释义 |
Definition of excretion in English: excretionnoun ɛkˈskriːʃ(ə)nɪkˈskriːʃ(ə)nɪkˈskriʃ(ə)n mass noun1(in living organisms and cells) the process of eliminating or expelling waste matter. Example sentencesExamples - The bound Hg is then removed from the organism by natural excretion.
- Most carbohydrates appear to be wasted through excretion or stored as fat.
- While both urinary sodium excretion and blood pressure fell, the salt reduction may not have caused the fall in blood pressure.
- In high dosages, aspirin tends to increase uric acid excretion, while lower dosages may cause its retention.
- Treatment also tends to prolong the excretion of organisms in the stool and is associated with the development of resistant organisms.
- A normal study reveals immediate increased hepatic uptake with rapid excretion by the cardiac blood pool.
- The liver removes it from the blood, chemically modifies it, and secretes it into the bile for excretion.
- You need water for all bodily processes, including digestion, waste excretion, circulation and even breathing.
- If the kidneys are not doing their job of waste excretion properly, this can cause an overload on the liver and lead to some liver problems.
- Furthermore, healthy persons taking chitosan have not shown clinically significant increases in fecal fat excretion.
- Pharmacologic control of hypertension reduces urine protein excretion and slows progression of the disease.
- Precipitant drugs modify the object drug's absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion or actual clinical effect.
- In most cases of gout decreased urinary excretion of urate is the most common metabolic abnormality.
- As a result, excretion of nitrogenous waste is reduced, and fluid and electrolyte balances cannot be maintained.
- It is of particular concern with agents that are metabolized to an active metabolite with significant renal excretion.
- Hepatic metabolism and the subsequent excretion of toxins are the primary means of detoxification in the body.
- We accounted for factors that may be associated with nondietary exposure, and the metabolism and excretion of the residues.
- Partial reabsorption is followed by renal excretion of conjugated metabolites.
- There is little evidence of virus excretion in urine or faeces.
- In the eukaryotic cell there are a number of places where specialized tasks, such as digestion of nutrients and excretion of wastes, take place.
Synonyms expulsion, ejection, discharge, passing, elimination, voidance, voiding, emptying, emptying out, purging, draining - 1.1count noun A product excreted by a living organism or cell.
Example sentencesExamples - Infected dogs also shed the virus through bodily secretions and excretions.
- Susceptible birds become infected when they have contact with contaminated excretions or surfaces that are contaminated with excretions.
- This increases the likelihood of spreading diseases between animals by direct contact and through eating bait contaminated with disease causing agents shed in feces, saliva or other excretions.
- These early materials were made from naturally occurring compounds such as animal excretions, pastes made from burnt wood, and natural deposits of antimony and lead ore.
- Chen is keeping a detailed record of his daily life, work, volume of water consumed, excretions and feelings of hunger, so as to provide first-hand data for future medical research.
- We are the Mr Clean society - devoted to eradicating every natural body odour and euphemizing every body function and its excretions.
- Entering buildings that are rarely opened or only seasonally opened may also result in exposure to mice and their excretions, contributing to infection.
- Overnight, the margin for error was reduced to almost zero, since nobody wants to overtake his own bodily excretions as he reaches terminal velocity.
- These materials include all body fluids, secretions, and excretions except sweat, regardless of whether they contain visible blood, mucous membranes, and nonintact skin.
- The precursors of perfection in yoga, they say, are lightness and healthiness of the body, absence of desire, clear complexion, pleasantness of voice, sweet odor and slight excretions.
- They should be worn when the worker will come in contact with blood, body fluids, secretions and excretions, or with items that have been contaminated with these fluids.
- Lassa fever spreads by human to human contact, transmission occurring through contact with an infected person's blood, tissue, secretions, or excretions of an individual infected with the Lassa virus.
- They're in a big apartment building which looks like an English housing estate from the outside but is clean, the lifts work, and there are no bodily excretions in sight or smell.
- Direct contact with secretions and excretions, especially faeces from infected birds.
- And as one might imagine, an area that walruses use to rest between feedings is riddled with a substantial amount of walrus excretions.
- The guidelines point out that you can only transmit the disease if you carry virus particles with you and you can only pick up and transmit the virus by having close contact with infected animals or their excretions.
- Because they have to swallow a radioactive capsule, their excretions are slightly radioactive.
- Bodily excretions, for example, can be seen not merely as different but as disgusting.
- For example, Zimmerman implies that the excretions of wild creatures in the forest is no different from that of dogs.
- Nevertheless, the number of viable individuals steadily decreases over time as the level of nutrients decrease and the levels of toxic excretions increase.
