hemato- 或 hemat- 也作 haemat- 或 haemato-
pref.(前缀)
语源
pref.(前缀)
- Blood:
血:
hematology.
血液学
语源
- Greek haimato-
希腊语 haimato- - from haima haimat- [blood]
源自 haima haimat- [血液]
hemato- or (before a vowel) hemat-
combining form
US variants of haemato-
hemato-
Word Origin
1
a variant of hemo-:
hematogenesis.
Also, hemat-; especially British, haemat-, haemato-.
Origin
< New Latin, combining form < Greek haimat-, stem of haîma blood
Related Words
- hematoblast
- hematocele
- hematochezia
- hematocrit
- hematocryal
- hematocyst
hemato-
combining form
⇨ see hemat-
combining form
⇨ see hemat-
hemato-
combining form
- US spelling of
HAEMATO- .〈美〉同HAEMATO- .
1888 Rolleston & Jackson Anim. Life 844When the green-coloured organism passes into a resting phase..its colour changes to red, owing to the formation of *haematochrome dissolved in droplets of fat.
1866 *Hæmatocryal . [ see hæmatothermal]
1854 Mayne Expos. Lex. ,*Hæmatocystis..a hydatid, or cyst containing blood..a hematocyst.
1890 L. C. Wooldridge tr. Bunge'sText-bk. Physiol. &Pathol. Chem. vi. 102The iron is more firmly fixed in the nuclein of the yolk of egg than in the albuminates of iron. .. The nuclein which containediron. .is doubtless the precursor of hæmoglobin, for there is no considerable quantity of any other compound of iron in the yolk. I have therefore proposed that this compound should receive the name *hæmatogen (blood-former).
1934 J. F. M c ClendonMan. Biochem. 112Bunge..supposed that mammals are born with a store of iron. That led him to look for iron in the eggs of birds, and he found an iron compound which he called hematogen.
1876 tr. Wagner'sGen. Pathol. 506Cysts which arise from blood-vessels, especially veins..hæmatocystides.
Ibid. 556*Hæmatogenic icterus.
1881 Sci. Amer. 12 Mar. 161/3For the dyscrasic or haematogenic origin of Bright's disease.
1866 A. Flint Princ. Med. (1880) 80Icterus, as thus induced by changes in the blood itself, is called *haematogenous.
1880 J. W. Legg Bile 229A hæmatogenous jaundice.
1651 Biggs New Disp. ⁋234These *Hæmatognomists or diviners by the Phœnomena's in the bloud.
1894 Med. News 29 Sept. 348/2 (heading)A modification of Hedin's *hematokrit.
Ibid. 350/2States of comparative health..seem to be of the least importance of all the data necessary for the present status of the hematokrit.
1946 Nature 31 Aug. 304/1 These patients had,..because of the low hæmatocrit, a significantly reduced blood volume.
1958 Immunology I. 206 Blood samples were centrifuged in Wintrobe haematocrit tubes.
1966 Lancet 24 Dec. 1381/2 Chamberlain and Millard (1963) reduced the hæmatocrit and red-blood-cell volume ( R.C. V.) in their patients with polycythæmia by means of oxygen.
1875 R. Fowler Med. Vocab. (ed. 2) 222/1*Hæmatolytic... 1. Accompanied with the escape of blood from distended capillaries. 2. Applied adj. and subs. to medicines, said to, by long continued use, impoverish the blood.
1886 Syd. Soc. Lex. ,Hæmatolytic, having power to diminish the number of red corpuscles in the blood.
1881 Brit. Med. Jrnl. 28 May 852/2A case of *haematomyelia in a man aged 19.
1940 H. G. Wells Babes in Darkling Wood iii. iii. 275He was equal to hæmatomyelia, a sort of temporary stroke just at the back of the head.
1970 Archiv. für Toxikol. XXVI. 56 The apparent sudden onset, the lack of progression,..and the relatively advanced age of manifestation all point to hematomyelia as the cause of the lesion, which in turn follows as a consequence of the increased bleeding tendency associated with benzene poisoning.
