Sensorium


1933, 2000)

The term “sensorium” comes (as does the word “sensation”) from the Latin sensus, “the faculty of perceiving.” The plural of “sensorium” is rarely used but in case of need you can choose between “sensoriums” and “sensoria.”

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  • Sensory

    Relating to sensation, to the perception of a stimulus, to the voyage made by incoming nerve impulses from the sense organs to the nerve centers or to the senses themselves.

  • Sensory integration

    A form of occupational therapy in which special exercises are used to strengthen the patient’s sense of touch (tactile), sense of balance (vestibular), and sense of where the body and its parts are in space (proprioceptive). It appears to be effective for helping patients with movement disorders or severe under- or over-sensitivity to sensory input.

  • Sensory neuron

    A neuron that receives electrical input signals from sensory cells and from other neurons.

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    The first lymph node to receive lymphatic drainage from a tumor. The sentinel node for a given tumor is found by injecting a tracer substance around the tumor. This substance then travels through the lymphatic system to the sentinel node. The tracer subst

  • Sentinel lymph node biopsy

    Examination of the first lymph node (“gland”) that receives lymphatic drainage from a tumor to determine whether that node does or does not have tumor cells within it. Which lymph node is the sentinel node for a given tumor is determined by injecting around the tumor a tracer substance that will travel through the lymphatic […]


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