pathology 的定义
plural pa·thol·o·gies.
- the science or the study of the origin, nature, and course of diseases.
- the conditions and processes of a disease.
- any deviation from a healthy, normal, or efficient condition.
pathology 近义词
等同于 botany
更多pathology例句
- The story provides an illuminating glimpse into many of the deeper pathologies afflicting the GOP, one that illustrates what’s on the line in Georgia with great clarity.
- The five-page report, acquired by the Los Angeles Times, cited pathology and radiology scans, prescriptions, consent forms, and transcripts from phone interviews.
- Many viral infections can cause undiagnosed pathology, but severe long-term effects are relatively uncommon.
- Also, the pathology, genetics and response to treatment differ.
- This is because, Recht said, the pathologies in other body parts tend to occupy a greater number of pixels in the MRIs compared to those in the knee, where evidence of damage can be just a few pixels in length.
- Borlaug studied forestry, and then obtained a Ph.D. in plant pathology.
- With no obvious pathology, physicians and scientists have little to study.
- Living with the threat of random death raining down leads to a strange way of life, a pathology of indirect fire.
- When Retsky showed the pathology report to William Hrushesky, his treating oncologist, the doctor exclaimed, “Mamma mia.”
- This is the much bigger pathology that the partisans on the Court have allowed to evolve.
- Epilepsy remains, notwithstanding all the advance in modern nervous pathology, quite as mysterious a disease as it has ever been.
- Hay fever "has a pathology" if urticaria has a pathology, for urticaria, too, subsides and leaves no traces.
- The microscope ceased to be an object of interest, the secrets of pathology and physiology had been mastered.
- Many of these are of a pathological character, but others have no connexion with the domain of pathology.
- The professor of pathology came along, a man who had more the look of a sacristan than of a physician.