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"gangrene" Definitions
  1. the decay (= a process of being destroyed) that takes place in a part of the body when the blood supply to it has been stopped because of an illness or injury

130 Sentences With "gangrene"

How to use gangrene in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "gangrene" and check conjugation/comparative form for "gangrene". Mastering all the usages of "gangrene" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The assistant died of gangrene, the patient died of gangrene, and the guy who was watching died of fright.
Having diabetes is a risk factor for developing Fournier's gangrene.
Corruption is like gangrene that poisons democracy, business and society.
Ilysa had lost her hands and feet after developing gangrene.
It can also cause gangrene, where the body's tissues die.
Well, the thing with trench feet is it's basically gangrene.
Male rulers often favored cutting out the "gangrene" of heresy.
She came to Ben Taub's emergency room one day last month because she noticed some pus and was concerned that the dry gangrene had converted into wet gangrene, an infection that can spread into the blood.
I chewed these fingers off before the frostbite could turn to gangrene.
Underneath, the 291-year-old's foot has started to blacken from gangrene.
It can lead to gangrene, or tissue death, as in Oliver's case.
In previous wars, severely injured soldiers often succumbed to gangrene and infection.
Mussolini called Bolshevism a "gangrene" or "cancer" that had to be excised.
Another one of ergotism's effects is gangrene, the loss of one's limbs.
She was eventually diagnosed with a chronic leg ulcer which developed into gangrene.
I don't want you to get gangrene or, you know, lose your foot.
There is still the putrid stench of gangrene wafting from his campaign headquarters.
Other post-surgery problems, such as gangrene and sepsis, can also be fatal.
In the most extreme case, limbs that have succumbed to gangrene will be amputated.
This can lead to blood clots, infections and, in extreme cases, gangrene or sepsis.
In November, an artillery shell wounded Smith, who passed away after gangrene set in.
People without penises are not immune to developing gangrene as a result of calciphylaxis.
The dislocation impaired the circulation to Livingston's foot; gangrene could set in if Shimoyama failed.
The infection can also cause necrosis and gangrene, or tissue death, which may require amputation. 
Tourniquets lost favor after the Civil War, because of their association with gangrene and amputation.
But in the First World War, the gangrene was the result of, basically, rotting feet.
At 27, she fell from a train, shattering her kneecap and almost dying from gangrene.
I inspected her wounds and was relieved to see that there was no wet gangrene.
His only son, Alois, who was also a gifted composer, died, of gangrene, in 1805.
Thin and clearly in pain, his recovery from gangrene is stymied by lack of everything.
Tissue damage or death (gangrene) may occur, and any existing infection may spread to your bone.
His cause of death was gangrene; his disease was what he termed die Porzellankrankheit—porcelain sickness.
Her skin started changing rapidly to a purplish-red color, and then it progressed into gangrene.
The disease causes a plethora of blood clots that have lead to Marie contracting gangrene and necrosis.
Her foot was so destroyed by gangrene that the bones were protruding, according to local news reports.
Included are deaths stemming from gangrene, constipation and an asthma attack, all easily treated with modern medicine.
Like gangrene or something, where it's not good but it's only one toe so it's all right.
During a previous trip to Latin America Francis called corruption "the plague, it's the gangrene of society".
I could tell the doctor to perform the surgery, or let gangrene take his limb and life.
Bedridden and dying from cardiac arrhythmia and gangrene, he's surrounded by an entourage of servants and physicians.
Gudin died of gangrene after having his leg amputated during Napoleon's failed invasion of Russia in 1812.
The doctors wanted to amputate both her legs, threatening that she would "get gangrene and die" otherwise.
Gabor had developed gangrene due to a blood clot in her leg following a 2010 hip-replacement surgery.
An emergency trip to the hospital revealed a staph infection in the bone and gangrene in the flesh.
The surgeon found a gallbladder full of gangrene; the organ fell to pieces as he removed it, he said.
Finally, Steve tosses it into some coffee to get the authentic infantry experience, minus the bullet wounds, gangrene, amputations etc.
An Ohio woman woke up from a coma with her limbs partially amputated after she developed gangrene from Capnocytophaga bacteria.
Mr. Remsburg, now 21, learned his finger, which had turned dark blue, had developed gangrene and had to be amputated.
After he was moved to intensive care at Rotes Kreuz Krankenhaus Hospital, doctors diagnosed him with severe sepsis and gangrene.
If the tissue has died, a process called gangrene, then the dead areas may have to be excised or amputated.
Penile gangrene caused by the buildup of calcium in the blood vessels is rare, difficult to treat, and often lethal.
Lawsuits: Alabama prisoners died of gangrene, constipation On numerous occasions during his incarceration, Mitchell was denied his medications, the lawsuit alleges.
