Ceroma vs. Seroma — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Ceroma and Seroma
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Compare with Definitions
Ceroma
Ceroma (Greek: κήρωμα) was a word which first appeared in the works of the two Roman poets Juvenal and Martial and has come to be defined as a mixture of oil, wax and earth; or, a cloth with which ancient wrestlers rubbed themselves, not only to make their limbs more sleek and less capable of gripping, but more pliable and fit for exercise. However, scholars point out that this definition is a misunderstanding of satire and its correct meaning is a "layer of mud or clay forming the floor of the wrestling ring in the times of the Empire".
Seroma
A seroma is a pocket of clear serous fluid (filtered blood plasma). They may sometimes develop in the body after surgery, particularly after breast surgery, abdominal surgery, and reconstructive surgery.
Ceroma
A mixture of oil and wax.
Seroma
(pathology) A pocket of clear serous fluid that sometimes develops in the body after surgery.
Ceroma
(historical) A cloth with which ancient wrestlers rubbed themselves, to make their limbs not only more sleek and less capable of gripping, but more pliable and fit for exercise.
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Ceroma
The unguent (a composition of oil and wax) with which wrestlers were anointed among the ancient Romans.
Ceroma
That part of the baths and gymnasia in which bathers and wrestlers anointed themselves.
Ceroma
The cere of birds.
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