Glossary entry (derived from question below)
German term or phrase:
Schocktod
English translation:
fatal shock/death following/in consequence of shock
Added to glossary by
davidgreen
Oct 25, 2006 10:17
17 yrs ago
1 viewer *
German term
Schocktod
German to English
Medical
Medical (general)
a) Symptome der Intoxikation
Falls Überdosierungserscheinungen eintreten, insbesondere bei Kindern, können diese zu hämorrhagischer Gastroenteritis und u.U. zu Schocktod führen. Nach etwa 2 bis 20 Stunden kommt es zu Vasomotorenkollaps und Acidoseatmung. Dann können eine trügerische Remission und Hepatose sowie u.U. Konvulsionen auftreten. Im schlimmsten Fall tritt Koma und Atemlähmung ein.
Falls Überdosierungserscheinungen eintreten, insbesondere bei Kindern, können diese zu hämorrhagischer Gastroenteritis und u.U. zu Schocktod führen. Nach etwa 2 bis 20 Stunden kommt es zu Vasomotorenkollaps und Acidoseatmung. Dann können eine trügerische Remission und Hepatose sowie u.U. Konvulsionen auftreten. Im schlimmsten Fall tritt Koma und Atemlähmung ein.
Proposed translations
(English)
4 +2 | fatal shock | davidgreen |
4 | shock death | Narasimhan Raghavan |
4 | death from shock | David Moore (X) |
3 | shock death | Jonathan MacKerron |
Proposed translations
+2
15 mins
Selected
fatal shock
I think "shock death" refers to death due to electrical shock (as in the link offered in the first suggestion). I and Roche disagree that it's not a medical term - plug it into http://www.gesundheit.de/roche/ and althought there's no english offered, it does appear 4x.
Reference:
http://www.gesundheit.de/roche/
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&rls=GGLG%2CGGLG%3A2005-42%2CGGLG%3Aen&q=%22fatal+shock%22
Peer comment(s):
agree |
sylvie malich (X)
: this is the only one so far that makes any sense to this native speaker: see also http://www.fda.gov/ola/2006/mifepristone0517.html
3 hrs
|
agree |
Julia Lipeles
3 hrs
|
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
3 mins
shock death
See:
Family to sue over woman’s shock deathFamily to sue over woman’s shock death. By Lincoln Anderson. Villager photo by Bob Arihood. Bob Arihood, the East Village photographer who took this photo ...
www.thevillager.com/villager_40/familytosueover.html - 18k - Cached - Similar pages
Family to sue over woman’s shock deathFamily to sue over woman’s shock death. By Lincoln Anderson. Villager photo by Bob Arihood. Bob Arihood, the East Village photographer who took this photo ...
www.thevillager.com/villager_40/familytosueover.html - 18k - Cached - Similar pages
Peer comment(s):
neutral |
Armorel Young
: your reference is to a case of death by electric shock (electrocution) which is not the case here
4 mins
|
The term shock death exists. That's all there to it. Shock is due to many things. All are referred to by this word only.
|
3 mins
shock death
Real Lexikon der Medizin
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Note added at 6 mins (2006-10-25 10:23:39 GMT)
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"1. Tod im dekompensierten Schock.
2. plötzl. Tod infolge externer Reizung des vegetat Nervensystems
3. Bolustod"
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Note added at 6 mins (2006-10-25 10:23:39 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
"1. Tod im dekompensierten Schock.
2. plötzl. Tod infolge externer Reizung des vegetat Nervensystems
3. Bolustod"
44 mins
death from shock
I think I would put it like this. "Death following/in consequence of shock" might also be acceptable, but I'm not a doctor, so I'm not at all sure here - I have a feeling this is used more frequently in relation to shock trauma after accidents.
It's a great pity google cannot distinguish between contexts, but there are at least nearly 700 hits for this exact expression, most of which appear medical-related rather than power-related.
"Shock death" is extremely common in the sense of "unexpected death", and that's why I wouldn't use that. Equally, it's very common in headlines about electrocution deaths.
It's a great pity google cannot distinguish between contexts, but there are at least nearly 700 hits for this exact expression, most of which appear medical-related rather than power-related.
"Shock death" is extremely common in the sense of "unexpected death", and that's why I wouldn't use that. Equally, it's very common in headlines about electrocution deaths.
Discussion