intussusception
nounInvagination, especially an infolding of one part of the intestine into another.
nounAssimilation of new substances into the existing components of living tissue.
nounA receiving within; reception of one part within another part of the same organ, or of one organ within another of the same kind; invagination; introversion; introsusception.
nounIn physiology, reception of foreign matter by a living organism, and its conversion into living tissue; ingestion, digestion, and assimilation of food, including the whole process of nutrition and growth. It is the mode of interstitial growth characteristic of organic life, as distinguished from any process of accretion by which a mineral may increase in size.
nounIn botany, according to the theory proposed by Nägeli, the growth of cell-walls by the intercalation of new solid particles between those already in existence. The intussusception theory is opposed to the theory of growth by apposition, which supposes that the new particles are deposited in layers on the inner side of the cell-wall.
nounThe reception of one part within another.
nounThe abnormal reception or slipping of a part of a tube, by inversion and descent, within a contiguous part of it; specifically, the reception or slipping of the upper part of the small intestine into the lower; introsusception; invagination.
nounThe interposition of new particles of formative material among those already existing, as in a cell wall, or in a starch grain.
nounThe act of taking foreign matter, as food, into a living body; the process of nutrition, by which dead matter is absorbed by the living organism, and ultimately converted into the organized substance of its various tissues and organs.
nounAbsorption.
