HEMORRHAGE vs BLEEDING: NOUN
- Excessive discharge of blood from the blood vessels; profuse bleeding.
- A copious loss of something valuable.
- A discharge of blood from blood-vessels: usually applied to flux, either external or internal, from a vessel or vessels ruptured by disease or by a wound, and constituting, when considerable and unchecked, an immediate danger to life.
- Any discharge of blood from the blood vessels.
- Alternative spelling of haemorrhage.
- Flow of blood from a ruptured blood vessel
- Flow of blood from a ruptured blood vessels
- A running or issuing of blood, as from the nose; a hemorrhage; the operation of letting blood, as in surgery.
- The drawing of sap from a tree or plant.
- In bookbinding, an excessive trimming down of the margins of a book, which cuts into and mutilates the print.
- The flow or loss of blood from a damaged blood vessel.
- The flow of blood from a ruptured blood vessel
HEMORRHAGE vs BLEEDING: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- (used as an intensifier) extreme, outright.
- Emitting, or appearing to emit, blood or sap, etc.; also, expressing anguish or compassion.
HEMORRHAGE vs BLEEDING: VERB
- Lose blood from one's body
- Present participle of bleed.
HEMORRHAGE vs BLEEDING: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To bleed copiously.
- To undergo a rapid and sudden loss.
- To lose (something valuable) rapidly and in quantity.
- N/A
HEMORRHAGE vs BLEEDING: ADVERB
- N/A
- (used as an intensifier) Extremely.
HEMORRHAGE vs BLEEDING: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- (adjective; adverb) Used as an intensive.
HEMORRHAGE vs BLEEDING: RELATED WORDS
- Cardiac tamponade, Awkward, Haemorrhaging, Shedding, Blood, Bleeder, Brain, Drain, Disease, Stroke, Subdural, Shed blood, Bleed, Bleeding, Haemorrhage
- Indentation, Bloodstream, Brain, Draining, Haemorrhagic, Drain, Hemorrhagic, Bloodletting, Throat, Bleeder, Blood, Hemorrhaging, Bloody, Haemorrhage, Hemorrhage
HEMORRHAGE vs BLEEDING: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Peritonitis, Cerebral hemorrhage, Cardiac tamponade, Awkward, Blood, Bleeder, Brain, Drain, Disease, Stroke, Subdural, Shed blood, Bleed, Bleeding, Haemorrhage
- Purging, Bloodshed, Indentation, Bloodstream, Brain, Draining, Haemorrhagic, Drain, Hemorrhagic, Throat, Bleeder, Blood, Bloody, Haemorrhage, Hemorrhage
HEMORRHAGE vs BLEEDING: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Petitioner suffered a skull fracture, subarachnoid hemorrhage, subdural hemorrhage, and a traumatic brain injury.
- Patients who experience an intracerebral hemorrhage or subarachnoid hemorrhage may present with many of the aforementioned signs and symptoms.
- The hemorrhage did not follow an arterial territory and appeared as a flamed shaped hemorrhage.
- Common causes of patients receiving higher PFB were massive hemorrhage and hypotension without significant hemorrhage.
- Woo D, Risk factors for intracerebral hemorrhage differ according to hemorrhage location.
- New approaches to obstetric hemorrhage: the postpartum hemorrhage consensus algorithm.
- Subhyaloid hemorrhage is suggestive of a subarachnoid hemorrhage.
- Microvascular hemorrhage may manifest as mucosal bleeding, bleeding as wound and IV sites, pleural or peritoneal hemorrhage, or visceral hemorrhage.
- Discharge diagnosis of intracerebral hemorrhage, gastrointestinal tract hemorrhage, hemarthrosis, hemopericardium, hematuria, vaginal bleeding, epistaxis, hemorrhage not otherwise specified, or a seco
- Abbreviations: CV, cortical vein; CVT, cerebral venous thrombosis; ICH, intracerebral hemorrhage; IVH intraventricular hemorrhage; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage; SDH, subdural hemorrhage.
- When angiodysplasia does cause bleeding, the rate and amount of bleeding are variable based on which vessel has a lesion.
- Abnormal vaginal bleeding in women who are ovulating regularly most commonly involves excessive, frequent, irregular, or decreased bleeding.
- Endoscopic therapy should only be delivered to actively bleeding lesions, non bleeding visible vessels and adherent clots.
- This may delay detection of bleeding and will not stop bleeding from a large vascular site.
- In PCOS, bleeding can be intermenstrual bleeding or as a result of an anovulatory cycle.
- Gastrointestinal bleeding can fall into two broad categories: upper and lower sources of bleeding.
- Internal and external bleeding, including bleeding from the eyes, can also occur.
- However, some miscarriages occur without bleeding, or bleeding may follow other symptoms.
- The pathophysiology of bleeding disorders presenting as abnormal uterine bleeding.
- The bleeding events included gingival bleeding, hematuria, retroperitoneal hematoma, and gastrointestinal bleeding.
HEMORRHAGE vs BLEEDING: QUESTIONS
- How does subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) cause hydrocephalus?
- Can eye drops help with subconjunctival hemorrhage?
- Is lumbar puncture associated with subarachnoid hemorrhage?
- What is the pathophysiology of thalamic hemorrhage?
- Can aortic compression reduce postpartum hemorrhage?
- Does indomethacin prevent intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH)?
- What is intraparenchymal or intraacerebral hemorrhage?
- Is hemorrhage related maternal mortality declining?
- What causes depression after subarachnoid hemorrhage?
- How is a recent hemorrhage visualized in subdural hemorrhage?
- Is post coital bleeding (bleeding after sex) common?
- Can implantation bleeding be different from normal bleeding?
- What is acute colonic bleeding (lower GI bleeding)?
- Can upper respiratory bleeding be mistaken for GI bleeding?
- What are the tests for postpartum bleeding (PV bleeding)?
- What causes nose bleeding and bleeding gums during pregnancy?
- Which is more dangerous, fast bleeding or slow bleeding?
- What does bleeding bleeding do in dead by daylight?
- How is acute glomerular venous bleeding (GV bleeding) managed?
- Is bleeding time correlated with bleeding rate and peak bleeding?