Sooner or later the overlying skin becomes involved, either with or without a pyogenic infection, and the gumma sloughs out leaving the typical syphilitic ulcer.
Infectious osteomyelitis is acute suppuration of the bone, always due to the infection of the bone marrow by pyogenic microorganisms.
As a clinical term, necrosis usually means destruction by pyogenic infection, and caries, destruction by the gradual extension of a tuberculous process.
Any pyogenic organism which can be carried in the blood may be deposited in the bone and produce suppuration.
In septicemia the blood contains both pyogenic toxins and multiplying pyogenic organisms.
The walls of a tubercular sinus are lined with a material identical with the pyogenic membrane of a cold abscess.
Acute osteomyelitis frequently occurs after injuries of moderate severity, because such injuries may lower resistance of the bones and make them unusually susceptible to pyogenic infection.
A condition in which pyogenic bacteria circulate in the blood, and form abscesses wherever they lodge.
The first six are known as pyogenic bacteria, as they all produce pus; in addition to the above there are many more microorganisms, but from a surgical standpoint those mentioned are the most important.
The pyogenic variety, it should be noted, cause the production of pus.
Its pyogenic power is even weaker than that of the albus.
Cellulitis is usually a result of infection not only with streptococci, but also with other pyogenic cocci.
Tuberculosis, lues, scarlet fever, diphtheria, enteric fever and pyogenic conditions may produce ulceration followed by cicatrices of the esophagus.
The trachea is relatively rarely involved in tuberculosis, but we may have in the trachea the pale swelling of the early stage of a perichondritis, or the later ulceration and all the phenomena following the mixed pyogenic infections.
Spasmodic stenosis with its consequent esophagitis and erosions, and, later, secondary pyogenic infection, may result in serious cicatrices.
Emphysema unaccompanied by pyogenic processes usually requires no treatment, though an occasional case may require punctures of the skin to liberate the air.
Germicidal action of chlorlyptus on pyogenic bacteria suspended in pus.
Germicidal action of chlorlyptus on pyogenic bacteria suspended in an oily medium.
The pyogenic membrane is now carefully plucked away with a pair of Grünwald’s forceps.
If the pyogenic polypoid mucous membrane be not carefully removed, suppuration may persist.
As a result of pyogenic infection, suppuration of the labyrinth may occur.
The entry is generally announced by the bulging upwards of the blue, polypoid, pyogenic membrane into which the thin white delicate mucosa of the cavity has been converted.
The mouth-parts or the sting of the insect are not sterile and the chances of their carryingpyogenic organisms are always present.
Similarly, species of spiders and other forms which are ordinarily perfectly harmless, may accidentally convey and inoculate pyogenic bacteria.
An infectious disease due to the absorption of animal poisons, principally pyogenic organisms, and characterized by the formation, in the various tissues and organs, of multiple metastatic abscesses.
One of the forms or a combination of pyogenic micrococci are held to be responsible, for this condition.
They are surrounded by a pyogenic membrane and filled with a creamy pus, in which the microbe swarms side by side with the pus globules.
The culture of the pus furnished the long strings of grains and the little pyogenic vibrio.
There is also the presence of a pyogenic bacterium, by which the disease may be maintained and propagated.
Pyogenic microörganisms are now regarded as causative.
The pyogenic cocci are added factors in the pustular and furuncular cases.
It is essentially a disease of the poorly cared-for and ill-fed; the direct exciting cause is the introduction of pyogenic microörganisms into the follicular openings.
Entrance into the follicles of pyogenic micrococci is now regarded as the essential factor.
When the pyogenic cyst is once broken the pus becomes diffused, and as it has no retaining membrane it burrows in all directions, and more or less of it is absorbed, causing pyomia.
As a result of pyogenic infection the cyst may be converted into an abscess.
In many cases, especially those in which ulceration has occurred, the addition of pyogenic infection may also be concerned in the failure of health.
Like septicæmia, this condition is due to pyogenic bacteria, the streptococcus pyogenes being the commonest organism found.
