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varix

 
Dictionary: var·ix
(văr'ĭks) pronunciation
n., pl., -i·ces (-ĭ-sēz').
  1. An abnormally dilated or swollen vein, artery, or lymph vessel.
  2. One of the longitudinal ridges on the surface of a gastropod shell.

[Latin, swollen vein.]


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Pl. varices [L.] an enlarged, tortuous vein, artery or lymphatic vessel.

  • aneurysmal v. — a markedly dilated tortuous vessel; sometimes used to denote a form of arteriovenous aneurysm in which the blood flows directly into a neighboring vein without the intervention of a connecting sac.
  • arterial v. — a racemose aneurysm or varicose artery.
  • lymph v., v. lymphaticus — a soft, lobulated swelling of a lymph node, due to obstruction of lymphatic vessels.
Wikipedia: Varix (mollusc)
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Varices on the shell of a Biplex species, Ranellidae

A varix (Pl. varices) is an anatomical feature of the shell of certain sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks.

It is a thickened axial ridge in the shell of some families of gastropods. A varix is located at intervals around the whorl, and is formed by considerable thickening of the outer lip at a resting stage in the growth of the shell. In other words, in gastropods whose shells have varices, the shells are characterised by episodic growth - the shell grows in spurts, and during the resting phase the varix forms.

Gastropods whose shells have varices are primarily families and species within the taxonomic groups Littorinimorpha and Neogastropoda.

In many gastropods bearing varices, for example the Cassinae, the varix is essentially merely a thickening and swelling of the shell at that point. But in some genera within the family Muricidae, such as Chicoreus, Hexaplex, Pteropurpura and Pterynotus, and also within the genus Biplex of the family Ranellidae, the varices are characterised by elaborate ruffles, frills or lamellae.

Some other genera, for example Murex, are armed with protective spines which may be straight or curved, and which are formed by the varices closing or curling around their axis.

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Varix (mollusc)" Read more