding in number with the pulmonary pouches [in Arachnida]. 1873 St. G. Mivart Lessons Elem. Anat. i. 13 Respiration of air by pulmonary sacs is neither universal in man's sub-kingdom,..nor unknown out of it. 1901 E. Step Shell Life i. 25 This simple form of lung is referred to as the Pulmonary Sac, and its external opening may be watched for just below the lip of the shell on the right-hand side. a1933 J. A. Thomson Biol. for Everyman (1934) I. xv. 384 Terrestrial snails and slugs breathe dry air, and the blood is spread out on the wall of the mantle-cavity, which is often called a lung or a pulmonary chamber. 1995 P. J. Hayward et al. in P. J. Hayward & J. S. Ryland Handbk. Marine Fauna N.W. Europe x. 572/1 Pulmonates..display a major modification of the mantle cavity which functions as a pulmonary sac or lung. d. Medicine. Of or relating to the pulmonary valve. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > vascular system > heart > [adjective] > valve portal1615 mitral1853 tricuspid valve1877 pulmonary1900 valvar1955 1900 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) B. 193 196 The mitral first sound was impure and the second pulmonary sound loud. 1967 Jrnl. Pediatrics 70 434/1 The second heart sound in the pulmonary area is split during expiration because of delayed closure of the pulmonic valve, and the pulmonary component is accentuated. 2. a. Medicine. Of a disease, condition, etc.: affecting or occurring in the lungs. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > disorder of respiratory organs > [adjective] > disorders of lungs pulmonic1597 pulmonical1598 pulmonary1708 1708 J. Wainewright Mech. Acct. Non-naturals iii. 18 I shall first observe, what preceeds a Pulmonary Consumption. 1793 T. Beddoes Observ. Nature & Cure Calculus 139 Giving the pulmonary ulcers an opportunity to heal. 1836–41 W. T. Brande Man. Chem. (ed. 5) 364 In some pulmonary complaints, the respiration of air slightly tainted by the admixture of chlorine has been resorted to as a stimulant. 1877 F. T. Roberts Handbk. Med. (ed. 3) I. 17 The dusky or livid hue of some cardiac and pulmonary diseases. 1953 R. W. Fairbrother Text-bk. Bacteriol. (ed. 7) vii. 81 Streptomycin is widely used for the treatment of tuberculosis. It is particularly effective in the early pulmonary, meningeal and miliary forms of the disease. 1979 W. B. Ober Boswell's Clap & other Ess. iii. 90 If this is taken as the first evidence of hemoptysis, Lawrence had a well-established pulmonary infection by that time. 2004 Metro 22 Nov. (London ed.) 21/1 Chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder..kills 20 times as many people as asthma does. b. Of a person: affected with lung disease (in early use esp. tuberculosis). Also, in extended use: †having qualities (as wasting, etc.) popularly associated with consumptive people (obsolete). ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > diseases of tissue > wasting disease > [adjective] > relating to consumption > affected by consumpta1398 phthisica1398 consumed?a1425 consumptuous1601 consumptive1648 phthisical1651 consumptionary1653 consumptionish1655 consumptionous1655 consumptional1662 consummate1684 phthisicky1697 pulmonary1712 the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > disorder of respiratory organs > [adjective] > disorders of lungs > affected with lung-sick?1530 pulmonarious1658 phthisicky1697 pulmonary1712 lungy1888 1712 J. Browne tr. P. Pomet et al. Compl. Hist. Druggs II. iv. 392/2 Great Vertues are attributed to the Spirit and Oil of Sulphur in Fevers and pulmonary Cases [Fr. maladies du poulmon] especially. 1793 J. Nott Hotwell Waters 68 At Hières, in the south of France, where many of our pulmonary invalids were used to emigrate. 1835 Southern Literary Messenger 1 547/1 The Red Sulphur..has been for some years known as a place of considerable resort by pulmonary patients. 1843 W. M. Thackeray Jérôme Paturot in Fraser's Mag. Sept. 350/2 Fond of inventing such suffering angels..pale, pious, pulmonary, crossed in love, of course. 1862 W. M. Thackeray Adventures of Philip I. ii. 18 If you want a pulmonary romance, the present won't suit you. 1896 T. C. Allbutt et al. Syst. Med. I. 281 Inclined to regard the voyage..as unsuitable to the pulmonary invalid. 1926 R. Karsten Civilization S. Amer. Indians i. 22 People that lived in the same house as the pulmonary patient..kept this prophylactic painting for a long time. 1976 Arch. Internal Med. 136 352 Failure to diagnose [hypersensitivity pneumonitis] properly may..condemn the patient to a lifetime as a pulmonary cripple. 2000 Clinics Chest Med. 21 693 The assessment of the pulmonary patient who complains of decreased functional status must include examination and consideration of all these variables. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > animal body > general parts > internal organs and systems > [adjective] > having lungs or gills gilled1771 pulmonary1833 pulmonated1834 branchiated1835 branchiferous1851 pulmonate1853 notobranchious1857 branchiate1870 notobranchiate1870 the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Arachnida > [adjective] > pulmonary pulmonary1833 pulmonate1853 the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > class Gastropoda > [adjective] > belonging to order Pulmonifera pulmonary1833 pulmoniferous1834 pulmobranchiate1841 pulmonate1853 1833 Entomol. Mag. 1 278 We could never separate the Pulmonary from the Trachean Arachnida, or Branchiferous from the Pulmonary Gasteropod Mollusca. B. n. 1. Anatomy. A pulmonary blood vessel, esp. a pulmonary artery. