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vesication
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vesication
vesication Med. (vɛsɪˈkeɪʃən) [ad. mod.L. vesicatio, noun of action from vesicare: see prec. So F. vésication (16th cent.), Pg. vesica{chook}āo, Sp. vejigacion. Cf. vesiculation.] 1. The result of blistering or of rising in blisters; a blister or group of these.1543 Traheron Vigo's Chirurg. ii. xi. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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vesiculation
vesiculation Path. and Geol. (vɪsɪkjʊˈleɪʃən) [f. vesicula + -ation. Cf. vesication.] The formation of vesicles, esp. on the skin; a vesicular condition or pustule.1876 Duhring Dis. Skin 67 Typical fluid exudation is observed in vesiculation, in the vesicles of eczema and herpes. 1897 Allbutt's Syst...
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Chlormethine
Skin exposure mainly causes erythema (redness) and vesication (blistering) at first, but absorption through the skin causes systemic toxicity.
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scabbing
scabbing, vbl. n. (ˈskæbɪŋ) [f. scab v. + -ing1.] 1. The process of forming a scab.1747 Wall in Phil. Trans. XLIV. 593, I now usually continue it..till, the Scabbing being perfected, I find it Time to cleanse the first Passages. 1805 Med. Jrnl. XIV. 507 The usual inflammation, vesication, and scabbi...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Ricin
indicated by swelling (edema) of the eyes and lips; asthma; bronchial irritation; dry, sore throat; congestion; skin redness (erythema); skin blisters (vesication
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epispastic
epispastic, a. and n. Med. (ɛpɪˈspæstɪk) [ad. mod.L. epispasticus, a. Gr. ἐπισπαστικός, f. ἐπισπάειν, f. ἐπί towards + σπάειν to draw.] A. adj. Drawing out humours; blistering.1657 Phys. Dict., Epispastick, blistering plaisters, or any other strong drawing plaister. 1861 Hulme tr. Moquin-Tandon ii. ...
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Calotropis gigantea
Signs and symptoms
Applied to the skin, it causes redness and vesication.
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umbois
▪ I. ‖ umbo (ˈʌmbəʊ) Pl. umbones (ʌmˈbəʊniːz), umbos. [L. umbo, umbōnis shield-boss, knob, projection, etc. Cf. F. ombon (in sense 1).] 1. The boss of a shield, usually in or near the centre, and sometimes having a sharp point.1721 Swift Poems, George-nim-Dan-Dean's Answ. to Sheridan 33 Like the umb...
Oxford English Dictionary
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phlyctena
‖ phlyctena, -æna Path. (flɪkˈtiːnə) [mod.L., a. Gr. ϕλύκταινα a blister (Hippocr.), f. ϕλύειν, ϕλύζ-ειν to swell.] An inflammatory vesicle, pimple, or blister upon the cuticle or the eye-ball.1693 tr. Blancard's Phys. Dict. (ed. 2), Plyctæna, a Pimple in the Skin; also a little Ulcer in the corneou...
Oxford English Dictionary
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counter-irritant
ˌcounter-ˈirritant [f. counter- 3 + irritant.] Med. A medical appliance used to produce irritation of the surface of the body, in order to counteract disease of more deeply-seated or distant parts. Also fig.1854 Macaulay Biog., Bunyan (1860) 36 Counter-irritants are of as great use in moral as in ph...
Oxford English Dictionary
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second
▪ I. second, n.1 (ˈsɛkənd) Forms: 4, 6 seconde, 6– second. [a. F. seconde, ad. med.L. secunda, fem. of L. secundus second a., used ellipt. for secunda minuta, lit. ‘second minute’, i.e. the result of the second operation of sexagesimal division; the result of the first such operation (now called ‘mi...
Oxford English Dictionary
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