Definition of Extravasated

1. Verb. (past of extravasate) ¹

2. Adjective. Produced by extravasation ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Extravasated

1. extravasate [v] - See also: extravasate

Lexicographical Neighbors of Extravasated

extravagant
extravagantly
extravagantness
extravaganza
extravaganzas
extravagate
extravagated
extravagates
extravagating
extravagation
extravagations
extravagent
extravasate
extravasated (current term)
extravasates
extravasating
extravasation
extravasation cyst
extravasations
extravascular
extravascular fluid
extravascular lung water
extravastion
extravehicular
extravehicular activity
extravenate
extraventricular
extraversion

Literary usage of Extravasated

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

1. Medical Record by George Frederick Shrady, Thomas Lathrop Stedman (1890)
"and just how many of these were due to the bullet, and how many to extravasated blood, cannot be positively said, but probably most were due to the latter ..."

2. A System of surgery: theoretical and practical v.5 by Timothy Holmes (1870)
"When thus extravasated over bones near the surface (as those of the vault of the skull), the blood commonly feels like a circumscribed swelling, ..."

3. The Medical Times and Gazette (1866)
"... as a whole, was beautifully injected with blood, the portion! only surrounding the patches showing extravasation. The extravasated points formed two ..."

4. Catalogue of the Hunterian Collection in the Museum of the Royal College of by Museum, Royal College of Surgeons in London (1830)
"Blood extravasated in consequence of Accident. 7. A section of the spleen of a man, ruptured in consequence of an injury: after which he became faint and ..."

5. A German-English dictionary of terms used in medicine and the allied sciences by Hugo Lang, Bertram Abrahams (1905)
"... m. extravasated blood Blut-farbe, /. blood-pigment Blut-farbig, a. blood-coloured Blut-farbstoff, m. the blood-pigments (eg haemoglobin, &c. ..."

6. The American and English Encyclopedia of Law by David Shephard Garland, John Houston Merrill, Charles Frederic Williams, Thomas Johnson Michie (1889)
"... a pregnant female, and neck was an indication of mechanical vio- Medical experts may show the effect of appearance of extravasated blood in the duce an ..."

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