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > vascular system > blood vessel > artery > [noun] > specific artery arterial vein?c1425 adorthy1525 subethal1525 temporal?1541 veiny artery1543 share artery1545 aorta1594 cephalic artery1599 subclavia1615 venous artery1650 subclavicular1656 pulmonary1707 cœliac artery or axis1713 renal1721 radial1723 carotid1741 ranine1753 femoral1754 hypogastric1774 iliac1782 pudical1803 articular1808 pudic1824 anonyma1832 internal mammary1835–6 iliac artery1840 transverse artery1842 innominate artery1866 innominate1879 thyroid axis1881 hyoid1883 medicerebral1889 coronary1893 1707 J. Drake Anthropol. Nova II. vi. 385 They receive Arteries and Veins from the Pulmonaries for their common Function. 1712 Philos. Trans. 1710–12 (Royal Soc.) 27 179 It ascends, as it comes out of the Heart, together with the Left Pulmonary, till they have pierced the Pericardium. 1809 T. Watkins tr. X. Bichat Physiol. Res. Life & Death viii. 234 Making two injections..of different coloured fluids into the two sides of the heart, through the venæ cavæ and pulmonaries. 1944 H. T. Karsner in O. Glasser Med. Physics 419 Emboli..lodge in the main stems of the pulmonaries and become coiled to produce occlusion. 1963 Copeia No. 1. 160/1 A portion of the left pulmonary is observed going caudad but only for a short distance. 2001 Cardiol. Young 11 391 On recent follow-up..no further increase in the indexed diameters of the pulmonaries could be documented in 21 of 33 patients. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Arachnida > [noun] > member of > having particular means of respiration > pulmonary pulmonary1835 pulmonate1890 1835 W. Kirby On Power of God in Creation of Animals II. xix. 281 Latreille..divides his Arachnidans into two Orders, Pulmonaries [Fr. Arachnides pulmonaires], or those that breathe by gills, and Trachearies, or those that breathe by spiracles in connection with tracheæ. Compounds pulmonary artery n. Anatomy the large artery conveying blood from the heart to the lungs; (also) a branch of this. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > vascular system > blood vessel > artery > [noun] > types of preparing vessela1618 pulmonary artery1679 arteriole1685 mammary1697 omphalomesenteric1728 collateral arteriesa1788 perforator1824 vas vasorum1848 comes1875 synangium1875 loop-artery1899 1679 Philos. Trans. 1677 (Royal Soc.) 12 1074 He hath made the Experiment, That Whey tinged with Saffron, being injected into the Pulmonary Artery, imediately runs into the left Ventricle of the Heart. 1750 J. Huxham Ess. Fevers 186 The gross inflammatory Blood sticks in the pulmonary Arteries. 1811 London Dissector (ed. 3) viii. 178 The aorta..is connected to the pulmonary artery by a ligament, which in the fœtus, was a large canal, the Ductus Arteriosus. 1988 P. Monette Borrowed Time iii. 66 The chest x-ray looked clear, except for a shadow that was probably the pulmonary artery. 1996 Jrnl. Parasitol. 82 835/1 Dirofilaria immitis is a heartworm that inhabits the right ventricle and pulmonary arteries of dogs. pulmonary circulation n. Physiology the passage of blood from the heart through the lungs and back to the heart; the system of blood vessels in which this occurs; cf. systemic adj. 1a. ΚΠ 1775 T. Withers Observ. Abuse Med. 94 Vomiting cannot be used with safety, on account of the severity of the pain, the obstruction of the pulmonary circulation, and the difficulties of respiration. 1833 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 33 434 The balance preserved between the pulmonary and aortic circulation. 1994 Alert Diver Mar. 29/1 Ultrasonic techniques for monitoring moving gas emboli in the pulmonary circulation. pulmonary pleura n. Anatomy the visceral pleura of the lung. ΚΠ 1813 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 103 159 At the age of about twenty years the lungs have a mottled..appearance, from black and dark blue spots, lines, and points disseminated immediately under the transparent pulmonary pleura. 1917 W. M. Crofton Pulmonary Tuberculosis ii. 16 The lymph of the pleural sac may either enter the lymph vessels of the parietal pleura or those of the pulmonary pleura. 2004 Vet. Jrnl. 167 274/1 Costal and pulmonary pleura could not always be distinguished. pulmonary valve n. Anatomy the valve of the heart at the entrance to the pulmonary artery; (also) any of the three semilunar segments of this valve (now rare). ΚΠ 1735 T. Morgan Mech. Pract. Physick 198 At length these pulmonary valves, by a continued Irritation and Stimulus, begin to swell, harden, and gradually lose their natural Elasticity and proper Action. 1832 Lancet 11 Aug. 591/2 Here are the pulmonary valves and the pulmonary artery all in a state of disease. 1968 New Eng. Jrnl. Med. 29 Feb. 499/2 A systolic murmur was heard, suggesting the establishment of a differential pressure between the systemic and pulmonary circulations rather than stenosis of the aortic or pulmonary valve. 1995 School Sci. Rev. June 55/2 The second heart sound is caused by closure of the pulmonary and aortic valve. pulmonary vein n. Anatomy the large vein conveying blood from the lungs to the heart; (also) a branch of this. ΚΠ 1682 R. Boyle Contin. New Exper. Physico-mech.: 2nd Pt. 94 The Air more tenacious than usual, being drawn into the inwards of the Lungs, and there between the Pulmonary Artery and Vein stopping the course of the blood. 1800 H. Davy Res. Nitrous Oxide iii. i. 351 The blood in the pulmonary veins gradually became more purple. 1901 M. Foster Lect. Hist. Physiol. 184 He found that so long as insufflation of the lungs was kept up the blood ran out by the pulmonary veins florid in colour. 1986 Jrnl. Anat. 145 133 The node-like cells may..represent an ectopic pacemaker centre in the pulmonary vein. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < adj.n.1668 |
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