fulminating appendicitis - translation to αραβικά
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fulminating appendicitis - translation to αραβικά

ANY SALT DERIVED FROM FULMINIC ACID
Fulminates; Fulminating powder
  • English pronunciation of the word "fulminate"

fulminating appendicitis      
‎ الْتِهابُ الزَّائِدَةِ الخاطِف‎
appendicitis         
  • 3D model of appendicitis.
  • 190px
  • Inflamed appendix removal by open surgery
  • Appendicitis as seen on CT imaging
  • 34–77}}
{{refend}}
  • more than 27.5}}
{{refend}}
  • Appendicolith as seen on plain X-ray
  • Laparoscopic appendectomy.
  • A CT scan demonstrating acute appendicitis (note the appendix has a diameter of 17.1 mm and there is surrounding fat stranding)
  • inflamed gallbladder]] that reaches the right lower part of the abdomen.
  • 190px
  • 190px
  • 190px
  • Laparoscopic view of a phlegmonous cecal appendix with fibrinous plaques, located in the right iliac fossa.
  • Location of [[McBurney's point]] (1), located two thirds the distance from the umbilicus (2) to the right anterior superior iliac spine (3)
  • Laparoscopic-assisted transumbilical appendectomy scar on a pediatric patient. Anesthetic result one month after surgery.
  • Ultrasound image of acute appendicitis
  • stitches]] the day after having the appendix removed by laparoscopic surgery
  • Location of the appendix in the [[digestive system]]
  • A [[fecalith]] marked by the arrow that has resulted in acute appendicitis.
INFLAMMATION OF THE APPENDIX
Apendicitis; Acute appendicitis; Ruptured appendix; Apendicitus; Appendictic; Appendecitis; Apendisities; Rumbling appendicitis; Pseudoappendicitis; Appendix rupture; Epityphlitis; Burst appendix
N
إلتهاب الزائدة الدودية
epityphlitis         
  • 3D model of appendicitis.
  • 190px
  • Inflamed appendix removal by open surgery
  • Appendicitis as seen on CT imaging
  • 34–77}}
{{refend}}
  • more than 27.5}}
{{refend}}
  • Appendicolith as seen on plain X-ray
  • Laparoscopic appendectomy.
  • A CT scan demonstrating acute appendicitis (note the appendix has a diameter of 17.1 mm and there is surrounding fat stranding)
  • inflamed gallbladder]] that reaches the right lower part of the abdomen.
  • 190px
  • 190px
  • 190px
  • Laparoscopic view of a phlegmonous cecal appendix with fibrinous plaques, located in the right iliac fossa.
  • Location of [[McBurney's point]] (1), located two thirds the distance from the umbilicus (2) to the right anterior superior iliac spine (3)
  • Laparoscopic-assisted transumbilical appendectomy scar on a pediatric patient. Anesthetic result one month after surgery.
  • Ultrasound image of acute appendicitis
  • stitches]] the day after having the appendix removed by laparoscopic surgery
  • Location of the appendix in the [[digestive system]]
  • A [[fecalith]] marked by the arrow that has resulted in acute appendicitis.
INFLAMMATION OF THE APPENDIX
Apendicitis; Acute appendicitis; Ruptured appendix; Apendicitus; Appendictic; Appendecitis; Apendisities; Rumbling appendicitis; Pseudoappendicitis; Appendix rupture; Epityphlitis; Burst appendix
الْتِهابُ جَنيبِ الأَعْوَر

Ορισμός

appendicitis
Appendicitis is an illness in which a person's appendix is infected and painful.
N-UNCOUNT

Βικιπαίδεια

Fulminate

Fulminates are chemical compounds which include the fulminate ion (CNO, C≡N+−O). The fulminate ion is a pseudohalic ion because its charge and reactivity are similar to those of the halogens. Due to the instability of the ion, fulminate salts are friction-sensitive explosives. The best known is mercury(II) fulminate, which has been used as a primary explosive in detonators. Fulminates can be formed from metals, such as silver and mercury, dissolved in nitric acid and reacted with ethanol. The weak single nitrogen-oxygen bond is responsible for their instability. Nitrogen very easily forms a stable triple bond to another nitrogen atom, forming nitrogen gas.