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"hypodermic syringe" Definitions
  1. a small glass piston or barrel syringe having a detachable, hollow needle for use in injecting solutions subcutaneously.
"hypodermic syringe" Synonyms

41 Sentences With "hypodermic syringe"

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

The pen inspired Murdoch to create the "medical-changing," or disposable, hypodermic syringe.
Plus, a New Zealand museum acquires a fountain pen that inspired the disposable, hypodermic syringe.
Tony Brenna, discussing Cathy Evelyn Smith, the "Florence Nightingale with a hypodermic syringe" ultimately imprisoned for her role in John Belushi's death, feels the paper crossed a line in befriending her to coax a quote.
Christie's has, however, diverted some major contemporary works, such as Francis Bacon's 1968 "Version No. 57.53 of Lying Figure With Hypodermic Syringe," valued at £20 million, into a sale on June 30, "Defining British Art," to celebrate the auction house's 250th anniversary.
Christie's is holding a special sale to celebrate its 250th anniversary — "Defining British Art" — on Thursday night, at which Francis Bacon's "Version No. 2 of Lying Figure With Hypodermic Syringe" (1968) is estimated at about $20 million and Lucian Freud's "Ib and Her Husband" (1992) at about $18 million.
Henry Moore's "Reclining Figure: Festival," one of five bronzes based on a commission for the 1951 Festival of Britain, sold for a top price of $33 million — an auction high for a Moore — and Francis Bacon's "Version No. 2 of Lying Figure With Hypodermic Syringe" (1968), took in $563 million.
A New Jersey nurse who allegedly told a 10-year-old boy with autism she would "give him the needle" if he did not behave, then stabbed him with a hypodermic syringe "sometimes repeatedly," has been suspended, according to documents filed by the state Office of the Attorney General and obtained by PEOPLE.
Mr. Gorvy also represented the buyer of two of the sale's other top works: Francis Bacon's "Version No. 2 of Lying Figure With Hypodermic Syringe" (1968), which sold near its estimate, £20.2 million, or $27 million; and John Constable's 1820s oil sketch "View on the Stour Near Dedham," which sold for £14.1 million, or $18.8 million (on an estimate of about £12 million, and had been guaranteed by a third party for about £12 million).
When placed under blue light, the marked areas exhibit fluorescence. :- Visible Implant Elastomer (VIE): Colored fluorescent elastomer material is injected into tissue with a hypodermic syringe. The material then cures into a pliable, solid well-defined mark, which fluoresces under blue light. :- Passive Integrated Transponder (PIT): Small microchips (about the size of a grain of rice) that are injected with a hypodermic syringe and read with a hand-held scanner.
Rynd worked at the Meath Hospital in Dublin.Francis Rynd – inventor of the hypodermic syringe www.irelandcalling.ie At the Meath Hospital he trained under surgeon Sir Philip Crampton. Rynd became a member of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1830.
Version No. 2 of Lying Figure with Hypodermic Syringe is a 1968 oil on canvas panel painting by the Irish born, English artist Francis Bacon. It is the second of two similarly titled paintings based on nude photographs of his close friend Henrietta Moraes, who is shown in a reclining position on a bed, themselves part of a wider series of collapsed figures on beds that began with the 1963 triptych Lying Figure.Dawson, 97 This later version is widely considered the more successful of the two panels."Version No. 2 of Lying Figure with Hypodermic Syringe".
A quicker form of the dry enema utilizes the injection of a small amount of water-based lubricant such as KY Jelly into the rectum via a non-hypodermic syringe, such as an oral syringe, or from some other source. Then again since the glycerin itself is an effective producer of the desired contraction of the colonic muscles it is simplerand more easily controlledto introduce 5–10 cc of glycerin directly into the rectum. Specialist syringes are available for this purpose but are hard to find. An alternative is to use an enema nozzle which has an intake end which is compatible with a standard hypodermic syringe.
Wenceslao Díaz Gallegos (1834–1895) was a Chilean scientist and medical surgeon, widely considered as one of the fathers of sanitation in the country, trainer of generations of medical professionals and first-time introducer of medical devices such as the thermometer and the hypodermic syringe in Chile.
Colin Albert Murdoch (6 February 1929 - 4 May 2008) was a New Zealand pharmacist and veterinarian who made a number of significant inventions, in particular the tranquilliser gun, the disposable hypodermic syringe and the child-proof medicine container. He had a total of 46 patents registered in his name.
