请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 atrophy
释义

Definition of atrophy in English:

atrophy

verbatrophying, atrophied, atrophies ˈatrəfiˈætrəfi
[no object]
  • 1(of body tissue or an organ) waste away, especially as a result of the degeneration of cells, or become vestigial during evolution.

    the calf muscles will atrophy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Her muscles haven't atrophied at all, and according to all data, she's in perfect health.
    • Extended periods in low or zero gravity take their toll on the human body: bones begin to decalcify as they experience less stress, and muscles atrophy, also as a result of disuse.
    • Listen, Lorus, his body has atrophied to the point where he can't move.
    • ‘As with any organic being after death, tissues will decompose and the body will atrophy, making actual measurements change over time,’ Holyoak said.
    • In space, the blood itself becomes weightless, and the heart will eventually atrophy because it has to work less to pump blood through the body.
    • In addition, your muscles might atrophy and you could have trouble walking.
    • Even after the original injury has healed, patients may still be in pain or very susceptible because their muscles have atrophied and there's nothing protecting them from sprains and strains.
    • As the body ages, muscles begin to atrophy, slowly being replaced by fat.
    • I watched my hard-earned muscles atrophy and I knew my cardiovascular endurance was diminishing every day Although I felt depressed and frustrated, I knew I was lucky to be alive.
    • In 1939 he underwent surgery for a brain tumour and emerged with one side of his face paralysed, his tongue atrophied and his behaviour even more erratic.
    • The retinal pigment membrane cells slowly degenerate and atrophy, and central vision is lost.
    • The brain actually atrophies when it isn't stimulated enough.
    • The main goal is for him to regain strength in his shoulder, back and upper arm because the muscles could atrophy from non-use.
    • Just like other muscles, the brain atrophies if not used.
    • The gland then atrophies if it doesn't rot away.
    • The cells gradually degenerate over a period of time and cause paralysis as muscles atrophy throughout the body.
    • Her muscles had atrophied in her hindquarters giving her front half a bulky football player look.
    • Creatine has also been tested with positive results in those whose muscles have atrophied due to neuromuscular diseases.
    • Computed tomography scans showed that her cerebral hemispheres had atrophied, and electroencephalograms showed that she was without any cortical activity.
    • As a result, muscles become atrophied, or wasted.
    Synonyms
    waste away, waste, become emaciated, wither, shrivel, shrivel up, shrink, become shrunken, dry up, decay, wilt
    decline, deteriorate, degenerate, grow weak, weaken, become debilitated, become enfeebled
  • 2Gradually decline in effectiveness or vigour due to underuse or neglect.

    the imagination can atrophy from lack of use
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Not surprisingly, the social skills of children atrophy when they watch television instead of playing.
    • Cabinet government of the traditional model has manifestly atrophied over the past seven years, by deliberate neglect, not accident.
    • I haven't done anything except costumes for so long that my imagination in that area is atrophied.
    • With everyone's imagination atrophied, no one will ever be a threat to the world.
    • He says, ‘We have undermined the purpose of the United Nations and caused its effectiveness to atrophy.’
    • ‘Mainframe skills have been atrophying in the U.S.,’ he says.
    • Contrast that reality with the medical profession, say, whose practitioners would soon find themselves uninsurable were they to permit their professional knowledge and skills to atrophy.
    • One consequence of this development is that their imaginations are beginning to atrophy: play is all about the destination, rather than the journey.
    • It has been a very busy couple of months and unfortunately this blog has rather atrophied from lack of time and input.
    • Perhaps a radical change of pace is exactly the stimulus this brilliant musician needs to help him realize his full artistic potential before it atrophies altogether.
    • There would be a flurry of coding and decoding activity in time of war, but with the coming of peace, cryptographic knowledge and skills would atrophy and have to be relearned again at the next outbreak of hostilities.
    • Command and control involves perishable skills that atrophy in the absence of training.
    • The sciences atrophied during the post-World War I industrial decline.
    • The obvious concern with a decline in reading is that such a trend causes critical thinking skills and one's imagination to atrophy.
    • It is difficult to envision how this inflationary boom can run smoothly for a sector so atrophied after years of neglect.
    • There's no telling how much further my language skills will atrophy.
    • For creativity is a muscle that must be worked or it will gradually atrophy and wither.
    • Whatever hitting skills these transient players once had are now atrophied from disuse.
    • As the long-term unemployed lose touch with the labour market, their self-esteem falls and their job skills atrophy.
    • The meeting would have gone well but being a blogger and spending most of my free time online, my social skills have atrophied to the point where I can now barely manage to get served in shops.
    • But unless we allow our imaginations to become completely atrophied, we will be influenced by both secular art and the base obscenities that are prevalent in our society.
    Synonyms
    peter out, taper off, tail off, dwindle, deteriorate, decline, wane, fade, fade away, fade out, give in, give up, give way, crumble, disintegrate, collapse, slump, go downhill, draw to a close, subside
    be neglected, be abandoned, be disregarded, be forgotten
noun ˈatrəfiˈætrəfi
mass noun
  • The process of atrophying or state of having atrophied.

