The animal in forty-five minutes was removed, and suffered afterwards from a croupous bronchitis, from which, however, it completely recovered in eleven days.
In poisoning by ammonia, with croupous respiration, keep the room warm, and fill it with steam by means of a bronchitis kettle.
The pulmonary form shows the same symptoms as croupous pneumonia, with a frequent suffocative cough and oppressed breathing, or dyspnea.
There is dribbling of saliva from the mouth and discharge from the nose, at first watery, becoming thicker and mixed with blood and small masses of cast-off croupous membrane, causing a very fetid odor.
These croupous areas when they form in the throat, larynx, or windpipe, may lead to narrowing of the passages, with consequent difficult breathing and even suffocation.
Among those believing in its croupous nature was Powell, who assumed the character of the inflammation to be specific, and the exudate of the same nature and formed in the same manner as that of ordinary croup.
There are those who maintain that the disease consists essentially in an inflammatory condition of the intestinal mucous membrane, either of the ordinary or of some specific type, croupous or diphtheritic.
Amongst the pulmonary lesions obstructing the venous circulation are emphysema, interstitial and croupous pneumonia, effusions into the pleura, intrathoracic aneurisms or tumors, etc.
Acute sthenic inflammations are rarely seen, and hence these persons seldom have acute croupous pneumonias; it is rather the catarrhal variety, and of this the subacute and chronic forms, which they suffer from.
Croupous membrane, according to him, is formed by the migration of numerous white blood-globules through the walls of the vessels in the mucous membrane, and by a direct formation of fibrin from the transuded plasma.
A croupous inflammation means destruction of epithelium, which gives rise to a fibrinous exudation upon the surface, while the cellular tissue remains intact.
True pneumonia is of infrequent occurrence as compared with that of hypostatic congestion of the lungs, but it nevertheless does occur, and may be of either the catarrhal or croupous variety.
This form of phthisis may follow either croupous or catarrhal pneumonia.
Certain of the conditions now regarded as indicative of a coagulative necrosis or a hyaline degeneration were previously described by Wagner as the result of a croupous or fibrinous metamorphosis.
Bamberger (1855) divides the inflammations of the mouth and pharynx into the catarrhal and croupous forms, and considers croup and diphtheria to be subdivisions of the latter form, differing only in degree.
Patches of congestion and occasionally submucous ecchymoses may be observed, and croupous exudation occurs here somewhat more frequently than in the small intestine.
It occasionally happens that an attack of croupouspneumonia may develop during the course of whooping cough, but in the vast majority of cases the disease is of the catarrhal type.
Contagious pleuropneumonia is an acute contagious disease of horses manifesting itself either as a croupous pneumonia or a pleuropneumonia with complications in the form of serous infiltrations of the subcutaneous tissues and tendons.
The diplococcus of Fraenkel is a small, oval diplococcus found in the "rusty" sputum of croupous pneumonia.
The specific or croupous pneumonia is associated with two organisms: Fraenkel's diplococcus and Friedländer's pneumo-bacillus.
The rusty sputum of croupous pneumonia is extremely tenacious, so that the vessel in which it is contained may be inverted without spilling it.
The pneumococcus is the causative agent in nearly all cases {36} of croupous pneumonia, and is commonly found in large numbers in the rusty sputum of this disease.
A rusty red sputum is the rule in croupous pneumonia, and was at one time considered pathognomonic of the disease.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "croupous" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.