He contributed many written essays on the subject of his special work. (See list by Doctor W. T. Lusk, "Transactions of New York Academy of Medicine," 1891, Second Series, volume viii, page 300. See also Index Catalogue, Washington, D. C., 1897, second series, volume ii). In 1856 he was instrumental in introducing the hypodermic syringe into America.
Alexander Wood Modern syringe made entirely of glass, essentially identical to Wood's, except for the volume markings. Royal Circus, Edinburgh Alexander Wood's grave, Dean Cemetery Alexander Wood (10 December 181726 February 1884), was a Scottish physician. He invented the first true hypodermic syringe. He served as President of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh from 1858 to 1861.
This is generally believed to be the first isolation of an active ingredient from a plant. Merck began marketing it commercially in 1827. Morphine was more widely used after the invention of the hypodermic syringe in 18531855. Sertürner originally named the substance morphium, after the Greek god of dreams, Morpheus, as it has a tendency to cause sleep.
Sometimes a quarter-hour can advance in a few real- time seconds, if Laura happens to be at the proper place. On the final night, Laura finds a skeleton key on Lillian's body. She can use this to open the attic door and discover Colonel Dijon and Rudy struggling over a hypodermic syringe. The ending depends on Laura's final actions.
"Chinese in a Dope Prosecution". The Daily Express, 10 April 1924, p. 13. She was taken to the police station, searched, and found to have cocaine hidden in the lining of her coat. There were marks on her body indicating the use of a hypodermic syringe. Payne made a statement to the police, and Chang's home was searched at 11:30 pm the same day.
Painted Parambassis ranga specimen. A needle was used to inject the pink dye in this example. Painted fish are ornamental aquarium fish which have been artificially coloured to appeal to consumers. This artificial colouring, also known as juicing, is achieved by a number of methods, such as injecting the fish with a hypodermic syringe containing bright fluorescent colour dye, dipping the fish into a dye solution, or feeding the fish dyed food.
There were dramatic developments in the field of medicine during these years. In 1834, a British surgeon with the Royal Navy suggested a link between sanitation and disease. This led to the establishment of departments of public health across the country by the end of the century and provided an impetus to municipalities to supply clean water to their citizens as noted above. The use of the hypodermic syringe, invented in 1853, was quickly adopted by Canadian doctors.
Multiple firsts were performed at Bellevue in its early years. In 1799, it opened the first maternity ward in the United States. By 1808, the world's first ligation of the femoral artery for an aneurysm was performed there, followed by the first ligation of the innominate artery ten years later. Bellevue physicians promoted the "Bone Bill" in 1854, which legalized dissection of cadavers for anatomical studies; two years later they started to also popularize the use of the hypodermic syringe.
Host growth conditions also influence the ability of the phage to attach and invade them. As phage virions do not move independently, they must rely on random encounters with the correct receptors when in solution, such as blood, lymphatic circulation, irrigation, soil water, etc. Myovirus bacteriophages use a hypodermic syringe- like motion to inject their genetic material into the cell. After contacting the appropriate receptor, the tail fibers flex to bring the base plate closer to the surface of the cell.
The injection valve is a motorized valve which links the mixer and sample loop to the column. Typically the valve has three positions for loading the sample loop, for injecting the sample from the loop into the column, and for connecting the pumps directly to the waste line to wash them or change buffer solutions. The injection valve has a sample loading port through which the sample can be loaded into the injection loop, usually from a hypodermic syringe using a Luer-lock connection.
Poirot claims that he can solve the mystery within twenty-four hours simply by interviewing the suspects. During these interviews he establishes a timeline that seems impossible: Sarah King places the time of death considerably before the times at which various of the family members claim last to have seen the victim alive. Attention is focused on a hypodermic syringe that has seemingly been stolen from Dr. Gerard's tent and later replaced. The poison administered to the victim is believed to be digitoxin, something that she already took medicinally.
In the drawing process, we use a hypodermic syringe or paint brush to draw lines. The process begins with drawing the circular guide lines on the Thai porcelain on a turning wheel, which is manually controlled. While drawing on the design, the artist will keep the sample pattern in front of him so he can draw the pattern correctly. The initial pattern drawing is very crucial to how the design will turn out, so it must be done by a well-experienced artist (usually drawn by a master craftsman).
In a drawer he finds a hypodermic syringe with a doctor's prescription "to be injected when the pain is very severe". Evelyn Gotobed tells Wimsey of an episode shortly before the sisters were dismissed in which Miss Whittaker had tried to get them to witness Miss Dawson's will, without the latter's knowledge. A mysterious West Indian clergyman named Hallelujah Dawson had also turned up, claiming to be an impecunious distant relative. Mrs Forrest asks Wimsey to visit her at her flat in London where she clumsily makes advances to him.
