necro-, necr-, necron-, -necrosis, nekro- +

(Greek: dead, death, dead body; dead tissue or cells; corpse)

necropsy
A visual examination, and dissection of a dead body, to determine the cause of death or any changes that were produced by disease.
necroscopy
Another term for an autopsy of dead bodies.
necrose
To cause necrosis or to become the site of necrosis.
necrosectomy
The resection of necrotic (dead) tissue.
necroses
Plural of necrosis.
necrosis
1. The death of cells in a tissue or organ caused by disease or injury.
2. Death, or mortification; especially, of a bodily tissue, as a result of the loss of blood supply, corrosion, burning, etc.

The causes of necrosis include insufficient blood supply, but also, other physical agents; such as, trauma, or radiant energy (electricity, infrared, ultraviolet, roentgen, and radium rays); chemical agents acting locally, acting internally following absorption, or placed into the wrong tissue; such as, some medicines cause necrosis if injected into the tissues rather than the vein, and iron dextran (injectable form of iron used in the prevention of iron deficiency) causes necrosis if injected into areas other than the deep muscle or vein.

necrospermia
A condition in which there are dead or immobile sermatozoa in the semen.
necrosteon
Gangrene of bone.
necrosteosis
necrotic
Relating to the death of a portion of bodily tissue.
necrotic enteritis
In veterinary medicine, an enterotoxemic disease in chickens caused by Clostridium perfringens, characterized by sudden onset with diarrhea, explosive mortality, and confluent mucosal necrosis of the small intestine.
necrotize
To cause necrosis.
necrotizing
Causing or undergoing the death of cells (necrosis).
necrotizing facitis
A severe bacterial infection that causes cell tissue to decay rapidly. This is the “flesh-eating bacterium” sometimes referred to in the media.
necrotomy
1. An operation for the removal of a necrosed (dead) portion of bone.
2. The dissection of a cadaver.

Related "death, dead; kill" units: -cide; lethal-; mort-; neci-; phono-; thanato-.