¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Exudates
1. exudate [n] - See also: exudate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Exudates
Literary usage of Exudates
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Manual of Clinical Diagnosis by Means of Microscopical and Chemical by Charles Edmund Simon (1904)
"Putrid exudates. Putrid exudates are observed following perforation of a gangrenous
focus or of a gastric or intestinal ulcer into one of the body- cavities ..."
2. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1907)
"In the first group are the fatty exudates containing chyle from the lymphatics.
In the second fat is likewise present, but according to Quincke it is ..."
3. A Manual of clinical diagnosis by means of microscopic and chemical methods by Charles Edmund Simon (1907)
"Serous exudates are clear, of a light straw color, and present a ... On standing,
even the purely serous exudates generally undergo a certain degree of ..."
4. The Journal of Experimental Medicine by Rockefeller University, Rockefeller Institute, Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (1908)
"THE ENZYMES OF FIBRINOUS exudates—THE EFFECT OF ONE ENZYME UPON ANOTHER. ...
Fibrinous exudates are readily obtained by injection of turpentine into the ..."
5. Chemical and microscopical diagnosis by Francis Carter Wood (1909)
"PART VIII TRANSUDATES AND exudates I. GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS THE examination of
transudates ... The pleural exudates contain rarely less than 4.5 per cent.; ..."
6. Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of Disease: A Text-book for by Augustus Caillé (1906)
"exudates exudates are inflammatory in origin, and their examination can aid as
... Tuberculous exudates are usually serous or haemorrhagic, the latter form ..."
7. Clinical Bacteriology and Haematology for Practitioners by Walter D'Este Emery (1921)
"CELLS MET WITH IN exudates. Leucocytes derived from the blood are present in the
majority of exudates, and in most cases they are of ordinary appearance, ..."