diastole

See also: Diastole and diástole

English

The diastole (filling) and systole (pumping) processes of a healthy human heart

Etymology

From Ancient Greek διαστολή (diastolḗ, separation, drawing asunder), from διά (diá, apart) + στέλλειν (stéllein, send).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /daɪˈæstəli/

Noun

diastole (usually uncountable, plural diastoles)

  1. (chiefly uncountable, physiology) The phase or process of relaxation and dilation of the heart chambers, between contractions, during which they fill with blood; an instance of the process.
    • 2005, Richard H. Vagelos, Rachel Marcus, J. Edwin Atwood, 35: Signs, Symptoms, and Laboratory Abnormalities in Cardiovascular Diseases, Robert M. Wachter, Lee Goldman, Harry Hollander (editors), Hospital Medicine, 2nd Edition, page 309,
      In patients with rapid rates, diastole may be sufficiently shortened that the third and fourth heart sounds become superimposed and form a summation gallop.
    • 2008, Jack H. Wilmore, David L. Costill, W. Larry Kenney, Physiology of Sport and Exercise, page 132,
      Of the total cardiac cycle at this rate, diastole accounts for 0.50 s, or 62% of the cycle, and systole accounts for 0.31 s, or 38%.
    • 2011, Julian Maizel, Michel Slama, 9: Hermodynamic Evaluation in the Patient with Arrhythmias, Daniel de Backer, Bernard P. Cholley, Michel Slama, Antoine Vieillard-Baron, Philippe Vignon (editors), Hemodynamic Monitoring Using Echocardiography in the Critically Ill, Springer, page 90,
      During a short cycle or premature contraction, LV ejection begins before pressure in the aorta has completely decreased, and it remains higher than with longer diastoles [4, 5].
  2. (uncountable, prosody) The lengthening of a vowel or syllable beyond its typical length.
    • 1815 March and June, On the Greek and Latin Accents, The Classical Journal, Volume XI, page 81,
      I have inserted diastole which is omitted in Putschius, an insertion which both the complement, and the subsequent text make necessary.
    • 1841, Gottfried Weber, Godfrey Weber′s General Music Teacher, page 115,
      [] according to prosody, this syllable has the diastole and the stress, whereas the second of “cujus” or of “animam” has not.
    • 2010, Jürgen Thym, Ann Clark Fehn, Of Poetry and Song: Approaches to the Nineteenth-Century Lied, page 46,
      Surely Goethe′s basic dichotomy of systole and diastole in the Divan poem [] .
  3. (Greek grammar) The hypodiastole, a textual or punctuation mark formerly used to disambiguate homonyms in Greek.

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Dutch

Etymology

From Ancient Greek διαστολή (diastolḗ, separation, drawing asunder).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /di.aː.ˈstoː.lə/
  • (file)

Noun

diastole f (plural diastoles)

  1. (physiology) diastole

Antonyms


French

Etymology

Borrowed from Ancient Greek διαστολή (diastolḗ, separation, drawing asunder).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /djas.tɔl/

Noun

diastole f (plural diastoles)

  1. (physiology) diastole

Antonyms

Derived terms

Further reading

Anagrams


Italian

Etymology

From Ancient Greek διαστολή (diastolḗ, separation, drawing asunder).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /diˈastole/, [d̪i.ˈaː.st̪o.le]
  • Hyphenation: di‧à‧sto‧le

Noun

diastole f (plural diastoli)

  1. (physiology) diastole

Antonyms

Derived terms

Anagrams


Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Ancient Greek διαστολή (diastolḗ)

Noun

diastole m (definite singular diastolen, uncountable)

  1. (physiology) diastole

Derived terms

References


Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Ancient Greek διαστολή (diastolḗ)

Noun

diastole m (definite singular diastolen, uncountable)

  1. (physiology) diastole

Derived terms

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