Anoxia vs Asphyxia - What's the difference?
anoxia | asphyxia |
(pathology) A condition in which a tissue or environment is severely or totally deprived of oxygen, severe hypoxia.
The loss of consciousness due to the interruption of breathing and consequent anoxia. Asphyxia can be result from choking, drowning, electric shock, injury.
The loss of consciousness due to the body's inability to deliver oxygen to its tissues, either by the breathing of air lacking oxygen or by the inability of the blood to carry oxygen. Such asphyxia can be result from the inhalation of non-toxic gases which displace oxygen from the inhaled air, by exposure to carbon monoxide from smoke inhalation such that hemoglobin is poisoned, or the development of methemoglobinemia.
(medicine) A condition in which an extreme decrease in the concentration of oxygen in the body leads to loss of consciousness or death. The term is now obsolete, having been replace in mid-twentieth century by the more specific terms anoxia, hypoxia, hypoxemia and hypercapnia.
* 1895 . Robley Dunglison and Richard J. Dunglison, ''A Dictionary of Medical Science containing a full explanation of the various subjects and terms of anatomy, physiology, medical chemistry, pharmacy, pharmacology, therapeutics, medicine, hygiene, dietetics, pathology, bacteriology, surgery, ophthalmology, otology, laryngology, dermatology, gynecology, obstetrics, pediatrics, medical jurisprudence, dentistry, etc. 21 edition:
As nouns the difference between anoxia and asphyxia
is that anoxia is a condition in which a tissue or environment is severely or totally deprived of oxygen, severe hypoxia while asphyxia is the loss of consciousness due to the interruption of breathing and consequent anoxia. Asphyxia can be result from choking, drowning, electric shock, injury.anoxia
English
(wikipedia anoxia)Noun
(-)Derived terms
* anoxicSee also
* asphyxia English terms with alpha privativesasphyxia
English
(wikipedia asphyxia)Noun
(-)- Hypoxaemia [...is] a deficient oxygenation of the blood; asphyxia from defective oxygenation of the blood.
