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In most cases, the center of this focus undergoes caseous necrosis.
Second, eat these little caseous balloons immediately - like topical plays, they lose value every couple of minutes.
To the naked eye, this has the texture of soft, white cheese and is termed caseous necrosis.
Caseous necrosis is a form of cell death in which the tissue maintains a cheese-like appearance.
Frequently, caseous necrosis is encountered in the foci of tuberculous infections.
In caseous necrosis no histological architecture is preserved.
Affected tissue is replaced by scarring and cavities filled with caseous necrotic material.
The pawnbreaking pathos of the first of these shoddy pieces reveals it as a Caseous effort.
Caseous necrosis in T.B. is most common site of dystrophic calcification.
However, in the lung, extensive caseous necrosis with confluent cheesy tan granulomas is typical.
Isoniazid reaches therapeutic concentrations in serum, cerebrospinal fluid, and within caseous granulomas.
Granulomatous tubercules eventually develop central caseous necrosis and tend to become confluent, replacing the lymphoid tissue.
During their period of farm isolation the goats intermittently exhibited large abscesses which are the obvious clinical symptoms of lumpy goat disease, Caseous lymphadenitis.
Several species cause disease in animals, most notably C. pseudotuberculosis, which causes the disease caseous lymphadenitis and some are also pathogenic in humans.
He wanted to face the oil painting at the end of the auditorium, showing Baron von Conradi, founder of the school, caseous and immortal beneath heavy varnish.
Now his right arm was suppurating with tubercular osteitis, and he coughed blood (after his death, his lungs were found to have extensive cavities and caseous necrosis).
Caseous necrosis can be considered a combination of coagulative and liquefactive necroses, typically caused by mycobacteria (e.g. tuberculosis), fungi and some foreign substances.
Goats can become infected with various viral and bacterial diseases, such as foot-and-mouth disease, caprine arthritis encephalitis, caseous lymphadenitis, pinkeye, mastitis, and pseudorabies.
Caseous lymphadenitis (CLA) is an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis found mostly in goats and sheep that at present has no cure.
Dystrophic calcification (DC) is the calcification occurring in degenerated or necrotic tissue, as in hyalinized scars, degenerated foci in leiomyomas, and caseous nodules.
The classical histologic pattern of scrofula features caseating granulomas with central acellular necrosis (caseous necrosis) surrounded by granulomatous inflammation with multinucleated giant cells.
These central regions begin to die through coagulative necrosis, though they also retain some of the structural characteristics of previously normal tissues, enabling a distinction from the granulomas of tuberculosis where caseous necrosis obliterates preexisting structures.
When the hilar lymph node for instance is infected with tuberculosis and leads to caseous necrosis, its gross appearance can be a cheesy tan to white, which is why this type of necrosis is often depicted as a combination of both coagulative and liquefactive necrosis.
In most cases the lungs show only multiple small foci with greyish centres containing the worms and tissue debris, but in the rare severe infections larger nodules are present, up to 1.0 cm in diameter with caseous centres, projecting from the lung surface; these nodules may coalesce to form areas of consolidation.