curarize

English

Etymology

curare + -ize

Verb

curarize (third-person singular simple present curarizes, present participle curarizing, simple past and past participle curarized)

  1. (transitive) To administer curare to.
    • 1906, William Townsend Porter, An Introduction to Physiology, page 569:
      Curarize the frog sufficiently to paralyze the motor nerves.
    • 1912, John Conrad Hemmeter, Manual of practical physiology, page 193:
      Curarize a large frog, and remove the arches from the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth vertebræ.
    • 1924, Chemical Abstracts - Volume 18, page 3224:
      It is difficult to curarize vitally stained frogs, and thoroughly curarized animals may be restored by injections of dyestuff (Congo red, trypan blue).
    • 2017, Paul A. Obrist, A.H. Black, Jasper Brener, Cardiovascular Psychophysiology:
      In addition, I do not smoke nor does anyone in my laboratory when we curarize rats.
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