1881 Huxley in NatureNo. 615. 347This modern humoral pathology was essentially blood-pathology (*hæmatopathology).
1854 Mayne Expos. Lex. ,Hæmatophagus, blood-eating; applied to those insects which seek the blood of animals for their sustenance, as the flea..*hematophagous.
1886 Syd. Soc. Lex. ,Hæmatophagous..also applied to an Hæmatozoon.
1854 Mayne Expos. Lex. ,*Hæmatopoiesis..assimilation of the chyle to blood; blood-making.
1876 tr. Wagner'sGen. Pathol. 536Consecutive changes..which disturb hæmatopoiesis, digestion, respiration, etc.
1885 Jrnl. Physiol. VI. 27The filtrate was reddish and shewed a spectrum which is that of acid *haematoporphyrin.
1902 Encycl. Brit. XXXI. 726/2By mineral acids the iron may be removed, leaving a purplish pigment, Hæmatoporphyrin, which has no power of taking up or giving off oxygen.
1928 J. Pryde RecentAdv. Biochem. (ed. 2) x. 315It would seem that neither hæmatoporphyrin nor mesoporphyrin is formed in the human body.
Ibid. ,Hæmatoporphyrin has a very powerful light-sensitising action.
1955 Sci. NewsLet. 9 Apr. 240/3Cancer tissue can be made to glow a bright red under ultraviolet light when a powder called hematoporphyrin is introduced intravenously before surgery.
1955 Endeavour XIV. 126/2 Haematoporphyrin..is accordingly described as 1,3,5,8-tetramethyl-2,4-di⁓(α-oxyethyl)-porphin-6,7-dipropionic acid.
1884 Lancet 2 Feb. 207/2 *Haematosalpinx... Tumours were discovered to the left and right of the uterus. These..proved to be the tubes, full of tar-like blood and firmly adherent.
1890 Billings Nat. Med. Dict. 614/1Hæmatosalpinx, collection of blood in the Fallopian tube.
1923 J. M. M. Kerr et al. CombinedText-bk. Obstetr. & Gynæcol. xli. 612The fluid..may extend to the uterine cavity, forming a hæmatometra, and in the most extreme cases it may distend the Fallopian tubes, forming hæmatosalpinges.
1972 C. J. Dewhurst IntegratedObstetr. &Gynaecol. Postgrad. i. 12/2Haematosalpinx is most uncommon except in cases of very long-standing , or in association with retention of blood in a fragment of upper vagina. [ imperforate membrane]
1886 Syd. Soc. Lex. ,*Hæmatoscope, an instrument invented by Hermann to regulate the thickness of the layer of the diluted blood when examined by the spectroscope.
1887 Jrnl. R.Microsc. Soc. Ser. ii. VII. 470The determination of the quantity of oxyhæmoglobin by instruments called hæmatoscopes or hæmatospectroscopes.
1854 Mayne Expos. Lex. ,Hæmatoscopia, term for an examination of the blood; *hematoscopy.
1887 Jrnl. R.Microsc. Soc. Ser. ii. VII. 470Hæmatoscopy..a new spectroscopic method of analysing the blood.
1866 Owen Anat. Vertebr I. 7Vertebrates might be primarily divided..into *Hæmatothermal, having the four-chambered heart, spongy lungs, hot blood, and Hæmatocryal, having less perfect breathing organs, less complex heart, with cold blood.
1852 J. Miller Pract. Surg. xxv. (ed. 2) 315Blood accumulating within the pleural cavity, may compress the lung, and constitute a dangerous *hæmato-thorax.
1876 tr. Wagner'sGen. Pathol. 212By hæmatothorax is understood hæmorrhage into the pleural cavities.
hemato-
also haemato-, word-forming element meaning "blood," from Greek haimato-, comb. form of haima (genitive haimatos) "blood" (see -emia).
hemato-
combining form. blood: Hematology = study of blood. Also, hemat- before vowels.
[< Greek haîma, -atos]
hemato-
combining form
see hemat-
see hemat-
hemato-
Prefix
- Alternative spelling of haemato-