Vesicle is the medical term for a small watery blister, and bulla for a large watery blister.
The common term for a raised bump on the epidermis filled with a watery fluid is a blister. In medical terms, a small blister is a vesicle, while a large blister is a bulla.
Diarrhea is the medical term meaning watery stools.
A blister is a circumscribed collection of clear fluid. In medical terms, a small blister is a vesicle, and a large blister is a bulla.
Depends on which area of the system one is referring to. If it is an open wound, it is drainage.
'vesicles' IS the medical term for small fluid-filled sacs or cysts, such as a blister.
Vesicle = small blisterBulla = large blisterA vesicleThe word "vesicle" is often used for the small ones.another word for blister is spot
Bulla (a large vesicle)bullaA bulla (plural bullae) is a large blister.
Blister Edema
In medical terminology, a vesicle and a blister refer to the same thing, which is a small fluid-filled pocket that forms on the skin. Vesicle is the scientific term while blister is the more common colloquial term for this skin lesion.
Usually a blister or acne is this. Though it also is usually a burn that causes it.
The small blister of chickenpox, like all blisters, is referred to in medical terminology as a "vesicle."
Bulla