English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From mid- +‎ shock.

Noun edit

midshock (uncountable)

  1. The midpoint or any intervening point during the process of shock
    • 1977, International Aerospace Abstracts, volume 17, numbers 7-12, page 1267:
      Observational data on the earth's bow shock system are classified and characterized. Foreshock components, midshock components, and aftershock components are discussed separately.
    • 2010, Lindsey M. Yik, Angel, My Angel - Page 129:
      She and Nogeku left out, leaving Ikumi still in midshock.
    • 2015, Kanu Chatterjee, Mark Anderson, Donald Heistad, Manual of Electrophysiology - Page 472:
      With biphasic defibrillators the electrode potential is reversed in midshock so the current reverses direction (Fig. 3).

Adverb edit

midshock (not comparable)

  1. Occurring during or at the midpoint of shock
    • 2011, Bruno Bissonnette, Pediatric Anesthesia:
      The current in biphasic waveforms flows in a bidirectional pattern between the paddles (i.e., the direction of current flow reverses midshock as opposed to the unidirectional pattern seen with monophasic waveforms), resulting in a lower defibrillation threshold.
    • 2013, Brian R. Walker, Nicki R Colledge, Stuart H. Ralston, Davidson's Principles and Practice of Medicine:
      [...] short-duration shock via two large electrodes or paddles coated with conducting jelly or a gel pad, positioned over the upper right sternal edge and the apex. Modern units deliver a biphasic shock, during which the shock polarity is reversed mid-shock.