Advertisement
Advertisement
perfuse
[ per-fyooz ]
verb (used with object)
- to overspread with moisture, color, etc.; suffuse.
- to diffuse (a liquid, color, etc.) through or over something.
- Surgery. to pass (fluid) through blood vessels or the lymphatic system.
perfuse
/ pəˈfjuːz /
verb
- to suffuse or permeate (a liquid, colour, etc) through or over (something)
- surgery to pass (a fluid) through organ tissue to ensure adequate exchange of oxygen and carbon monoxide
Derived Forms
- perˈfusion, noun
- perˈfusionist, noun
- perˈfusive, adjective
- perˈfused, adjective
Other Words From
- per·fu·sive [per-, fyoo, -siv], adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of perfuse1
Example Sentences
Food and Drug Administration and made by the company XVIVO, to perfuse and monitor donor lungs.
“And then you can start to have organ damage where your kidneys don’t work, your spleen, your liver. If things get really bad, then you start to not be perfusing your brain the same way.”
On Valentine’s Day 2022, he became the first person in the world known to receive a heart, liver, and kidney from a donor whose organs were perfused after circulatory death.
“We can do surgery on fish out of the water as long as you have their gills getting perfused with water,” she said.
Immune rejection aside, pig hearts transplanted into baboons seem to sputter out in a matter of days unless they’re perfused with a nutrient solution before the transplant, Mohiuddin says.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse