(Pathology) gangrene that develops in the presence of arterial obstruction and is characterized by dryness of the dead tissue and a dark brown color.
1One patient suffered from peripheral dry gangrene, required amputations, and had persistent Raynaud's phenomenon.
2If the part is aseptic it shrivels, and presents the ordinary features of dry gangrene.
3When these measures are successful, dry gangrene ensues.
4They are precisely similar to the cumulative effects of a salt diet in producing scurvy, or of spurred rye in producing dry gangrene.
5All the physical appearances and clinical symptoms associated with dry gangrene supervene, and the dead portion is delimited by a line of demarcation.
6Dry Gangrene.-Thisis a combination produced by a loss of water from the tissues.
7Dry gangrene is most often seen in horses from continuous lying down (decubitus) or from uneven pressure of some portion of the harness.
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