After three months she developed gangrene and the guards released her because they did not want her dying in the camp.
It can be avoided by keeping the feet dry and clean, but left untreated it can lead to gangrene and amputation.
That makes it a valuable treatment for wounds that won't heal (including diabetic or radiation injuries) and fighting infection, including gangrene.
If blood is blocked from reaching the genitals, he adds, it can result in death of the skin known as gangrene.
In the modern world, we often see images of gangrene from mountaineers that are climbing Everest and their feet get frostbite.
After no improvement, Marie was placed into a medically induced coma as her limbs began to deteriorate as a result of gangrene.
The singer emotes about getting "frostbite" and "gangrene" and enduring "sub-zero chills" while campaigning in the first caucus state during winter.
Her most serious injury was a broken femur; she died shortly after learning the fate of Juan, with gangrene in her leg.
The FDA said it identified 12 cases of Fournier's gangrene - 7 in men and 5 in women - between March 2013 and May 2018.
Frogs are susceptible to a condition called red leg, a kind of gangrene that can be cleared up with an antibiotic, she explained.
The GOP and WH have become sinister conclaves of souless traitors, liars and thieves – a gangrene we must remove so democracy can live.
The restraints severely cut off blood flow to his legs, according to the suit, one of which developed gangrene and eventually required amputation.
These buildups make it impossible for blood to get enough oxygen to certain parts of the body, killing off tissue and causing gangrene.
The gangrene most often occurs in children between 2 and 5 who are severely malnourished and exposed to unsanitary conditions and contaminated drinking water.
Although Wasser had changed her tampon multiple times the day she got sick, she ended up suffering a massive heart attack and developed gangrene.
Flemish Painter Jan Mandijn's vision of Anthony contains a similar set of ergot indicia:  apothecary tools, fire, the saint flying through the air, gangrene.
In rare severe cases in which blood flow is chronically diminished, secondary Raynaud's can result in skin ulcers and even gangrene that require surgery.
Diabetes apps can change the way patients cope, by monitoring blood-glucose levels and food intake, potentially reducing long-run harm such as blindness and gangrene.
She had a fever of 107 degrees when she was rushed to the hospital with multiple health complications, including gangrene and severe damage to her foot.
Alone for two more weeks in a cave, he used a knife to amputate several of his own frostbitten toes to stop the spread of gangrene.
In today's world, we're more familiar with it being a product of frostbite and gangrene sets in and you've gotta amputate the toes or the legs.
According to the Mayo Clinic, hyperbaric oxygen therapy is typically a procedure used to treat burns, brain abscecces, gangrene, and other forms of infections in the body.
Ninety percent of the kites that Mr. Saud and Mr. Shehzad collect have wings slashed by manja, and about half of these die from gangrene or infection.
The 43-year-old was receiving a dialysis treatment for end-stage kidney failure when doctors discovered gangrene on the tip of his penis during an examination.
Fournier gangrene is rare, according to the National Organization for Rare Disorders, with an estimated 1,800 cases reported in English-language medical journals between 1950 and today.
Perez's condition appeared to be improving until the gangrene spread to both his feet, hands and forearms, his daughter, Dilena Perez-Dilan, told NJ Advance Media on Tuesday.
Itself cut into nine sections, the exhibition is a broad historical affaire that celebrates the 300th anniversary of the king's death on September 1, 1715, due to gangrene.
Set in the king's bedchambers in Versailles and anchored by a poignant performance from Jean-Pierre Léaud, the movie focuses on the king's slow, excruciating death from gangrene.
During her years working at the Hospital Provincial Saturnino Lora at Santiago de Cuba, she saw cases of tetanus, balanitis, and gangrene as a result of getting the pearl.
This is where, among other things, Dr. Mengele busied himself sewing twins together, injecting dwarf children with gangrene, sterilizing legions of inmates by having them sit on irradiated benches.
In 1995, suffering from dementia, kidney failure and gangrene in one leg, Andrija Puharich, surrounded by feral cats (sans ESP), fell down a flight of stairs to his death.
Penile gangrene is often lethal Cases of penile calciphylaxis are notoriously difficult to treat, resulting in a 64% mortality rate for those who contract it, according to the study.
President-elect Trump soothed Republicans by naming as his health secretary Representative Tom Price of Georgia, a surgeon-congressman who seems to view government-run medicine as something like gangrene.
While Perez showed signs of improvement a couple weeks ago, his daughter said new infections have since emerged, causing gangrene to spread to both of his feet, hands and forearms.
PAD occurs when fatty deposits in the arteries restrict the blood flow to the limbs, resulting in pain in the legs, poor healing of diabetic ulcers, gangrene, and eventual amputation.
Sildenafil's other side effects when used too heavily can include heart attack and painfully long-lasting erections that, if untreated, could even cause your penis to develop gangrene and require amputation.