    gastric atrophy
    extensive TV viewing may lead to atrophy of children's imaginations
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Spinal muscular atrophy is a degenerative condition which is untreatable.
    • Repair within three weeks of injury is recommended to avoid tendon retraction, reinjury, tendon degeneration and muscle atrophy.
    • It usually presents with pain and muscle weakness with atrophy in the shoulder girdle.
    • Coeliac disease is characterised histologically by total or subtotal villous atrophy.
    • During the immobilization of a fracture, all nonimmobilized parts must be moved to avoid stiffness, muscle atrophy and joint contractures.
    • This loss occurs because of quadricep inhibition, which then leads to muscle atrophy.
    • Because of atrophy, cervical stenosis, or other conditions, obtaining satisfactory cervical samples from older women may be difficult.
    • Muscles deteriorate in microgravity conditions; significant muscle atrophy has been seen in humans after only five days in space.
    • MRI reveals relative atrophy of the frontal lobes and the anterior temporal lobes.
    • Lack of gravitational forces leads to muscle atrophy, decreased muscle tone and strength, and neuromuscular changes (eg, fatigue, slowed tendon reflexes).
    • Physical therapy is directed at preventing atrophy and contractures, and is particularly necessary in patients with calcinosis and muscle involvement.
    • Polio, a disease that attacks the nervous system, usually infects young children resulting in paralysis and muscular atrophy.
    • MRI revealed temporal lobe atrophy in two patients presenting with dementia.
    • This is also called optic atrophy, and may be present at birth or may appear because of a condition such as diabetes.
    • Mucosal atrophy may result when dietary sources of fatty acids are lacking or when the fecal stream is diverted by an ileostomy or colostomy.
    • Evaluation of the wrist should begin with identifying erythema, swelling, masses, skin lesions, muscle atrophy, contractures, scars, or other obvious deformities.
    • Patients who are overweight often suffer from muscle atrophy caused by inactivity, which worsens back symptoms and problems.
    • It has been theorized that changes in everyday experiences and activity patterns may result in disuse and consequent atrophy of cognitive processes and skills.
    • Researchers administered cognitive function tests to 3,734 men, obtained brain images from 574 men, and evaluated brain atrophy in 290 male autopsy results.
    • Potential complications associated with long-term steroid use are atrophy, steroid-induced acne, rosacea, and striae.
    • Decreased grip strength may result in loss of dexterity, and thenar muscle atrophy may develop if the syndrome is severe.
    • The pelvic examination should include an evaluation for inflammation, infection and atrophy.
    Synonyms
    wasting, wasting away, emaciation, withering, shrivelling, shrivelling up, shrinking, drying up, wilting, decaying, decay
    declining, deteriorating, deterioration, degenerating, degeneration, weakening, debilitation, enfeeblement

Derivatives

  • atrophic

  • adjective aˈtrɒfɪkəˈtrɑfɪk
    • Clinical trials have not proved any drugs to be effective in preventing or treating atrophic or exudative age-related macular degeneration.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • There has also been an increased incidence of atrophic gastritis and achlorhydria in patients with gluten sensitivity.
      • Sometimes the lesions heal at one place with a white atrophic scar and then spread actively to the neighboring skin.
      • In atrophic disease, the macula usually shows areas of depigmentation.
      • Computed tomography of the adrenal glands revealed both glands to be small and atrophic with evidence of bilateral calcification.
      • An autopsy was performed, which showed atrophic muscle fibers microscopically.
      • If multifocal atrophic gastritis is found, repeat surveillance every one to three years should be considered.

