carnification
A pathological process in which chronic inflammation or infection causes lung tissue to organize into a fibrous form that resembles meat, which can lead to a loss of normal lung function.
Noun
- A pathological process in which chronic inflammation or infection causes lung tissue to organize into a fibrous form that resembles meat, which can lead to a loss of normal lung function.
- Carnification is held to be most common in new-born children; after the fifth year it is comparatively unfrequent in occurrence; whilst in adults it is very rarely met with; but in aged people again becomes more common...
- The lesions alluded to are those which have been hitherto described under the names of lobular pneumonia and carnification. - 1858, J. Forsyth Meigs, A Practical Treatise of the Diseases of Children, page 129:
- The physical signs of carnification of the lower lobe of a lung and those of a small pleural effusion are the same, excepting that the chest may be distended on one side, and the heart be displaced away from the disease...
- A similar pathological transformation to other types of tissue so that it becomes fibrous and dense.
- One grade of inflammatory irritation produces carnification or hepatization of the medullary tissue, another grade suppuration, and a still higher degree of inflammatory irritation produces gangrene of that tissue. -...
- The liver was not cirrhosed, as he had believed, but was in a state of carnification. - 1873, Dr. Eames, “Carnification of the Liver--Peritonitis”, in The Dublin Journal of Medical Science, volume 56, page 64:
- From this condition the marrow may return to its normal state, or the carnification may be the stage prior to and immediately preceding suppuration. - 1887, Thomas Jones, Diseases of the bones, page 72:
- The literal transformation of something into flesh or meat.
- The room AX is pacing in looks CUTE ('cut!' with an 'e' which, in turn, stands for eye; an eye of carnification that turns bread into flesh; good enough to eat once the carnifex has made the split into a shift, which is...
- Brooks Bouson also remarks on the fact that Year also draws much of its abject horror from its vision of the male "''carnification" of the female subject: that is, the reduction of the woman to a fleshly object or to...
- Stranger yet, at the point where the wood met the man's flesh, there was a type of carnification taking place in which it looked like the material was a mix of half-wood half-flesh. - 2021, Un-su Kim, The Cabinet:
- The transformation of something into a human being.
- Alongside these radiant, clamorous sisters with their luminous eyes and rich curves, Hennie appeared – and was– frail, muted, secretive, nothing at all like an expected carnfication of his full name, Hendrik. - 1981,...
- Bulgakov does not see this divine-human communication as being 'asymmetrical', such that while the human is divinized, the divine is unaffected by the human, which, a traditional opinion says, would only result in its...
- Gerald was a Thor. Of course, you are not to take that literally; but if ever there was a carnification of the great god himself, then Gerald was in his image. - 2022, Fannie Hurst, The Vertical City:
- The process of something nonphysical taking on a physical form (not necessarily involving flesh).
- Ptah-Seth and Sekmet whirl in utter disorientation, dizzy with the loss of time and reality, utterly confused and shattered by the destruction of their first carnification and the change to another form. - 2008, John...
- But life is lived in such a way that this carnification of implicit ghosts occurs most commonly in joking. - 2017, William Fry, Sweet Madness: A Study of Humor:
- Carnal (sexual) activity.
- Yet the spaces between the photos are not so unfleshly: sanguinary parturition, placid blood-warmth of lactation, mysterious lone carnification of my and my husband's love in this marriage-bed– all even more inviolable...
- There will be no carnification in this house! - 2020, Kevin Karmalade, Hail Regina - Season One (Episodes 1-8)::
Origin
Compare French carnification.