It has brought all the rot to the surface, now we can see where is the gangrene of democracy, and the need to combat corruption in a much more energetic way.
This becomes highly painful if it gets stuck there, as well as potentially dangerous: a lack of blood flow could lead to gangrene and your dick needing to be chopped off.
These issues can include painful and debilitating conditions such as scrotal cellulitis as well as more serious, even deadly problems such as Fournier's gangrene (a rare but life-threatening bacterial infection).
A South Australian man was left with a "penile stump" after doctors removed tissue infected with gangrene from his penis, according to a December report published in the medical journal BMJ.
I'm writing this on a glowing robot typewriter with instantaneous access to the sum total of human knowledge and have yet to die of gangrene, which I guess is pretty cool too.
According to Fox 8, doctors had fought to save her life (and limbs) by removing the many clots in her arms and legs, which had caused gangrene, or a death of tissue.
Mr. Spicer was truly the perfect mouthpiece for the Trump White House, and, in the same way one might feel phantom pain in an amputated gangrene-ridden arm, he will be missed.
As a Red Cross volunteer in Belgium, he paints what he sees in the field hospitals—masked doctors, men with gangrene—and these images infuriate Elinor, who accuses Paul of "using" the men.
A 43-year-old South Australian man had most of his penis surgically removed after a buildup of calcium in his blood vessels caused gangrene to spread, according to the medical journal BMJ.
It's popular in Cuba despite the practice having led to tetanus, balanitis (an inflammation of the head or glans of the penis), and gangrene that ultimately resulted in more than a few penile amputations.
Thorbjarnarson refused Warhol's entreaties and found himself justified three days later, when the sick man was at last on the operating table," Mr. Gopnik said, adding, "The surgeon found a gallbladder full of gangrene.
The Declare study found no increased risk of amputations, fractures, bladder cancer or gangrene in patients taking Farxiga - issues that have occasionally been noted with SGLT drugs - although there was an increase in genital infections.
The show also includes a wax model of a foot with gangrene from the Mütter collections positioned alongside McCormack's "Black Procession" (2016), a series of cotton-string feet with growing black invasions that suggest decay.
Patients are at risk of the infection known as Fournier's gangrene, an extremely rare but life-threatening bacterial infection of the tissue under the skin that surrounds the genital area, the FDA said in a statement.
Here are two of their stories: He lost part of left foot to gangrene after ground zero accident John Feal and his crew of demolition experts arrived at ground zero the morning after the towers collapsed.
He died at 61 at Montefiore Hospital, and Ms. Bradshaw, a nurse working for a plastic surgeon, recognized the hallmarks of end-stage diabetes on his death certificate: gangrene, electrolyte imbalance, congestive heart failure and thrombosis.
At a second shelter, the director and staff helped cure her ankle — which smelled and cause her to fear she would get gangrene — with medication and topical creams because Elizabeth was too scared to venture outside.
Wallschlaeger's poems feel timely, as the links between property ownership, alienated labor, and the history of black slavery in the United States ("Greasy gangrene hamburger wrapper of a country," in her words) become clearer by the day.
Lawsuit: Alabama prisoners died of gangrene, constipation Recently granted early release, Faulkner told CNN that he went to work in the kitchen the day before Garland's death to prepare food for the roughly 3,400 prisoners housed at Beto.
His theory is that as whites saw entire populations throughout Europe wiped out from the disease that caused their skin to blacken from necrosis or gangrene, they were traumatized and ultimately associated dark skin with the disease they feared.
The entries include a nightmarish close-up of a tapeworm with a toothy frown; a freaky shot of a daddy longleg's bulging, lidless eye; and a view of two gangrene-hued weevils getting it on—a bit more ew than boo.
"It's not completely understood," Harch said, explaining that in the late 1950s, doctors in the Netherlands began experimenting with trying to give maximum amounts of oxygen to patients with conditions in which lack of oxygen was a problem, such as gangrene.
Look, unlike Blake Lively, I do not have a partial medical degree, but I'm pretty sure that when a shark bites your leg open and your lower extremities are ravaged by gangrene, it causes more damage than just a scar.
As Jan slowly makes his way to the border, he is pursued relentlessly by a high-ranking Nazi officer, Kurt Stage (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), even as frostbite and gangrene force Jan to rely ever more on the protection of friendly Norwegians.
Many other relatives have one or more ailments often associated with poor diets: her mother and two sisters (diabetes and hypertension), and her husband (hypertension.) Her father died three years ago after losing his feet to gangrene, a complication of diabetes.
Prince Be had suffered from diabetes for more than two decades, and had various health problems over the years, among them several strokes, including one in 2005 that left him partly paralyzed, and gangrene, which led to the partial amputation of one leg.