Many varieties ofpyogenic bacteria have now been differentiated, the best known being the staphylococcus aureus, the streptococcus, and the bacillus coli communis.
When sinuses have formed and become infected with pyogenic bacteria, there may be a diurnal variation in the temperature of the type known as hectic fever (Fig.
A third group of chronic inflammations are those that begin as an acute pyogenic inflammation, which, instead of resolving completely, persists in a chronic form.
When effusion is present, it may be serous, as in arthritis deformans, or sero-fibrinous or purulent, as in certain forms of pyogenic and tuberculous arthritis.
When the abscess is allowed to burst, or is opened and becomes infected with pyogenic bacteria, there is not only the risk of aggravation of the disease and persistent suppuration, but there is a greater liability to general tuberculosis.
In #inherited syphilis# the earliest joint affections are those in which there is an effusion into the joint, especially the knee or elbow; and in exceptional cases pyogenic infection may be superadded, and pus form in the joint.
Leucocytosis is met with in nearly all acute infective diseases, and in acute pyogenic inflammatory affections, particularly in those attended with suppuration.
This postulate applies not only to stimuli from visible forces, but to those received by the invasion of the micro-bodies which cause pyogenic or non-pyogenic infections.
Pain, however, is not the only symptom of the invasion of the body by pyogenic or parasitic organisms.
The infections that are usually, though not always, associated with pain are the pyogenic infections.
The pyogenic infections and the exanthemata constitute the great majority of infections and are the basis of the discussion which follows.
In the pyogenic infections, in order to protect the remainder of the body, which, of course, enjoys no immunity, every possible barrier against the spread of the infection is thrown about the local point of infection.
It is because nature has no helpful response to offer against cancer, while in certain of the acute pyogenic infections the nociceptors force the beneficent physiologic rest.
In tuberculous meningitis the clot which forms floats in the centre of the fluid, and is translucent, grey, and flaky; in the pyogenic forms it is yellow, and sticks to the side of the vessel.
It is liable to occur also in the course of any disease in which there is an infection of the blood with pyogenic bacteria, and has been met with in diphtheria, typhoid fever, scarlet fever, measles, and other eruptive fevers.
Syphilis is a common cause, but the condition may follow on infections with ordinary pyogenic cocci, pneumococci, the influenza bacillus or the bacillus coli.
This may be symptomatic of some inflammatory condition in the vicinity, such as a pyogenic affection of the lower jaw--for example, that associated with a carious root or an unerupted wisdom tooth, or with parotitis or tonsillitis.
Eczema capitis is of surgical importance only in so far as it often forms the starting-point of infection of lymph glands by pyogenic and other organisms.
This is an acute suppurative inflammation of the tonsils and peritonsillar tissue, due to infection with pyogenic bacteria.
The culture of pus yielded the long chains noted in the preceding observation and also the small pyogenic vibrio.
This blood, upon cultivation, gave an abundance of the pyogenic vibrio.
The pyogenic membrane, like the granulations of a sore, which it resembles in nature, forms pus, not from any inherent disposition to do so, but only because it is subjected to some preternatural stimulation.
Indeed, such a procedure would be objectionable, as it would stimulate the pyogenic membrane to unnecessary suppuration.
The lochia were full of the pyogenic vibrio and of the organism of furuncles, although there was but a small proportion of the latter.
On May twenty-eighth, a rabbit was inoculated under the skin of the abdomen with five drops of the preceding culture of the pyogenic vibrio.
After confinement, the pus that always naturally forms in the injured parts of the uterus instead of remaining pure becomes contaminated with microscopic organisms from outside, notably the organism in long chains and the pyogenic vibrio.
This is a large group, for all the pathogenic bacteria possess the power, under certain conditions, of initiating purely pyogenic processes in place of or in addition to their specific lesions, (e.
These are usually grouped together under the title of "pyogenic bacteria," as distinct from those which only occasionally exercise a pyogenic rôle.
Abscess formation from infection with ordinary pyogenic bacteria occurs naturally in the rabbit, and frequently the animal house of a laboratory is decimated by an infective septicæmia due to B.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "pyogenic" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.