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A distinction can be made between respiratory H. (due to disturbances in [[oxygen]] uptake via the lungs), circulatory H. (due to insufficiency in the distribution of oxygen-rich blood), anaemic H. (due to lack of transportable haemoglobin) and histotoxic H. (due to disturbance or poisoning of cell respiration). | A distinction can be made between respiratory H. (due to disturbances in [[oxygen]] uptake via the lungs), circulatory H. (due to insufficiency in the distribution of oxygen-rich blood), anaemic H. (due to lack of transportable haemoglobin) and histotoxic H. (due to disturbance or poisoning of cell respiration). | ||
− | https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypoxie_( | + | https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypoxie_(Medicine) <sub>([https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Lizenzbestimmungen_Commons_Attribution-ShareAlike_3.0_Unported Wikipedia CC-by-sa-3.0])</sub> |
Oxygen deficiency in body tissue.
A distinction can be made between respiratory H. (due to disturbances in oxygen uptake via the lungs), circulatory H. (due to insufficiency in the distribution of oxygen-rich blood), anaemic H. (due to lack of transportable haemoglobin) and histotoxic H. (due to disturbance or poisoning of cell respiration).
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypoxie_(Medicine) (Wikipedia CC-by-sa-3.0)