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hemorrhage 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈhem(ə)rij/,
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haemorrhages, plural; hemorrhages, plural;
  1. (of a person) Suffer a hemorrhage
    • - he had begun hemorrhaging in the night
  2. Expend (money) in large amounts in a seemingly uncontrollable manner
    • - the business was hemorrhaging cash
Noun
  1. An escape of blood from a ruptured blood vessel, esp. when profuse

  2. A damaging loss of valuable people or resources suffered by an organization, group, or country
    • - a hemorrhage of highly qualified teachers

  1. bleeding: the flow of blood from a ruptured blood vessel
  2. shed blood: lose blood from one's body
  3. (hemorrhagic) of or relating to a hemorrhage
  4. Bleeding, technically known as hemorrhaging or haemorrhaging (see American and British spelling differences) is the loss of blood or blood escape from the circulatory system. ...
  5. "Hemorrhage (In My Hands)" is a song by the rock band Fuel, released as the first single from their album Something Like Human. The single spent twelve weeks at number one on the U.S. Modern Rock Tracks chart and is the band's most successful song to date. ...
  6. Alternative spelling of haemorrhage; Alternative spelling of haemorrhage
  7. (Hemorrhagic) In CAPRIE patients receiving PLAVIX, gastrointestinal hemorrhage occurred at a rate of 2.0%, and required hospitalization in 0.7%. In patients receiving aspirin, the corresponding rates were 2.7% and 1.1%, respectively. The incidence of intracranial hemorrhage was 0. ...
  8. (Hemorrhagic) Tissue into which bleeding has occurred.
  9. Bleeding; (such as in brain hemorrhage)
  10. bleeding, especially large amount
  11. A general term for loss of blood, often profuse, brought about by injury to the blood vessels or by a deficiency of certain necessary blood elements such as platelets.
  12. In medicine, loss of blood from damaged blood vessels. A hemorrhage may be internal or external, and usually involves a lot of bleeding in a short time.
  13. the medical term for bleeding.
  14. Massive, heavy bleeding.
  15. A copious discharge of blood from circulatory system (including arteries, veins, and capillaries) to the internal or external tissues. Blood loss is usually severe enough to threaten health or life of the individual. Bleeding can lead to either anemia or, in more severe cases, shock and death. ...
  16. Rapid and poorly controlled arterial bleeding.
  17. Excess bleeding; in the brain, it can be a cause of stroke
  18. Bleeding that is abnormally heavy. In some rare cases of Crohn's disease, a bleeding ulcer may burrow through the gut wall and shear an artery.
  19. Bleeding into an organ, body cavity or tumor.
  20. an abnormal flow of blood from an incision or wound.
  21. This is bleeding, which is the most common complication of ulcers. Mortality rate is 6 to 10 percent from hemorrhages, which can result in anemia, vomiting blood, or passage of bright red blood through the rectum (melana) (Longe 2006).
  22. Bleeding that occurs following damage to blood vessels. Bleeding may occur within the brain when blood vessels in the brain are damaged. See Hematoma. [Click Here To Return To List]
  23. To bleed excessively; may be the result of injury or blood clotting abnormalities.
  24. Internal bleeding often caused by rupture of an aneurysm.
  25. This occurs when a tiny blood vessel within the vocal fold bursts, creating a bleed into the mucosal covering. The accumulation of blood under the surface of the vocal fold makes the fold stiff, which makes vibration more difficult. ...