Origin

Late 16th century: from French atrophier (verb), atrophie (noun), from late Latin atrophia, from Greek, 'lack of food', from a- 'without' + trophē 'food'.

 
 

Definition of atrophy in US English:

atrophy

verbˈatrəfēˈætrəfi
[no object]
  • 1(of body tissue or an organ) waste away, typically due to the degeneration of cells, or become vestigial during evolution.

    without exercise, the muscles will atrophy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The main goal is for him to regain strength in his shoulder, back and upper arm because the muscles could atrophy from non-use.
    • In space, the blood itself becomes weightless, and the heart will eventually atrophy because it has to work less to pump blood through the body.
    • As the body ages, muscles begin to atrophy, slowly being replaced by fat.
    • As a result, muscles become atrophied, or wasted.
    • Extended periods in low or zero gravity take their toll on the human body: bones begin to decalcify as they experience less stress, and muscles atrophy, also as a result of disuse.
    • In 1939 he underwent surgery for a brain tumour and emerged with one side of his face paralysed, his tongue atrophied and his behaviour even more erratic.
    • Her muscles had atrophied in her hindquarters giving her front half a bulky football player look.
    • Just like other muscles, the brain atrophies if not used.
    • Her muscles haven't atrophied at all, and according to all data, she's in perfect health.
    • I watched my hard-earned muscles atrophy and I knew my cardiovascular endurance was diminishing every day Although I felt depressed and frustrated, I knew I was lucky to be alive.
    • The brain actually atrophies when it isn't stimulated enough.
    • ‘As with any organic being after death, tissues will decompose and the body will atrophy, making actual measurements change over time,’ Holyoak said.
    • Creatine has also been tested with positive results in those whose muscles have atrophied due to neuromuscular diseases.
    • The cells gradually degenerate over a period of time and cause paralysis as muscles atrophy throughout the body.
    • Computed tomography scans showed that her cerebral hemispheres had atrophied, and electroencephalograms showed that she was without any cortical activity.
    • Even after the original injury has healed, patients may still be in pain or very susceptible because their muscles have atrophied and there's nothing protecting them from sprains and strains.
    • The retinal pigment membrane cells slowly degenerate and atrophy, and central vision is lost.
    • The gland then atrophies if it doesn't rot away.
    • Listen, Lorus, his body has atrophied to the point where he can't move.
    • In addition, your muscles might atrophy and you could have trouble walking.
    Synonyms
    waste away, waste, become emaciated, wither, shrivel, shrivel up, shrink, become shrunken, dry up, decay, wilt
  • 2Gradually decline in effectiveness or vigor due to underuse or neglect.

    her artistic skills atrophied from lack of use
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Whatever hitting skills these transient players once had are now atrophied from disuse.
    • One consequence of this development is that their imaginations are beginning to atrophy: play is all about the destination, rather than the journey.
    • Contrast that reality with the medical profession, say, whose practitioners would soon find themselves uninsurable were they to permit their professional knowledge and skills to atrophy.
    • Cabinet government of the traditional model has manifestly atrophied over the past seven years, by deliberate neglect, not accident.
    • I haven't done anything except costumes for so long that my imagination in that area is atrophied.
    • The meeting would have gone well but being a blogger and spending most of my free time online, my social skills have atrophied to the point where I can now barely manage to get served in shops.
    • As the long-term unemployed lose touch with the labour market, their self-esteem falls and their job skills atrophy.
    • It is difficult to envision how this inflationary boom can run smoothly for a sector so atrophied after years of neglect.
    • The sciences atrophied during the post-World War I industrial decline.
    • There would be a flurry of coding and decoding activity in time of war, but with the coming of peace, cryptographic knowledge and skills would atrophy and have to be relearned again at the next outbreak of hostilities.
    • Command and control involves perishable skills that atrophy in the absence of training.
    • But unless we allow our imaginations to become completely atrophied, we will be influenced by both secular art and the base obscenities that are prevalent in our society.
    • With everyone's imagination atrophied, no one will ever be a threat to the world.
    • There's no telling how much further my language skills will atrophy.
    • It has been a very busy couple of months and unfortunately this blog has rather atrophied from lack of time and input.
    • He says, ‘We have undermined the purpose of the United Nations and caused its effectiveness to atrophy.’
    • ‘Mainframe skills have been atrophying in the U.S.,’ he says.
    • Perhaps a radical change of pace is exactly the stimulus this brilliant musician needs to help him realize his full artistic potential before it atrophies altogether.
    • For creativity is a muscle that must be worked or it will gradually atrophy and wither.
    • The obvious concern with a decline in reading is that such a trend causes critical thinking skills and one's imagination to atrophy.
    • Not surprisingly, the social skills of children atrophy when they watch television instead of playing.
    Synonyms
    peter out, taper off, tail off, dwindle, deteriorate, decline, wane, fade, fade away, fade out, give in, give up, give way, crumble, disintegrate, collapse, slump, go downhill, draw to a close, subside
nounˈatrəfēˈætrəfi
  • The process of atrophying or state of having atrophied.

