perfuse

Etymology
From 1520s, from, past participle of from  +  (from nasalised form of PIE root *gheu- ("to pour")); compare ,.

Verb

 * 1)  To permeate or suffuse something, especially with a liquid or with light.
 * 2)  To force a fluid to flow over or through something, especially through an organ of the body.
 * 3) * 2001, Alan B. R. Thomson, Gary Wild, Lipid Absorption and the Unstirred layers, Charles M. Mansbach II, Patrick Tso, Arnis Kuksis (editors), Intestinal Lipid Metabolism, Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publishers, page 140,
 * The change in the ratio of the uptake of xylose and urea could not be explained just by an alteration in UWL resistance or by a change in the laminar flow properties of the perfused fluid.
 * 1)  To force a fluid to flow over or through something, especially through an organ of the body.
 * 2) * 2001, Alan B. R. Thomson, Gary Wild, Lipid Absorption and the Unstirred layers, Charles M. Mansbach II, Patrick Tso, Arnis Kuksis (editors), Intestinal Lipid Metabolism, Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publishers, page 140,
 * The change in the ratio of the uptake of xylose and urea could not be explained just by an alteration in UWL resistance or by a change in the laminar flow properties of the perfused fluid.
 * The change in the ratio of the uptake of xylose and urea could not be explained just by an alteration in UWL resistance or by a change in the laminar flow properties of the perfused fluid.

Translations

 * Bulgarian:
 * Finnish: virrata läpi
 * German: durchströmen,