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anemia

/uh-nee-mee-uh/US // əˈni mi ə //UK // (əˈniːmɪə) //

贫血,贫血症,贫血病,血癌

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Pathology. a quantitative deficiency of the hemoglobin, often accompanied by a reduced number of red blood cells and causing pallor, weakness, and breathlessness.
    • : a lack of power, vigor, vitality, or colorfulness: His writing suffers from anemia.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Economists believe high rates of iron-deficiency anemia also have a macroeconomic effect, reducing individual productivity by as much as 40% and reducing GDP by over 1%.

  • Inhibiting sickling would reduce cell lysis — where the cell’s outer membrane is broken — and improve anemia, possibly reducing episodes of pain.

  • Three days after celebrating his 60th birthday this month, he was admitted to a clinic in La Plata with anemia and dehydration.

  • Maradona, who turned 60 on Friday, was initially hospitalized Monday with symptoms of anemia, dehydration and depression, per reports.

  • For example, CRISPR Therapeutics has ongoing clinical trials employing CRISPR-Cas9 to fix sickle cell anemia, as well as another blood condition known as beta thalassemia.

  • When I was a medical student in my native Oklahoma, I treated a young woman with a calm smile and severe anemia.

  • But no one could figure out the cause of her anemia until someone asked her more carefully about her diet.

  • Its relationship to anemia, however, is more complex than the cause-and-effect sequence I learned in medical school.

  • MDS is a relatively rare condition that can lead to a depletion of red or white blood cells, anemia, heavy bleeding.

  • The three anti-anemia drugs have cost the government a reported $60 billion since 1989.

  • It occurs in well-marked cases of pernicious anemia and leukemia, and, much less commonly, in very severe symptomatic anemias.

  • In pernicious anemia they are always greatly diminished, and an increase should exclude the diagnosis of this disease.

  • (b) In secondary anemia plaques are generally increased, although sometimes decreased.

  • Megaloblasts are found in pernicious anemia, and with extreme rarity in any other condition.

  • Pathologically, normoblasts occur in severe symptomatic anemia, leukemia, and pernicious anemia.