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vaskulären

Vaskulären is the inflected form of the German adjective vaskulär, meaning vascular. It is used in medical and scientific language to describe structures, tissues, or processes related to blood vessels or, less commonly, to lymphatic vessels. In German, vaskulär functions as an attributive or predicative descriptor, with forms adapted to gender, case, and number (for example, vaskuläre Erkrankungen, vascularess network).

Etymology and scope: The term derives from Latin vasculāris, meaning “of a vessel,” from vasculum (a small

Usage and contexts: Common applications cover macrovascular components (arterien, venen) and microvascular components (kapillaren). Vaskuläre Veränderungen

Relation to other terms: German uses angio- or angiologisch for vessel-related topics in some subspecialties, while

vessel).
It
entered
German
through
Romance
or
Latin
scientific
vocabulary
and
is
related
to
the
English
“vascular.”
The
prefix
and
suffix
allow
it
to
form
a
wide
range
of
compounds,
such
as
vaskuläre
Anatomie
(vascular
anatomy),
vaskuläre
Versorgung
(vascular
supply),
and
vaskuläre
Strukturen
(vascular
structures).
describe
vessel-related
alterations
seen
in
conditions
like
atherosclerosis,
aneurysms,
vasculitis,
or
thrombosis,
as
well
as
in
imaging
findings.
In
physiology
and
pathology,
the
term
also
appears
in
discussions
of
blood
flow,
perfusion,
and
tissue
oxygenation,
where
vaskuläre
function
is
essential
for
organ
health.
vaskulär
emphasizes
the
vascular
system
as
a
whole
or
its
functional
status.
Understanding
vaskulären
terminology
supports
cross-disciplinary
communication
in
anatomy,
radiology,
and
clinical
medicine.