viscer-, viscero-, visceri-, visc- +
(Latin: internal organs; all that is under the skin, all parts in the body except flesh or muscles; entrails; any large interior organ in any of the three great cavities of the body; specifically, those within the chest; such as, the heart or lungs or in the abdomen; such as, the liver, pancreas or intestines)
enviserate, enviserated
These are misspellings of eviscerate, eviscerated and do not exist in any dictionary on or off the internet.
eviscerate, eviscerating, eviscerated
1. To take away or to remove an essential part of something and so weaken it: "There was a compromise that eviscerated the proposed Senate bill."
2. To remove the entrails of; to disembowel.
3. To remove the internal organs or entrails of a person or of an animal.
4. In medicine, to remove the contents of (an organ) or to remove an organ; such as, an eye, from (a patient).
5. To protrude through a wound or surgical incision.
evisceration
1. The removal of the contents of the eye with retention of the sclera.
2. The surgical removal of part of the abdominal viscera.
3. The loss or removal of the abdominal viscera; disemboweling.
evisceroneurotomy
Evisceration of the eye combined with cutting of the optic nerve or the removal of a portion of the nerve.
inviserate, inviserated, inviserating
1. Deep-seated; internal.
2. To breed; to nourish.
3. Literally, to put into the entrails.
obstetric evisceration
The removal of the abdominal and thoracic contents, usually from a dead fetus, in order to diminish its bulk and allow vginal delivery. This procedure is now considered to be outmoded and is seldom used.
perivisceral
1. Near or around a viscus or the viscera.
2. Surrounding the viscera (internal organs of the body, specifically those within the chest (as the heart or lungs) or the abdomen (as the liver, pancreas, or intestines).
viscera (pl), viscus (s)
1. The internal organs of the body, specifically those within the chest (as the heart or lungs) or abdomen (as the liver, pancreas or intestines).
2. Any large interior organ in one of the three great cavities of the body, especially in the abdomen.
3. The soft internal organs of the body, especially those contained within the abdominal and thoracic cavities.
4. The intestines.
viscerad
Toward the viscera.
visceral
1. A reference to the viscus or to the viscera
2. Indicating hollow organs.
visceral cranium
The portion of the skull which forms the face and the jaws.
visceral crisis
Lightning pains coming from a viscus, as seen in
tabes dorsailis.
Tabes dorsalis refers to the slowly progressive degeneration of the spinal cord that occurs in the tertiary (third) phase of syphilis a decade or more after originally contracting the infection.
Among the terrible features of tabes dorsalis are lancinating lightning-like pain, ataxia (wobbliness), deterioration of the nerves to the eyes (the optic nerves) leading to blindness, urinary incontinence, loss of the sense of position, and degeneration of the joints (Charcot's joints).
Tabes is a Latin word for "decay". The term tabes dorsalis was created in 1836 when the cause of the condition was thought to be wastage of the dorsal (posterior) columns of the spinal cord, well before it was recognized as part of late syphilis.
visceral ectopia
A congenital hernia into the umbilical cord.
visceralgia
1. Pain in the viscera or in bodily organs.
2. Any deep pain, usually of neurologic origin, in the visera.
The word viscera refers to any large interior organ in any one of the three great cavities of the body, especially in the abdomen.
visceralism
The opinion or theory that the viscera are the principal seats of diseases.
Cross references of word families related directly, or indirectly, to: "internal organs, entrails, inside":
ent-;
enter-;
fistul-;
incret-;
inter-;
intra-;
splanchn-.