    gastric atrophy
    extensive TV viewing may lead to atrophy of children's imaginations
    Example sentencesExamples
    • MRI reveals relative atrophy of the frontal lobes and the anterior temporal lobes.
    • The pelvic examination should include an evaluation for inflammation, infection and atrophy.
    • This loss occurs because of quadricep inhibition, which then leads to muscle atrophy.
    • Potential complications associated with long-term steroid use are atrophy, steroid-induced acne, rosacea, and striae.
    • Polio, a disease that attacks the nervous system, usually infects young children resulting in paralysis and muscular atrophy.
    • Decreased grip strength may result in loss of dexterity, and thenar muscle atrophy may develop if the syndrome is severe.
    • It has been theorized that changes in everyday experiences and activity patterns may result in disuse and consequent atrophy of cognitive processes and skills.
    • MRI revealed temporal lobe atrophy in two patients presenting with dementia.
    • It usually presents with pain and muscle weakness with atrophy in the shoulder girdle.
    • Because of atrophy, cervical stenosis, or other conditions, obtaining satisfactory cervical samples from older women may be difficult.
    • Physical therapy is directed at preventing atrophy and contractures, and is particularly necessary in patients with calcinosis and muscle involvement.
    • Mucosal atrophy may result when dietary sources of fatty acids are lacking or when the fecal stream is diverted by an ileostomy or colostomy.
    • Patients who are overweight often suffer from muscle atrophy caused by inactivity, which worsens back symptoms and problems.
    • This is also called optic atrophy, and may be present at birth or may appear because of a condition such as diabetes.
    • Spinal muscular atrophy is a degenerative condition which is untreatable.
    • Muscles deteriorate in microgravity conditions; significant muscle atrophy has been seen in humans after only five days in space.
    • Lack of gravitational forces leads to muscle atrophy, decreased muscle tone and strength, and neuromuscular changes (eg, fatigue, slowed tendon reflexes).
    • Evaluation of the wrist should begin with identifying erythema, swelling, masses, skin lesions, muscle atrophy, contractures, scars, or other obvious deformities.
    • During the immobilization of a fracture, all nonimmobilized parts must be moved to avoid stiffness, muscle atrophy and joint contractures.
    • Coeliac disease is characterised histologically by total or subtotal villous atrophy.
    • Repair within three weeks of injury is recommended to avoid tendon retraction, reinjury, tendon degeneration and muscle atrophy.
    • Researchers administered cognitive function tests to 3,734 men, obtained brain images from 574 men, and evaluated brain atrophy in 290 male autopsy results.
    Synonyms
    wasting, wasting away, emaciation, withering, shrivelling, shrivelling up, shrinking, drying up, wilting, decaying, decay

Origin

Late 16th century: from French atrophier (verb), atrophie (noun), from late Latin atrophia, from Greek, ‘lack of food’, from a- ‘without’ + trophē ‘food’.

 
 
随便看

 

英语词典包含464360条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/12/24 1:09:48