Sanakirja
Tekoälykääntäjä
Kuvat 5

Vaihtoehtoiset kirjoitusmuodot

Ääntäminen

  • ÄäntäminenUK
  • Tuntematon aksentti:
    • IPA: /əˈfɪəɹɪsɪs/
  • linguistics:
    • IPA: /əˈfɛɹəsɪs/
  • US:
    • IPA: /əˈfɛɹəsɪs/
    • IPA: /ˌæfəˈɹisɪs/
  • medicine:
    • IPA: /ˌæfəˈɹisɪs/
KieliKäännökset
espanjaaféresis
italiaaferesi
latinaablatio, aphaeresis
portugaliaférese
puolaafereza
ranskaaphérèse
saksaAphärese
suomiafereesi
venäjäафере́з (aferéz)

Määritelmät

Substantiivi

  1. (phonetics, linguistics, prosody) Elision, suppression, or complete loss of a letter or sound (syllable) from the beginning of a word, such as the development of from .
  2. (medicine, specific, still current) The removal of blood from a patient, and the removal of certain components (such as platelets) from that blood, followed by the transfusion of the filtered blood back to the donor (patient).
  3. (medicine, general, obsolete) Extirpation or extraction of a superfluity (especially a pathological one) from the body, especially blood.

Taivutusmuodot

Monikkoaphereses

(medicine, specific, still current) The removal of blood from a patient, and the removal of certain components (such as platelets) from that blood, followed by the transfusion of the filtered blood back to the donor (patient).

Whole blood enters the centrifuge (1) and separates into plasma (2), leukocytes (3), and erythrocytes (4). Selected components are then drawn off (5).

(medicine, specific, still current) The removal of blood from a patient, and the removal of certain components (such as platelets) from that blood, followed by the transfusion of the filtered blood back to the donor (patient).

Disinfect, insert the cannula, pull out the cannula, and dress the wound. The blue pressure cuff is controlled by the platelet apheresis machine in newer models.

(medicine, specific, still current) The removal of blood from a patient, and the removal of certain components (such as platelets) from that blood, followed by the transfusion of the filtered blood back to the donor (patient).

A Fenwal Erythropheresis machine is being used for plasmapheresis.