Dictionary Definition
fulminant adj : sudden and severe; "fulminant
pain"; "fulminant fever"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- exploding or detonating
- Occurring suddenly, rapidly, and with great severity or intensity
Related terms
German
Extensive Definition
Fulminant is any event or process which occurs
suddenly, quickly and is intense and severe to the point of
lethality, i.e, it has an explosive character. The word
comes from Latin fulmināre, to
strike with lightning.
It is most used in medicine, and there are several
diseases which have this adjective:
- Fulminant liver failure
- Fulminant colitis
- Fulminant pre-eclampsia
- Fulminant meningitis
- Fulminant hepatic venous thrombosis (Budd-Chiari syndrome)
Some viral hemorrhagic
fevers, such as Ebola, Lassa fever
and Lábrea
fever may kill in as short a time as 2 to 5 days. Diseases that
cause rapidly-developing lung edema,
such as some kinds of pneumonia, may kill in a few
hours. For example, it was said of the black death
(pneumonic bubonic
plague) that some of its victims would die in a matter of hours
after the initial symptoms appeared. Other pathologic conditions
that may be fulminating in character are
acute respiratory distress syndrome, asthma, acute anaphylaxis, septic shock
and
disseminated intravascular coagulation.
The most rapid deaths are those provoked by
massive body trauma,
such as in an explosion, smashing of the
whole body, etc., and, of course, by being hit by lightning.
Following this, localized acute trauma to the heart and to the brain (such as by
putting a bullet through
them), are also almost instantaneously lethal. Commotio
cordis is a sudden cardiac arrest caused by a blunt,
non-penetrating trauma to the precordium, which causes
ventricular
fibrillation of the heart, and it is often observed in young
athletes in some sports. Then, cardiac
arrest and stroke in
certain parts of the brain, such as in the brainstem (which controls
cardiovascular
and respiratory
system functions), and massive hemorrhage of the great
arteries (such as in
perforation of the walls by trauma or by sudden opening of an
aneurysm of the
aorta) may be very quick,
death ensuing in less than one minute.
Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is still a mysterious cause
of respiratory arrest in infants.
Some toxins, such as cyanide may also provoke
fulminant death. Abrupt hyperkalemia provoked by
intravenous injection of potassium
chloride leads to fulminant death by cardiac arrest.
Other meanings
- To fulminate is to hurl verbal denunciations, severe criticisms, or menacing comments at someone, or to kill by lightning. Thus, the Greek god Zeus is commonly represented holding a bunch of lightning bolts in one of his hands, which he used to fulminate mortals he wanted to kill.
- Fulminates are a class of mercury-based explosives used in detonator caps, due to the startling suddenness with which they explode.