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cardiac

/kahr-dee-ak/US // ˈkɑr diˌæk //UK // (ˈkɑːdɪˌæk) //

心动,心电图,心脏,心脏病

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : of or relating to the heart: cardiac disease.
    • : of or relating to the esophageal portion of the stomach.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Medicine/Medical. a cardiac remedy.
    • : a person with heart disease.

Examples

  • Other than Weaver taking medical leave as a result of a cardiac emergency as word of the New York Post article reached the Lincoln Project, no action was announced against him in the middle of a campaign season.

  • The analysis found that adult cardiac surgery volume fell by more than half nationwide, to roughly 12,000 surgeries a month on average.

  • Taken along with conventional heart medication in patients with chronic cardiac failure, hawthorn berries have been found to improve heart function, shortness of breath, and fatigue.

  • One part of the theory is that stress can cause your cardiac and respiratory signals to get out of whack, and that slowing your breathing can help them synchronize again .

  • At Christiana Hospital in Delaware, critical-care nurse Lauren Esposito and her colleagues typically work with critical cardiac patients.

  • A woman, sixty-eight, suffers a heart attack and goes into prolonged cardiac arrest.

  • In fact, half of the people who have cardiac events have “ideal” levels of LDL cholesterol.

  • In the heart, it reversed age-induced cardiac hypertrophy (enlargement of the heart).

  • The hope was that death would occur quickly in an unconscious senseless person both by cardiac and respiratory arrest.

  • But there are reports which say cannabis can be considered as a cause of death because it can induce a cardiac arrest.

  • He knew that there was cardiac trouble in his family, but he had never realized before the meaning of his heritage.

  • In addition to all this, Jessie's brother dies of consumption, and a seaside acquaintance is half killed by cardiac asthma.

  • The symptoms of the disease are moderated, the duration of the attack is shortened, and the cardiac complications are prevented.

  • Gently assist the progress of the catheter down the œsophagus until it passes the cardiac orifice of the stomach.

  • All reforms hitherto had profited nothing, because they had been either cerebral or cardiac.