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Showing results for perfusion.

perfusion

American  
[per-fyoo-zhuhn] / pərˈfyu ʒən /

noun

  1. the act of perfusing.

  2. Surgery. the passage of fluid through the lymphatic system or blood vessels to an organ or a tissue.


Etymology

Origin of perfusion

1565–75; < Latin perfūsiōn- (stem of perfūsiō ) a drenching. See perfuse, -ion

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Diaz Artiles and her team aim to collect cardiovascular responses using each countermeasure and compare effects on ocular perfusion pressure and other cardiovascular functions that may be affected by microgravity environments.

From Science Daily • Jun. 19, 2024

Most significantly, surgical programs that have adopted perfusion are transplanting more organs.

From New York Times • Apr. 2, 2024

And other research is changing the definition of death itself: researchers at Yale University have developed a perfusion system for keeping pig brain cells and bodies “alive” for hours after the animals have died.

From Scientific American • Oct. 19, 2023

You could “see how the heart was performing” in the body after restarting perfusion, he says.

From Science Magazine • May 11, 2023

With such a perfusion of ringlits I should scarcely have known her—but the ands, feat, and i's, was very like.

From Burlesques by Thackeray, William Makepeace