ProphetesAI is thinking...
pneumogastric
Answers
MindMap
Loading...
Sources
pneumogastric
pneumogastric, a. (n.) Anat. (njuːməʊˈgæstrɪk, pnjuː-) [mod.f. pneumo- b + gastric. So F. pneumogastrique (Chaussier).] Pertaining to the lungs and the stomach or abdomen; spec. in pneumogastric nerve, name for each of the tenth pair of cerebral nerves, the most widely distributed of all these (henc...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Eusebio Oehl
Fisiologia del pneumogastrico (1867) - Physiology of the pneumogastric.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
vagus
vagus Anat. and Path. (ˈveɪgəs) Pl. vagi (ˈveɪdʒaɪ). [a. L. vagus wandering, straying.] The pneumogastric nerve (see pneumogastric a.).1840 E. Wilson Anat. Vade M. (1842) 403 The Pneumogastric Nerve (vagus) arises by numerous filaments from the respiratory tract immediately below the glosso-pharynge...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Samuel Osborne Habershon
'On the Pathology of the Pneumogastric Nerve' (Lumleian Lectures), 1877, 2nd edit. 1885; Italian translation, 1879.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
vagal
vagal, a. Anat. and Path. (ˈveɪgəl) [f. vag-us + -al1.] a. vagal nerve, the vagus or pneumogastric nerve. b. Of, pertaining to, or affecting this.1854 Orr's Circ. Sci., Org. Nat. I. 205 The exoccipitals..are perforated to give exit to the vagal and hypoglossal nerves. 1885 M{supc}William in Jrnl. Ph...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Charles-Emmanuel Sédillot
Selected writings
Du nerf pneumo-gastrique et de ses fonctions (1829, doctoral thesis) - The pneumogastric nerve and its functions.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
vago-
vago- (ˈveɪgəʊ) used as comb. f. of vagus in a few terms of Anat. or Med. in the sense ‘of or pertaining to, denoting, the vagus or pneumogastric nerve (and some other nerve or part)’, as vago-accessory, vago-glossopharyngeal, vago-sympathetic adjs.; vaˈgotomy Surg. [-tomy], an operation in which th...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Giorgio Baglivi
performed experiments on the circulation of blood in frogs; he also injected various medicines into dogs' veins and spinal canals and experimented on their pneumogastric
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
singultus
‖ singultus (sɪŋˈgʌltəs) [L. Cf. singult.] 1. Path. Hiccups, hiccuping. Given in the Physical Dict. (1657) and in Blancard, Harris, etc., but without evidence of actual use in English.1754–64 Smellie Midwifery III. 180 A fever intervened..attended with singultus. 1767 Gooch Treat. Wounds I. 395 Sick...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Claude-Henri Chouard
By using the same approach to reconstruct the solitary tract and its gustatory nuclei, he observed that the nucleus of the last brachial nerve, the pneumogastric
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
recurrent
recurrent, a. and n.2 (rɪˈkʌrənt) [ad. L. recurrent-em, pres. pple. of recurrĕre to recur. Cf. F. récurrent (16th c.).] A. adj. 1. Anat. and Bot. Of a nerve, vein, artery, branch, etc.: Turned back so as to run or lie in a direction opposite to its former one. recurrent nerves, the laryngeal and men...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Dennis Embleton
Vol. xvii p. 258
Reports of the Newcastle and Gateshead Medical Society
On tenderness and pain of the pneumogastric nerves.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
par
▪ I. par, n.1 (pɑː(r)) [a. L. pār equal, (as n.) that which is equal, equality. Cf. It. pare, Sp., Pg. par, F. pair equal; It., Ger. pari, Pg. paro, par of exchange.] 1. a. Equality of value or standing; an equal footing, a level. Now chiefly in phr. on or upon a par.1662 Petty Taxes 26 A natural pa...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Aix-Marseille University
He conducted research on hypophysis and pneumogastric physiology, which earned him the Monthyon Prize at the French Academy of Sciences.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org