wound$92536$ - traduction vers grec
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wound$92536$ - traduction vers grec

ASPECT OF HISTORY
Wound treatment; Wound care; Wound doctor
  • [[Achilles]] tending [[Patroclus]] wounded by an arrow
(Attic red-figure kylix, c. 500 BC)
  • A glass container containing tubocurarine chloride. Tubocurarine was used in ancient times as a poison, but was used in the 20th century as a muscle relaxant.
  • This is a portrait of [[Joseph Lister]], who was the first doctor to begin to sterilize his surgical gauze.

wound      
n. πλήγμα, πληγή, τραύμα
blood poisoning         
  • Personification of ''septicemia'', carrying a spray can marked "[[Poison]]"
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  • Sepsis Steps. Training tool for teaching the progression of sepsis stages
  • Phenotypic strategy switches of microbes capable of provoking sepsis
  • Intravenous fluids being given
LIFE-THREATENING ORGAN DYSFUNCTION TRIGGERED BY INFECTION
Septicemia; Blood poisoning; Septicaemia; Streptococcal septicaemia; Septacemia; Septasemia; Septecemia; Severe sepsis; Sepsis-induced hypotension; Candida septicaemia; Septicaemia affecting skin; Gonococcal septicaemia affecting skin; Septicimia; Blood-poisoning; Bacterial sepsis; Septicæmia; Epidemiology of sepsis; Viral sepsis; Wound fever; Septicemias
πυαιμία, δηλητηρίαση αίματος

Définition

wound
I. VERB FORM OF 'WIND'
Wound is the past tense and past participle of wind
2.
II. INJURY
(wounds, wounding, wounded)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
A wound is damage to part of your body, especially a cut or a hole in your flesh, which is caused by a gun, knife, or other weapon.
The wound is healing nicely...
Six soldiers are reported to have died from their wounds.
N-COUNT
2.
If a weapon or something sharp wounds you, it damages your body.
A bomb exploded in a hotel, killing six people and wounding another five...
The two wounded men were taken to a nearby hospital.
VERB: V n, V-ed
The wounded are people who are wounded.
Hospitals said they could not cope with the wounded...
N-PLURAL
3.
A wound is a lasting bad effect on someone's mind or feelings caused by a very upsetting experience. (LITERARY)
She has been so deeply hurt it may take forever for the wounds to heal.
N-COUNT
4.
If you are wounded by what someone says or does, your feelings are deeply hurt.
He was deeply wounded by the treachery of close aides...
= hurt
VERB: be V-ed
5.
to rub salt into the wound: see salt

Wikipédia

History of wound care

The history of wound care spans from prehistory to modern medicine. Wounds naturally heal by themselves, but hunter-gatherers would have noticed several factors and certain herbal remedies would speed up or assist the process, especially if it was grievous. In ancient history, this was followed by the realisation of the necessity of hygiene and the halting of bleeding, where wound dressing techniques and surgery developed. Eventually the germ theory of disease also assisted in improving wound care.