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“apoplexy”
apoplexy (s), apoplexies (pl) (noun forms)
1. A term for a "stroke", a cerebrovascular accident (CVA), often associated with loss of consciousness and paralysis of various parts of the body.
2. Sudden impairment of neurological function, especially that resulting from a cerebral hemorrhage; a stroke.
3. Any acute clinical event, related to impairment of cerebral circulation, which lasts longer then twenty-four hours; brain attack.
4. A sudden effusion of blood into an organ or tissue.
5. A fit of extreme anger; rage.
6. Etymology: apoplexy comes from the Greek apoplexia, "a seizure", in the sense of being struck down.
2. Sudden impairment of neurological function, especially that resulting from a cerebral hemorrhage; a stroke.
3. Any acute clinical event, related to impairment of cerebral circulation, which lasts longer then twenty-four hours; brain attack.
4. A sudden effusion of blood into an organ or tissue.
5. A fit of extreme anger; rage.
6. Etymology: apoplexy comes from the Greek apoplexia, "a seizure", in the sense of being struck down.
In Greek plexe is "a stroke". The ancients believed that anyone suffering a stroke; or any sudden incapacity, had been struck down by the gods.
A "sudden fit of paralysis and dizziness", from Old French apoplexie or directly from Late Latin apoplexia; from apo-, "off" + plessein, "hit".
This entry is located in the following units:
apo-, ap-, aph-
(page 4)
-plexia, -plexias, -plexies, -plexy, -plectic, -plexic +
(page 1)
Word Entries containing the term:
“apoplexy”
sanguineous apoplexy
A cerebral hemorrhage or the flow of blood from a ruptured blood vessel in the brain often followed by neurologic damage; a type of stroke.
This entry is located in the following unit:
sangui-, sanguio-, sanguin- +
(page 3)