iliac
See also: Iliac
English
Etymology
From French iliaque, from Late Latin īliacus, Latin īlium.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɪliæk/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Adjective
iliac (not comparable)
- Relating to the ilium.
- 1989, Antonio Strano, Salvatore Novo, editors, Advances in Vascular Pathology 1989: Proceedings of the 15th World Congress of the International Union of Angiology, Rome, 17–22 September 1989, volume 1, Excerpta Medica, →ISBN, page 483, →ISBN:
- Five of the 16 patients required simultaneous FF bypass and iliaco-femoral bypass; 2, required simultaneous FF bypass and iliac thrombo-endoarterectomy (Table II).
Derived terms
- anterior superior iliac spine
- aortoiliac
- autoiliac
- bisiliac
- brachyiliac
- common iliac artery
- common iliac vein
- dolichoiliac
- external iliac artery
- iliac artery
- iliac crest
- iliac fossa
- iliac furrow
- iliac horn syndrome
- iliac passion
- interiliac
- internal iliac artery
- ischioiliac
- occipitoiliac
- sacroiliac
- subiliac
- superiliac
- suprailiac
- transiliac
- vertebroiliac
Related terms
Translations
Translations
Anagrams
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from French iliaque, from Latin iliacus.
Adjective
iliac m or n (feminine singular iliacă, masculine plural iliaci, feminine and neuter plural iliace)