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  1. v. in·sulted, in·sulting, in·sults. n. (ĭn′sŭlt′) a. Medicine A bodily injury, irritation, or trauma. b. Something that causes injury, irritation, or trauma: "the middle of the Bronx, buffeted and poisoned by the worst environmental insults that urban America can dish out" (William K. Stevens). in·sult′er n.

  2. Insult (medical) In medical terms, an insult is the cause of some kind of physical or mental injury. For example, a burn on the skin (the injury) may be the result of a thermal, chemical, radioactive, or electrical event (the insult). [1] Likewise sepsis and trauma are examples of foreign insults, [2] and encephalitis, multiple sclerosis, and ...

  3. INSULT definition: 1. an offensive remark or action: 2. something that causes an injury or damage to the body: 3. to…. Learn more.

  4. In medical terms, an insult is the cause of some kind of physical or mental injury. For example, a burn on the skin (the injury) may be the result of a thermal, chemical, radioactive, or electrical event (the insult). Likewise sepsis and trauma are examples of foreign insults, and encephalitis, multiple sclerosis, and brain tumors are examples ...

  5. Sep 7, 2022 · In some patients with severe burns, however, their immune system can overreact and actually make the injury more severe than the initial insult. Sometimes, the immune response to an insult leads to sepsis. Most often, sepsis-inducing insults are bacterial infections, but these other insults can also be the cause: Viral or fungal infections

  6. insult in American English. (ɪnˈsʌlt ; for n. ˈɪnˌsʌlt ) verb transitive. 1. to treat or speak to with scorn, insolence, or great disrespect; subject to treatment, a remark, etc. that hurts or is meant to hurt the feelings or pride. 2. Obsolete. to attack; assail.

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  8. Summary. Surgery of any kind represents a traumatic insult to the body and is accompanied by a verifiable stress response dependent on the magnitude of the insult. While the general principles of broad-based anaesthesia have been covered in Section 1, Chapters 2, 3 and 4, the purpose of this chapter is to alert the reader to operative ...

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