oxygen starvation - traducción al Inglés
Diclib.com
Diccionario ChatGPT
Ingrese una palabra o frase en cualquier idioma 👆
Idioma:

Traducción y análisis de palabras por inteligencia artificial ChatGPT

En esta página puede obtener un análisis detallado de una palabra o frase, producido utilizando la mejor tecnología de inteligencia artificial hasta la fecha:

  • cómo se usa la palabra
  • frecuencia de uso
  • se utiliza con más frecuencia en el habla oral o escrita
  • opciones de traducción
  • ejemplos de uso (varias frases con traducción)
  • etimología

oxygen starvation - traducción al Inglés

CONDITION IN WHICH THE BODY OR A REGION OF THE BODY IS DEPRIVED OF ADEQUATE OXYGEN SUPPLY AT THE TISSUE LEVEL
Anemic hypoxia; Oxygen starvation; Tissue hypoxia; Altitude hypoxia; Oxygen-shortage; Oxygen shortage; Hypoxiation; Oxygen deficiency; Hypoxic tissue; Hypoxic tissues; Localized hypoxia; Localised hypoxia

oxygen starvation         
(n.) = falta de oxígeno, falta de oxigenación
Ex: The most likely causes of brain damage among low birthweight infants are prematurity and infections, not oxygen starvation.
starvation         
  • [[Buchenwald]] inmates, 16 April 1945, when camp was liberated
  • [[Maximilian Kolbe]], on a West German postage stamp, marked [[Auschwitz]]
  • No data}}
  • A girl during the [[Nigerian Civil War]] of the late 1960s, shown suffering the effects of severe hunger and malnutrition
  • The starving [[Livilla]] refusing food.<br />From a drawing by André Castagne.
MOST EXTREME FORM OF MALNUTRITION, A CONSEQUENCE OF PROLONGED INSUFFICIENCY OF FOOD
Starving; Starve; Starved to death; Starvation state; Inanition; Deprivation of food; Death by starvation; Involuntary fasting
(n.) = inanición, hambre, escasez, falta
Ex: This approach let to the financial starvation of public libraries.
----
* oxygen starvation = falta de oxígeno, falta de oxigenación
oxygen         
  • An experiment setup for preparation of oxygen in academic laboratories
  • alt=A ball structure of a molecule. Its backbone is a zig-zag chain of three carbon atoms connected in the center to an oxygen atom and on the end to 6 hydrogens.
  • alt=A drawing of a young man facing towards the viewer, but looking on the side. He wear a white curly wig, dark suit and white scarf.
  • alt=The inside of a small spaceship, charred and apparently destroyed.
  • alt=An elderly worker in a helmet is facing his side to the viewer in an industrial hall. The hall is dark but is illuminated yellow glowing splashes of a melted substance.
  • Oxygen and [[MAPP gas]] compressed-gas cylinders with regulators
  • alt=A concentric-sphere diagram, showing, from the core to the outer shell, iron, silicon, oxygen, neon, carbon, helium and hydrogen layers.
  • alt=A metal frame structure stands on the snow near a tree. A middle-aged man wearing a coat, boots, leather gloves and a cap stands by the structure and holds it with his right hand.
  • alt=A drawing of three vertical pipes connected at the bottom and filled with oxygen (left pipe), water (middle) and hydrogen (right). Anode and cathode electrodes are inserted into the left and right pipes and externally connected to a battery.
  • alt=A gray device with a label DeVILBISS LT4000 and some text on the front panel. A green plastic pipe is running from the device.
  • Liquid oxygen, temporarily suspended in a magnet owing to its paramagnetism
  • Oxygen discharge (spectrum) tube
  • [[Space-filling model]] representation of dioxygen (O<sub>2</sub>) molecule
  • aufbau]] filling of the orbitals with the 12 electrons, 6 from each O atom, beginning from the lowest-energy orbitals, and resulting in covalent double-bond character from filled orbitals (and cancellation of the contributions of the pairs of σ and σ<sup>*</sup> and π and π<sup>*</sup> orbital pairs).
  • alt=A graph showing time evolution of oxygen pressure on Earth; the pressure increases from zero to 0.2 atmospheres.
  • alt=Time evolution of oxygen-18 concentration on the scale of 500 million years showing many local peaks.
  • alt=A drawing of an elderly man sitting by a table and facing parallel to the drawing. His left arm rests on a notebook, legs crossed.
  • alt=A rusty piece of a bolt.
  • 2}} is used in [[space suit]]s.
  • alt=A diagram of photosynthesis processes, including income of water and carbon dioxide, illumination and release of oxygen. Reactions produce ATP and NADPH in a Calvin cycle with a sugar as a by product.
  • alt=Water flowing from a bottle into a glass.
  • alt=A diagram showing a male torso and listing symptoms of oxygen toxicity: Eyes&nbsp;– visual field loss, nearsightedness, cataract formation, bleeding, fibrosis; Head&nbsp;– seizures; Muscles&nbsp;– twitching; Respiratory system&nbsp;– jerky breathing, irritation, coughing, pain, shortness of breath, tracheobronchitis, acute respiratory distress syndrome.
  • alt=World map showing that the sea-surface oxygen is depleted around the equator and increases towards the poles.
MULTI-PLATFORM XML EDITOR, XSLT/XQUERY DEBUGGER AND PROFILER
Oxygen xml; Oxygen editor; Oxygen xml editor; Oxygen (software); OXygen; Oxygen XML Author; Oxygen XML Grid; Oxygen XML Text
(n.) = oxígeno
Ex: The lethal effect of displacement of oxygen by an inert gas, such as nitrogen, on insect populations was investigated.
----
* medicinal oxygen = oxígeno medicinal
* oxygen atom = átomo de oxígeno
* oxygen mask = máscara de oxígeno
* oxygen molecule = molécula de oxígeno
* oxygen starvation = falta de oxígeno, falta de oxigenación

