Significance of Coagulative necrosis
Synonyms: Tissue death, Necrotic tissue, Infarcted tissue
The below excerpts are indicatory and do represent direct quotations or translations. It is your responsibility to fact check each reference.
Hindu concept of 'Coagulative necrosis'
From: Journal of Ayurveda and Integrated Medical Sciences
(1) A characteristic of a wound defined as a burn, caused by various factors like heat or radiation.[1] (2) A type of cell death resulting from burns, causing the affected tissue to become firm and opaque, leading to significant physical and emotional trauma for the patient.[2] (3) Coagulative necrosis is the concept that Kshara when used externally works on, and it causes coagulation of proteins, disintegration of blackish brown discharge.[3]
The concept of Coagulative necrosis in scientific sources
From: International Journal of Pharmacology
(1) A pattern of cell death where cellular structures are preserved but the cell is dead, seen in some renal tubules affected by gentamicin.[4] (2) A type of cell death characterized by the preservation of cellular architecture, seen in heart muscle tissue.[5] (3) Coagulative necrosis is a form of cell death characterized by irreversible damage, observed in individual tubules of rat kidneys treated with gentamicin and camel milk.[6]
From: Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research
(1) Coagulative necrosis is a feature where focal areas were evident in sheep, and the foci were usually small and distributed throughout the left ventricular wall.[7] (2) This was present in the lungs of A 2, and the lesions probably reflected necrotic bacterial pneumonia with possible early abscessation, and there were multifocal areas of what appeared to be coagulative and caseous necrosis, separated from the adjacent lung tissue.[8]
From: The Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences
(1) Coagulative necrosis is a process that induces cellular damage and volume reduction of the target area selectively through concentrated energy, which is caused by high temperature.[9]