Mr. Briles sued for defamation — he dropped the suit just before the text messages were released — accusing Baylor of making a "scapegoat" of him, perhaps to make a case that the problem had been solved, like a limb amputated before gangrene has spread.
"I'm afraid of losing my home, losing my disability check, because I'd have no address to send it to, if they smelled cannabis in my apartment," said one speaker at the event, who lost fingers and fractured bones in his legs due to gangrene.
In those roles, Ma learned plenty, including that kidney disease impacts up to 40 percent of diabetics, and that diabetes afflicts roughly 0003 million people — a giant percentage of whom are unable to feel pain from ulcers and gangrene, which can lead to amputations.
Watch more from Motherboard: The First Animal to Survive in Space: Tardigrades The green bottle fly larvae is already used in FDA-approved "maggot debridement therapy," in which maggots are applied to non-healing wounds, like diabetic foot ulcers, which can lead to gangrene.
He followed that with "The Gangrene," a slim book, published earlier in France and then banned, in which several Algerian intellectuals provided accounts of torture by the French in Algeria; in his edition, Mr. Calder added reports of torture by British officials in Kenya.
Read more:A man was left with a &apospenile stump&apos after contracting gangrene and requiring surgeryA vibrator developed after analyzing over 30,000 orgasms is like a Fitbit for sexual pleasureReddit users are saying they use toothpaste as a lube replacement, but it can cause genital burning and scarring
Parabiosis, the surgical linkage of circulatory systems, has had a mostly grisly history in humans—when it was tried as a desperate measure on terminal cancer patients, in 1951, a two-year-old boy lost part of his foot to gangrene—and in rodents, which resisted being conjoined.
For example, a former NFL drug adviser said he had seen people develop "everything from gangrene of the arm to an abscess on the hip" from using black-market drugs, while in an unrelated case, a user injected an entire vial of penicillin that had been mislabeled as a steroid.
The story has a bit of everything: The classic rise-and-fall arch of stardom, the literal embodiment of the male gaze, reputation gangrene from scandal shrapnel due to a man's unwanted advances, virulent attacks for showcasing her sexuality, and the unexamined sixty-four year stretch when she was locked away.
Pavel Granados, director of the Fonoteca, the national music library, said the audio was recovered in January from a pilot program by well-known Mexican radio host Alvaro Galvez y Fuentes, dating to 1953 or 1954, shortly before the painter died at the age of 47 after suffering gangrene and depression.
In that piece, Bauer detailed chilling accounts of inferior medical care—including an inmate who lost both his legs and his fingers to untreated gangrene—sexual assaults, and other abusive practices, as well as the frequent cancellation of such rehabilitative services as the law library, education and job training, and drug counseling.
Doctors tried to amputate the foot of one man but could not gain proper access to it, so they could only give him a blood transfusion, the city government said in a statement; rescuers finally extricated him on Monday, but by then gangrene had set in and he was being treated at a hospital.
During the time of the Renaissance, ergotism was a phantasmagoric event with an onset that was difficult to distinguish from the bubonic plague: it came on first as nausea and insomnia, then developed into sensations of being engulfed in flames while hallucinating over several days, and often ended with the amputation of one or more limbs due to gangrene, or ended in death.
On the drive to Revdal, Haug told me that he wanted me to experience the ''Hotel Savoy'' alone — to leave me there for several minutes in silence so that I could imagine what it must have been like to stay in there, day after day, expecting Marius and his friends to come, but them never coming, to be experiencing incredible pain from gangrene, to start to think that this would be the place where he would die.
Lully, née Lulli,Once sung for great LouisThe Sun King who outlived his sonsLully, née Lulli,A glut for sodomyFell out with the curly patronTo gain back his favourHe gave him a flavourOf royal liturgical funUpon the 'te deum'The retinaculumWas struck with the maestro's batonThe song was so youngSung only verse oneWhen Versailles uncomfterbly dumb'dThe gangrene untreatedSpread north through his meatedAnd life thereby quickly undoneLully, dont fussClimb down parnassusCome, visit this century, comeIt's anthroposceneyAnd Kanye RegimeyI'm sure you could light it up some
Its ensemble cast includes Helen Moses, 91, who falls in love with her neighbor, Howie, at a Bronx nursing home; Fred Jones, 88, who struggles to reach his third-floor walk-up apartment after gangrene claimed parts of two toes; Ping Wong, 90, originally from Hong Kong, who lucked into subsidized housing and fills her days with mah-jongg; Ruth Willig, 91, who must readjust after an unwanted move from one assisted-living facility to another; Jonas Mekas, 92, a Lithuanian-born filmmaker who dedicates his life to art; and the sad-eyed but dignified Sorensen, who has longed to die ever since Walter, his partner of 60 years, passed away in 2009.

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