Definition of Coagula

1. coagulum [n] - See also: coagulum

Medical Definition of Coagula

1. Plural of coagulum. (05 Mar 2000)

Lexicographical Neighbors of Coagula

coagencies
coagency
coagent
coagents
coagglutination
coagglutinin
coaggregation
coagment
coagmentation
coagmentations
coagmented
coagmenting
coagments
coagonist
coagonists
coagula (current term)
coagulabilities
coagulability
coagulable
coagulant
coagulants
coagulase
coagulases
coagulate
coagulated
coagulates
coagulating
coagulation
coagulation factor
coagulation factor XI

Literary usage of Coagula

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Treatise on the Practice of Medicine by George Bacon Wood (1866)
"(a) Direct Effects of coagula.—With regard to the effects of coagula in the ... There is reason to think that coagula in the blood-vessels sometimes cause ..."

2. The Retrospect of Medicine by William Braithwaite (1881)
"Puerperal coagula differ from menstrual coagula essentially ... Menstrual coagula may occur at any time during the child-bearing period of life, ..."

3. Clinical Diagnosis: The Bacteriological, Chemical, and Microscopical by Rudolf Jaksch von Wartenhorst (1899)
"The author has termed the condition ureteritis membranacea. A similar appearance is recorded by Baumuller.i4& 2. Fibrin coagula.-—Large and much-matted ..."

4. Lectures on appendicitis and notes on other subjects by Robert Tuttle Morris (1899)
"A large psoas abscess may have upon the walls of its cavity a half pound of tenacious, partially organized lymph coagula which cannot be removed easily with ..."

5. The London Medical Gazette (1840)
"In it»; larger branches of the pulmonary artery, these coagula lay completely free, and partly filled the cavity of the vessel; ..."

6. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1864)
"... from Obstruction of the Pulmonary Artery by coagula. —The following remarkable case of this is recorded in a recent number (Jan. ..."

7. A Practical Treatise on the Diagnosis, Pathology, and Treatment of Diseases by Austin Flint (1870)
"Clots formed after death and at the close of life—Fibrinous coagula formed during ... First, will be considered the formation of fibrinous coagula ..."

8. The Retrospect of Practical Medicine and Surgery: Being a Half-yearly edited by William Braithwaite, James Braithwaite, Edmond Fauriel Trevelyan (1854)
"There was nothing peculiar in the blood generally. The coagula in the right cavities of the heart presented quite ordinary characters. ..."

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