释义 |
myeloid, a.|ˈmaɪəlɔɪd| [f. Gr. µυελ-ός marrow + -oid.] Resembling marrow, as myeloid tumour; of or pertaining to marrow, as myeloid cell. Also, of, pertaining to, or involving myeloid cells.
1857Trans. Path. Soc. Lond. VIII. 346 Large Myeloid Tumour in the Head of the Humerus. 1875C. H. Jones & Siev. Pathol. Anat. 320 The myeloid cells or ‘myeloplaxes’ of bone. 1887Brit. Med. Jrnl. 26 Feb. 458/1 A myeloid sarcoma growing from the centre of the first metatarsal bone. 1927,1961[see erythroid a. 2]. 1966Wright & Symmers Systemic Path. I. iv. 179/2 Leukaemias may arise from any of the stem cells of the leucopoietic series, and the three most frequent types may be classified as myeloid, lymphatic and monocytic. 1971Brit. Med. Bull. XXVII. 66/1 Leukaemia, in the acute and in the chronic myeloid forms, is the type of malignancy which is most frequently induced by whole-body exposures of several hundred rads. |