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hematoma

/hee-ma-toh-muh, hem-uh-/US // ˌhi mæˈtoʊ mə, ˌhɛm ə- //

血肿,血瘤,流血,血液肿

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural he·ma·to·mas, he·ma·to·ma·ta [hee-ma-toh-muh-tuh, hem-uh-]. /ˌhi mæˈtoʊ mə tə, ˌhɛm ə-/. Pathology.

    • : a circumscribed collection of blood, usually clotted, in a tissue or organ, caused by a break in a blood vessel.

Examples

  • Perez said a hematoma at birth compressed her son’s spinal cord, resulting in permanent neurological damage.

  • By then he was blue in the face, a sickening color, like an old hematoma.

  • If bleeding around the brain is involved, the hematoma can grow quickly.

  • The result is a rapidly enlarging blood clot, called a hematoma.

  • This “lucid interval” is found in nearly half of all cases of epidural hematoma (Bullock, Neurosurgery, 2006).

  • From the description, Secretary Clinton has a subdural hematoma, a collection of blood under the dura mater.

  • There was considerable hematoma in the right lateral portion of the neck and the right superior mediastinum, as I noted.

  • There was a large hematoma in the anterior basal segment of the right lower lobe extending on into the median basal segment.

  • There was a large hematoma retroperitoneally in the midline also, causing the bowels to be pushed forward rather strikingly.

  • The examination showed a large hematoma in the left wall of the abdomen, and other complications.

  • Hematoma, or blood tumors, may be found embedded in this membrane.