¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Catabolites
1. catabolite [n] - See also: catabolite
Lexicographical Neighbors of Catabolites
Literary usage of Catabolites
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Harvey Lectures by Harvey Society of New York, New York Academy of Medicine (1912)
"... to say nothing of the physiological action of the nitrogenous catabolites,
that must float about in the circulation prior to their excretion. ..."
2. Diarrhea and Malnutrition: Interactions, Mechanisms, and Interventions by Lincoln C. Chen, Nevin S. Scrimshaw (1983)
"... through degradation, fermentation, etc.; competition for uptake of nutrients
on the part of the causative agent; effect of bacterial catabolites; etc. ..."
3. The Oxford Medicine by Henry Asbury Christian, James Mackenzie (1920)
"Any great loss of water and electrolytes, with a retention of catabolites by the
damaged kidneys, is sufficient'to provoke serious disturbances of cellular ..."
4. A Practical Treatise on Nervous Diseases for the Medical Student and General by Frank Savary Pearce (1904)
"Self-developed catabolites may be the remote cause back of all others; these
autochthonous poisons precipitating the mechanical status of the cells found ..."
5. A Text-book of chemistry: For Students and Practitioners of Medicine by Edward Curtis Hill (1911)
"The final products of catabolism (catabolites) are excreted. Atwater has shown
that there is no more metabolism with severe mental labor than with the most ..."