Definición

inanition
[??n?'n??(?)n]
¦ noun formal
1. exhaustion caused by lack of nourishment.
2. lack of vigour and enthusiasm.
Origin
ME: from late L. inanitio(n-), from L. inanire 'make empty', from inanis 'empty, vain'.

Wikipedia

Hypoxia (medical)

Hypoxia is a condition in which the body or a region of the body is deprived of adequate oxygen supply at the tissue level. Hypoxia may be classified as either generalized, affecting the whole body, or local, affecting a region of the body. Although hypoxia is often a pathological condition, variations in arterial oxygen concentrations can be part of the normal physiology, for example, during strenuous physical exercise.

Hypoxia differs from hypoxemia and anoxemia, in that hypoxia refers to a state in which oxygen present in a tissue or the whole body is insufficient, whereas hypoxemia and anoxemia refer specifically to states that have low or no oxygen in the blood. Hypoxia in which there is complete absence of oxygen supply is referred to as anoxia.

Hypoxia can be due to external causes, when the breathing gas is hypoxic, or internal causes, such as reduced effectiveness of gas transfer in the lungs, reduced capacity of the blood to carry oxygen, compromised general or local perfusion, or inability of the affected tissues to extract oxygen from, or metabolically process, an adequate supply of oxygen from an adequately oxygenated blood supply.

Generalized hypoxia occurs in healthy people when they ascend to high altitude, where it causes altitude sickness leading to potentially fatal complications: high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE) and high altitude cerebral edema (HACE). Hypoxia also occurs in healthy individuals when breathing inappropriate mixtures of gases with a low oxygen content, e.g., while diving underwater, especially when using malfunctioning closed-circuit rebreather systems that control the amount of oxygen in the supplied air. Mild, non-damaging intermittent hypoxia is used intentionally during altitude training to develop an athletic performance adaptation at both the systemic and cellular level.

Hypoxia is a common complication of preterm birth in newborn infants. Because the lungs develop late in pregnancy, premature infants frequently possess underdeveloped lungs. To improve blood oxygenation, infants at risk of hypoxia may be placed inside incubators that provide warmth, humidity, and supplemental oxygen. More serious cases are treated with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP).

Ejemplos de uso de oxygen starvation
1. The heart attack caused oxygen starvation to the brain, which was the cause of death.
2. The drug caused organ failure resulting in brain damage through oxygen starvation and he died two months later.
3. Moody took drastic action: to prevent his passengers dying of oxygen starvation, he went into a nosedive, dropping 6,000ft in one minute, to an altitude where there was enough oxygen in the outside atmosphere to fill the cabin once more.
4. Bron was born at 4.35pm on September 8 but her mother was told she would not recover from the effects of oxygen starvation and she followed advice to turn off life support at 6pm the following day.
5. Oxygen starvation robs the seas and oceans of many fish, oysters, sea grass beds and other marine life _ and the number of such dead zones has grown every decade since the 1'70s.