He studied many diverse disciplines such as medicine, archeology, geology, seismology, climatology, ethnography and philosophy, and specialized in health geography, considered a prerequisite to specialization in parasitology and tropical diseases. His specialization allowed him to lead the sanitary commission to help the victims of the 1861 Mendoza earthquake. In 1873 he was appointed head of the chair of internal medicine at the Universidad de Chile School of Medicine. From that position he pushed the introduction of modern medical instruments like the thermometer and the hypodermic syringe, which was used to administer morphine, atropine and cocaine in the treatment of patients.
The advent of the hypodermic syringe also allowed these drugs to be injected for immediate effect, in contrast to cannabis which is not water-soluble and therefore cannot be injected. Additionally, as fears regarding the recreational use of cannabis began to take hold (prompted by sensationalist media reports and government propaganda campaigns), states began passing legislation to restrict the sale and possession of cannabis, eliminating its availability as an over-the-counter drug. By 1936, every state had passed a law of this manner. The use of cannabis as medicine further declined with the passage of the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937.
Abu al-Qasim Ammar ibn Ali al-Mawsili () was an important eleventh-century Arab Muslim ophthalmologist. Despite little being known about his life or education, he has been described as the most original of all Arab oculists. As his nisba indicates, Ammar was born in Mosul, and later moved to Egypt, where he settled during the reign of the Fatimid caliph al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, to whom he wrote his only composition, Kitāb al-muntakhab fī ilm al-ayn (“The book of choice in ophthalmology”). He is mostly known for the invention of a hypodermic syringe, which he used to remove cataracts, a major cause of blindness.
The isolation of morphine in the early 1800s was yet another milestone in obstetric anesthesia. However, the drug would not be widely used until the invention of the hypodermic needle in the 1850s. The first to use a hypodermic syringe in the United States was Fordyce Barker, who actually received the syringe from H.J Simpson as a gift during a visit to Edinburgh. Eventually, the use of morphine for pain control during labor lost favor due to its effects of respiratory depression in the newborn and was replaced largely by meperidine, a synthetic narcotic, first made in Germany in 1939, that had less of an effect on respiratory depression.
Cnidoscolus was separated from the Linnaean genus Jatropha on the basis of its stinging hairs or trichomes, that consist of a multi-cellular pedestal and a single, elongate, hollow cell with a slightly swollen tip. On being touched, the brittle swollen tip breaks off at an oblique angle, the sharpened end readily penetrates the skin, and the cell contents are injected as if by a hypodermic syringe. This poison leads to great irritation of the skin, a condition which may last several days. If part of the plant is eaten it causes swelling of the lips, flushing of the face, vomiting and even unconsciousness.
Both a pharmacist and a veterinarian, Murdoch was aware of the risks in reusing syringes. There was a high risk of passing infection from one patient to the next in both humans and animals unless the glass syringe was sterilized accurately. Wanting to eliminate these risks, and needing a more effective vaccination for his animal patients, Murdoch designed and invented the disposable hypodermic syringe, a plastic version of its glass predecessor. Murdoch presented the design to officials of the New Zealand Department of Health, who were skeptical, and believed it “too futuristic”, and that it would not be received well by both doctors and patients.
Bacon was decidedly gay and did not often paint or show much interest in female nudes, although Deakin's original photographs are quite erotic, verging on voyeuristic and seedy.Farr, 144 A few of Bacon's other incorporated influences, including Henry Fuseli's 1871 The Nightmare, which emphasis female sexuality and appeal, especially according to Sothebys, in the long hair and "thrown back arm, so eloquent of physical abandon". Bacon's painting contains traces of these influences, but is more focused on inner turmoil and projection of his bleak, nihilistic, outlook. This is apparent in the contorted and unflattering manner in which he depicts his model, and most especially in the manner she is seemingly pinned to the bed by the hypodermic syringe.
However, a post- mortem finds that Vera Findlater was already dead when she was struck, and Wimsey realises that the whole scene has been faked in order to frame the entirely innocent clergyman. Tyre tracks from Mrs Forrest's car are found nearby, and Wimsey suspects her and Mary Whittaker of acting in collusion. Wimsey's manservant, Bunter, realises that the fingerprints on Mrs Forrest's wineglass are identical to those on a cheque written by Miss Whittaker. Wimsey at last understands that Muriel Forrest and Mary Whittaker are one and the same person, and that she carried out the murders by injecting air into her victims' bloodstream with a hypodermic syringe, causing blockage and immediate death through heart failure.
