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Definition of Hematolysis
1. Noun. Lysis of erythrocytes with the release of hemoglobin.
Generic synonyms: Lysis
Derivative terms: Haemolytic, Hemolytic
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hematolysis
Literary usage of Hematolysis
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Clinical pathology of the blood: A Treatise on the General Principles and by James Ewing (1903)
"The latter view is based principally upon the abundant evidence of excessive
hematolysis, which is undoubtedly the prominent external feature of the disease ..."
2. Annals of Ophthalmology (1904)
"While widely different and not conclusive, these freezing points are notably
above that of the serum of the rabbit, which is .56. hematolysis: The liquid ..."
3. The Surgery of the Ear by Samuel Joseph Kopetzky (1908)
"Bard (88), however, admits the inferior value of hematolysis as compared to ...
and hematolysis up to the present writing are possessed of almost no ..."
4. Clinical Hematology: A Practical Guide to the Examination of the Blood with by John C. DaCosta (1901)
"Owing to the coexistence of these two conflicting factors, the real extent of
the hematolysis cannot be determined until after the disappearance of the ..."
5. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1908)
"The essential process seemed to have been hematolysis. The length of convalescence
was on the average twenty-six days. Other operators give the average time ..."