释义 |
DictionarySeeinclusioncell inclusion
cell inclusion[′sel in′klü·zhan] (cell and molecular biology) A small, nonliving intracellular particle, usually representing a form of stored food, not immediately vital to life processes. cell inclusion
inclusion [in-kloo´zhun] 1. the act of enclosing or the condition of being enclosed.2. anything that is enclosed; a cell inclusion.cell inclusion a usually lifeless, often temporary, constituent in the cytoplasm of a cell.fetal inclusion a partially developed embryo enclosed within the body of its twin.inclusion (in-kloo-zhun) [L. inclusus, enclosed] Being enclosed or included.inclusion blennorrheaChlamydial conjunctivitis.inclusion bodyMicroscopic structures (made of a dense, occasionally infective core surrounded by an envelope) seen in the cytoplasm and nuclei of cells infected with some intracellular pathogens. Inclusion bodies are seen in cells infected with herpesviruses (esp. cytomegalovirus), smallpox, lymphogranuloma venereum, psittacosis, and other organisms. Synonym: cell inclusion; See: Negri bodiescell inclusionInclusion body.dental inclusionAn obsolete term for impacted tooth. fetal inclusionMalformed twins in which one, the parasite, is completely enclosed within the other, its host or autosite. See: teratoma |