A syringe with a male Luer-Lok fitting, and a needle with female Luer-Lok fitting (purple) which screws into it The Luer taper is a standardized system of small-scale fluid fittings used for making leak-free connections between a male-taper fitting and its mating female part on medical and laboratory instruments, including hypodermic syringe tips and needles or stopcocks and needles. Currently ISO 80369 governs the Luer standards and testing methods. Invented by Karl Schneider and named after the 19th-century German medical instrument maker Hermann Wülfing Luer, it originated as a 6% taper fitting for glass bottle stoppers (so one side is at 1.72 degrees to the centerline). Key features of Luer taper connectors are defined in the ISO 594 standards.
Sylvester, 31 Bacon was avowedly against melodrama and loaded meanings in his paintings, and of for years seemed defensive in including such a direct utensil as syringe. He instead saw the device as akin to the nails in a depiction of the crucifixion of Jesus, a particular obsession of his, and said "I've used the figures lying on beds with a hypodermic syringe as a form of nailing the image more strongly to reality or appearance. I don't put the syringe because of the drug that's being injected but because it's less stupid than putting a nail through the arm, which would be even more melodramatic."Dawson, 98 A bitter irony is that Moraes fell victim to heroin addiction from the 1970s.
During the viewing, pink-colored lighting is sometimes used near the body to lend a warmer tone to the deceased's complexion. A photograph of the deceased in good health is often sought to guide the embalmer's hand in restoring the body to a more lifelike appearance. Blemishes and discolorations (such as bruises, in which the discoloration is not in the circulatory system, and cannot be removed by arterial injection) occasioned by the last illness, the settling of blood, or the embalming process itself are also dealt with at this time (although some embalmers utilize hypodermic bleaching agents, such as phenol-based cauterants, during injection to lighten discoloration and allow easier cosmeticizing). It is also common for the embalmer to perform minor restoration of the deceased's appearance with tissue building chemicals and a hypodermic syringe.
' Notes written by Kerr and found in his file at Chiswick give an indication of his mental condition at this time: > 'Dear Dr Tuke, > I wish I c[oul]d have some more brandy: it is like being in prison to be > deprived like this of ordinary necessities. > C.K. > Also if you c[oul]d lend me a hypodermic syringe I s[houl]d be very much > obliged.' > > 'Dear Dr Tuke > Last night, the morphia bottle was not found in my room: so Mr [illegible] > refused to give me a dose at all: this, I regard as the most monstrous piece > of insolence in a paid [illegible] I have ever heard of: but not by any > means the only bit of impertinence I have been subject to. The morphia you > have given me has had no effect at all.
Inversion of Cimabue's Santa Croce Crucifix, 1287–1288. Inverted to highlight the association Bacon made with Rembrandt's Side of Beef, and the central panel of his 1965 Crucifixion As well as being Bacon's first large format triptych, Three Studies for a Crucifixion introduced the later and often repeated visual motif a human body turned inside out. This idea was drawn from a long tradition in art history, and was influenced strongly by Rembrandt's Side of beef and Chaim Soutine's Carcass of Beef.Sylvester, 108 Although the idea of torn flesh was present in early work such as his Painting (1946), in the 1960s triptychs and the two versions of the Lying figure with Hypodermic Syringe (1963 & 1968), Bacon inverts the epidermis and guts of human torsos to create imagery, according to Sylvester, nearing the grotesque and horror of Rubens's Descent from the Cross, and the Crucifix panel of Cimabue.
As a professor, he was associated with the Hôpital de la Charité (1864–67), Hôpital Pitié (1867–69) and the Hôtel-Dieu (1869–76). In 1866 he became a member of the Académie nationale de médecine (section for pathological anatomy).Behier, Louis Félix Jules Sociétés savantes de France He is credited with the popularization of the hypodermic syringe in France,Lectures on clinical medicine: delivered at the Hotel-Dieu, Paris, Volume 35 edited by Pierre Victor Bazire a device that had been invented in 1853.1000 Inventions and Discoveries He is also known for his pioneer experimentation with the opiate narceine,The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, Volume 72 and for his advocacy of hydrotherapy (cold water baths) and alcohol (a "Todd's mixture" containing brandy) for the treatment of typhoid fever.Medical news and library, Volume 32 With dermatologist Alfred Hardy, he is associated with the eponym "Béhier-Hardy symptom" (also known as "Béhier- Hardy aphonia"), described as the loss of voice as a sign of the early stages of pulmonary gangrene.

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