| steato-, steat- (Greek: fat; suet, tallow).steatite: 1. Fat, tallow.  2. Soap-stone resembling tallow or suet. steatitis: 1. Inflammation of adipose (fat) tissue.  2. An inflammation of fat tissue in certain animals such as swine, horses, cats, and chickens. It is one of the manifestations of vitamin E-selenium deficiency disease in these animals. "Yellow fat disease" is the more popular name for this disease. steatocele: A fatty mass formed within the scrotum.
 steatocystoma: A cyst arising from the sebaceous (fatty, greasy, or oily) gland apparatus.
 steatogenous: Producing fat; causing steatosis.
 steatohepatitis: Fatty liver in alcoholics.
 steatolysis, steatolytic: 1. The hydrolysis or emulsion of fat in the process of digestion.  2. Emulsification of fat prior to absorption. steatoma: 1. A lipoma.  2. A fatty mass retained within a sebaceous gland. steatomery: A deposit of fat on the outer aspect of the thighs and buttocks.
 steatonecrosis: Fat necrosis (death).
 steatopathy: Any disease of the sebaceous glands.
 steatopyga, steatopygia: 1. An excessive accumulation of fat on the buttocks.  2. Excessive fatness of the buttocks, usually seen more often in women. 3. In anthropology, a condition in certain populations in which individuals have broad masses of fat protruding from the buttocks and thighs with an additional slant to the sacrum; often noted among women of the Bushmen and Hottentot groups of Africa. steatopygous, steatopygic: A reference to excessively fat buttocks.
 steatorrhea: Passage of fat in large amounts in the feces, due to failure to digest and absorb it; occurs in pancreatic disease and the malabsorption syndromes.
 steatosis: 1. Fatty degeneration.  2. The accumulation of fat. |