Bolus

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Bolus can refer to:

  • In medicine, a bolus (from Latin bolus, ball) is a large dose of a medication that is given (usually intravenously by direct infusion injection or gravity drip) to raise blood-level concentrations to a therapeutic level. This is typically done at the beginning of a treatment or after a removal of medicine from blood, like after Dialysis.
    • Diabetics and health care professionals use bolus to describe a dosage of fast-acting insulin intended to "cover" a meal (as opposed to basal, which is either a dose of slow-acting insulin or a continuously pumped small quantity of fast-acting insulin, intended to "cover" the glucose output of the liver).
  • In veterinary medicine a bolus is a large time-release tablet that stays in the rumen of cattle, goats and sheep.
  • In biology, a bolus is any kind of ball-shaped organic structure of an organism or of its discharged substances.
    • The term is also used for any fairly large quantity of matter, usually food, making its way through the digestive tract. In some technical domains it is used to describe the solid results of a bowel movement.
  • The Jacquard loom uses an instrument called the Bolus hook.
  • A bolus is also a pastry of the Netherlands. There are two recipes. One is a Jewish pastry from Amsterdam and surroundings with ginger and/or almonds ('bole'). The other recipe is from the province Zeeland: a sweet sticky bun rolled and shaped in the form of a shell or turban, and covered with cinnamon and brown caramelized sugar.
  • An Anatolian village, also called Baulus, on the site of Ancient Berissa

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