释义 |
Definition of roseola in English: roseolanoun ˌrəʊzɪˈəʊlərə(ʊ)ˈziːələ mass nounMedicine 1A rose-coloured rash occurring in measles, typhoid fever, syphilis, and some other diseases. 〔医〕蔷薇疹,玫瑰疹;风疹 Example sentencesExamples - Most other respiratory viruses (such as regular measles, mumps, roseola, mononucleosis [‘mono’] and bronchiolitis) don't seem to increase the normal risk for birth defects.
- In your daughter's case, I think she may be having either heat rash, eczema, rubella or bacterial infection - but not chicken pox, measles or roseola because these are accompanied by high fever.
Synonyms spots, skin eruption, breakout - 1.1 A disease of young children in which a fever is followed by a rash, caused by a herpesvirus.
幼儿急疹,幼儿蔷薇疹,猝发疹 Example sentencesExamples - Take your child to the doctor if she has symptoms of roseola.
- I had been wondering if the assessment of Intestines Wind / Heat had been a bit off, but at that point the baby developed a whole body rash - red points - diagnosed by the MD as roseola.
- Although roseola is contagious, you probably can't protect your child from it because it is usually spread by respiratory droplets or saliva from a child who has no obvious symptoms of the illness.
- Roseola (also known as sixth disease, exanthem subitum, and roseola infantum) is a viral illness in young children, most commonly affecting children between the ages of 6 months and 2 years.
- Illnesses that most commonly cause febrile convulsions include viral upper respiratory infections such as flu, ear infections, or roseola (a virus causing a temperature and rash).
- Human herpesvirus 6, the cause of childhood roseola, has been detected in the lungs of some patients with idiopathic pneumonia.
- Seizures are most likely to occur early in an illness (such as roseola, colds, gastrointestinal infection) when the fever is rising quickly.
- Infection made most children ill, and symptoms included fever, irritability, runny nose, rash, roseola, and diarrhea.
- Infants infected with HHV 6 may develop roseola, a mild rash that disappears within several days.
- A diagnosis of roseola is often uncertain until the fever drops and the rash appears, so the doctor may order tests to make sure that the fever is not caused by another type of infection.
OriginEarly 19th century: modern variant of rubeola, from Latin roseus 'rose-coloured'. Definition of roseola in US English: roseolanoun Medicine 1A rose-colored rash occurring in measles, typhoid fever, syphilis, and some other diseases. 〔医〕蔷薇疹,玫瑰疹;风疹 Example sentencesExamples - Most other respiratory viruses (such as regular measles, mumps, roseola, mononucleosis [‘mono’] and bronchiolitis) don't seem to increase the normal risk for birth defects.
- In your daughter's case, I think she may be having either heat rash, eczema, rubella or bacterial infection - but not chicken pox, measles or roseola because these are accompanied by high fever.
Synonyms spots, skin eruption, breakout - 1.1 A disease of young children in which a fever is followed by a rash, caused by a herpes virus.
幼儿急疹,幼儿蔷薇疹,猝发疹 Example sentencesExamples - Take your child to the doctor if she has symptoms of roseola.
- Illnesses that most commonly cause febrile convulsions include viral upper respiratory infections such as flu, ear infections, or roseola (a virus causing a temperature and rash).
- Infection made most children ill, and symptoms included fever, irritability, runny nose, rash, roseola, and diarrhea.
- I had been wondering if the assessment of Intestines Wind / Heat had been a bit off, but at that point the baby developed a whole body rash - red points - diagnosed by the MD as roseola.
- Seizures are most likely to occur early in an illness (such as roseola, colds, gastrointestinal infection) when the fever is rising quickly.
- Infants infected with HHV 6 may develop roseola, a mild rash that disappears within several days.
- Roseola (also known as sixth disease, exanthem subitum, and roseola infantum) is a viral illness in young children, most commonly affecting children between the ages of 6 months and 2 years.
- A diagnosis of roseola is often uncertain until the fever drops and the rash appears, so the doctor may order tests to make sure that the fever is not caused by another type of infection.
- Human herpesvirus 6, the cause of childhood roseola, has been detected in the lungs of some patients with idiopathic pneumonia.
- Although roseola is contagious, you probably can't protect your child from it because it is usually spread by respiratory droplets or saliva from a child who has no obvious symptoms of the illness.
OriginEarly 19th century: modern variant of rubeola, from Latin roseus ‘rose-colored’. |