anuretic

English

Etymology

From anuresis + -etic.

Adjective

anuretic (not comparable)

  1. (medicine) Of, pertaining to or characterised by anuresis.
  2. (medicine) Who has anuresis; unable to urinate.
    • 2002, Dean Tong, Elusive Innocence: Survival Guide for the Falsley Accused, page 57:
      In addition, the psychologist diagnosed the 3-year-old as anuretic and encopretic when, in fact, the child was simply not yet toilet-trained, and neither diagnosis is valid at such a young age.
    • 2007, Eileen O'Grady, A Nurse's Guide to Caring for Cardiac Intervention Patients, page 31:
      This should be considered in any patient who becomes hypotensive, breathless and anuretic following catheterisation (11).
    • 2011, Advanced Life Support Group, Advanced Paediatric Life Support: The Practical Approach, page 136:
      Some children may be anuretic – renal function (serum creatinine, urea and electrolytes) should be analysed promptly.

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