Synonyms production, discharge, emission, exudation, ooze, oozing, leakage, leaching, emanation, giving off, release, sending out
Origin Early 17th century: from French excrétion or Latin excretio(n-), from excernere 'sift out' (see excrete). Rhymes accretion, Capetian, completion, concretion, deletion, depletion, Diocletian, Grecian, Helvetian, repletion, Rhodesian, secretion, suppletion, Tahitian, venetian Definition of excretion in US English: excretionnounikˈskrēSH(ə)nɪkˈskriʃ(ə)n 1(in living organisms and cells) the process of eliminating or expelling waste matter. Example sentencesExamples - Partial reabsorption is followed by renal excretion of conjugated metabolites.
- While both urinary sodium excretion and blood pressure fell, the salt reduction may not have caused the fall in blood pressure.
- Precipitant drugs modify the object drug's absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion or actual clinical effect.
- In the eukaryotic cell there are a number of places where specialized tasks, such as digestion of nutrients and excretion of wastes, take place.
- It is of particular concern with agents that are metabolized to an active metabolite with significant renal excretion.
- As a result, excretion of nitrogenous waste is reduced, and fluid and electrolyte balances cannot be maintained.
- You need water for all bodily processes, including digestion, waste excretion, circulation and even breathing.
- The bound Hg is then removed from the organism by natural excretion.
- Treatment also tends to prolong the excretion of organisms in the stool and is associated with the development of resistant organisms.
- In most cases of gout decreased urinary excretion of urate is the most common metabolic abnormality.
- Furthermore, healthy persons taking chitosan have not shown clinically significant increases in fecal fat excretion.
- In high dosages, aspirin tends to increase uric acid excretion, while lower dosages may cause its retention.
- If the kidneys are not doing their job of waste excretion properly, this can cause an overload on the liver and lead to some liver problems.
- There is little evidence of virus excretion in urine or faeces.
- We accounted for factors that may be associated with nondietary exposure, and the metabolism and excretion of the residues.
- Pharmacologic control of hypertension reduces urine protein excretion and slows progression of the disease.
- Hepatic metabolism and the subsequent excretion of toxins are the primary means of detoxification in the body.
- A normal study reveals immediate increased hepatic uptake with rapid excretion by the cardiac blood pool.
- Most carbohydrates appear to be wasted through excretion or stored as fat.
- The liver removes it from the blood, chemically modifies it, and secretes it into the bile for excretion.
Synonyms expulsion, ejection, discharge, passing, elimination, voidance, voiding, emptying, emptying out, purging, draining - 1.1 A product of excretion.
Example sentencesExamples - This increases the likelihood of spreading diseases between animals by direct contact and through eating bait contaminated with disease causing agents shed in feces, saliva or other excretions.
- For example, Zimmerman implies that the excretions of wild creatures in the forest is no different from that of dogs.
- The guidelines point out that you can only transmit the disease if you carry virus particles with you and you can only pick up and transmit the virus by having close contact with infected animals or their excretions.
- Lassa fever spreads by human to human contact, transmission occurring through contact with an infected person's blood, tissue, secretions, or excretions of an individual infected with the Lassa virus.
- Direct contact with secretions and excretions, especially faeces from infected birds.
- They're in a big apartment building which looks like an English housing estate from the outside but is clean, the lifts work, and there are no bodily excretions in sight or smell.
- We are the Mr Clean society - devoted to eradicating every natural body odour and euphemizing every body function and its excretions.
- Because they have to swallow a radioactive capsule, their excretions are slightly radioactive.
- Bodily excretions, for example, can be seen not merely as different but as disgusting.
- Nevertheless, the number of viable individuals steadily decreases over time as the level of nutrients decrease and the levels of toxic excretions increase.
- Overnight, the margin for error was reduced to almost zero, since nobody wants to overtake his own bodily excretions as he reaches terminal velocity.
- And as one might imagine, an area that walruses use to rest between feedings is riddled with a substantial amount of walrus excretions.
- Chen is keeping a detailed record of his daily life, work, volume of water consumed, excretions and feelings of hunger, so as to provide first-hand data for future medical research.
- Infected dogs also shed the virus through bodily secretions and excretions.
- Entering buildings that are rarely opened or only seasonally opened may also result in exposure to mice and their excretions, contributing to infection.
- Susceptible birds become infected when they have contact with contaminated excretions or surfaces that are contaminated with excretions.
- The precursors of perfection in yoga, they say, are lightness and healthiness of the body, absence of desire, clear complexion, pleasantness of voice, sweet odor and slight excretions.
- These early materials were made from naturally occurring compounds such as animal excretions, pastes made from burnt wood, and natural deposits of antimony and lead ore.
- They should be worn when the worker will come in contact with blood, body fluids, secretions and excretions, or with items that have been contaminated with these fluids.
- These materials include all body fluids, secretions, and excretions except sweat, regardless of whether they contain visible blood, mucous membranes, and nonintact skin.
Synonyms production, discharge, emission, exudation, ooze, oozing, leakage, leaching, emanation, giving off, release, sending out
Origin Early 17th century: from French excrétion or Latin excretio(n-), from excernere ‘sift out’ (see excrete). |