Definition of Coapted

1. coapt [v] - See also: coapt

Lexicographical Neighbors of Coapted

coannihilation
coannihilations
coappear
coappeared
coappearing
coappears
coapplied
coapplies
coapply
coapplying
coapt
coaptation
coaptation splint
coaptation suture
coaptations
coapted (current term)
coapting
coapts
coaration
coarb
coarbs
coarct
coarctate
coarctate retina
coarctations
coarctectomy
coarctotomy
coarse

Literary usage of Coapted

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Nervous and Mental Diseases by Archibald Church, Frederick Peterson (1914)
"This condition of the joints places them at a certain disadvantage, so that the joint-surfaces are not properly coapted and ligamentous stretching is often ..."

2. Principles of surgical nursing: A Guide to Modern Surgical Technic by Frederick Cook Warnshuis (1918)
"The nurse's relation to a surgical wound begins when the wound has been coapted by the surgeon. For this reason, she should be in possession of a general ..."

3. The Universal Medical Journal (1894)
"Where the coapted parts are reinforced by sutures such as catgut, the latter serve as a frame-work for the plastic exudate which is quickly thrown out, ..."

4. The Principles and practice of gynecology: For Students and Practitioners by Emilius Clark Dudley (1902)
"CD Flap-splitting on both sides : A, A. vaginal surface; B, B, vesical surface ; C, C, and D, D, inner surfaces of split edges, and the ones to be coapted.1 ..."

5. Therapeutic Gazette (1904)
"The muscle, if well developed, is coapted by interrupted sutures. ... The skin may be coapted with the Michel clamp, buried silver wire ..."

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