In medicine|lang=en terms the difference between serous and polyserositis
is that serous is (medicine) containing, secreting, or resembling serum; watery; a fluid or discharge that is pale yellow and transparent, usually representing something of a benign nature (this contrasts with the term sanguine, which means blood-tinged and usually harmful) while polyserositis is (medicine) chronic inflammation of the serous membranes.
As an adjective serous
is (medicine) containing, secreting, or resembling serum; watery; a fluid or discharge that is pale yellow and transparent, usually representing something of a benign nature (this contrasts with the term sanguine, which means blood-tinged and usually harmful).
As a noun polyserositis is
(medicine) chronic inflammation of the serous membranes.
serous
English
Adjective
(
en adjective)
(medicine) Containing, secreting, or resembling serum; watery; a fluid or discharge that is pale yellow and transparent, usually representing something of a benign nature. (This contrasts with the term sanguine, which means blood-tinged and usually harmful.)
Derived terms
* serous gland
* serous membrane
Related terms
* mucous
* blood serum
* muscle serum
* serum albumin
Anagrams
*
polyserositis
English
Noun
(-)
(medicine) Chronic inflammation of the serous membranes