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fistula
[ fis-choo-luh ]
noun
- Pathology. a narrow passage or duct formed by disease or injury, as one leading from an abscess to a free surface, or from one cavity to another.
- Surgery. an opening made into a hollow organ, as the bladder or eyeball, for drainage.
- Veterinary Pathology. any of various suppurative inflammations, as in the withers of a horse fistulous withers, characterized by the formation of passages or sinuses through the tissues and to the surface of the skin.
- Obsolete. a pipe, as a flute.
fistula
/ ˈɪʊə /
noun
- pathol an abnormal opening between one hollow organ and another or between a hollow organ and the surface of the skin, caused by ulceration, congenital malformation, etc
- obsolete.any musical wind instrument; a pipe
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of fistula1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of fistula1
Example Sentences
Mount Sinai researchers have published the first study to use single-cell analysis in identifying several pathophysiological mechanisms of abnormal passageways in the digestive system known as perianal fistulae, a common complication of Crohn's disease.
A fistula is an internal hole and can be the result of childbirth.
“We suspect this was the source of his chronic abscesses and fistulas,” the second surgeon noted, according to portions of medical records shared by Contreras with The Times.
Surgeries included many performed in the body’s orifices to treat polyps, inflamed tonsils, hemorrhoids and fistulas.
James Marion Sims, a 19th century Alabama surgeon heralded as the father of modern gynecology, pioneered a treatment for vesicovaginal fistulas, a condition that affects bladder control and fertility in women.
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