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This study suggests that the brain’s recollection of cold can act as a switch, turning on the metabolic furnace of brown fat even when the surrounding air is mild.—William A. Haseltine, Forbes.com, 20 Aug. 2025 Eating most of your calories in the morning or early afternoon may also increase energy levels, promote healthy digestion, enhance sleep, and improve metabolic health.—Cristina Mutchler, Verywell Health, 14 Aug. 2025 But because retinal cells need so much metabolic support, researchers at the University of Michigan decided to see if there were other compounds involved in their health.—New Atlas, 9 Aug. 2025 This level of analysis allows researchers to understand people by metabolic subtype and tailor treatment to match.—Jia Jung, San Diego Union-Tribune, 29 July 2025 See All Example Sentences for metabolic
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from German metabolisch, borrowed from Greek metabolikós "changeable, subject to change," from metabolḗ "change, transition" (from metabol-, stem in noun derivation of metabállein "to put into a different position, turn about, change, alter," from meta-meta- + bállein "to reach by throwing, let fly, strike, put, place") + -ikos-ic entry 1 — more at devil entry 1
Note:
The term was introduced by the German physiologist Theodor Schwann (1810-82) in Die Mikroskopischen Untersuchungen über die Uebereinstimmung in der Struktur und dem Wachsthum der Thiere und Pflanzen (Berlin, 1839), p. 229: "Die Frage über die Grundkraft der Organismen reducirt sich also auf die Frage über die Grundkräfte der einzelnen Zellen. Wir müssen nun die allgemeinen Erscheinungen der Zellenbildung betrachten, um zu finden, welche Kräfte man zur Erklärung derselben in den Zellen voraussetzen muss. Diese Erscheinungen lassen sich unter zwei natürlichen Gruppen bringen: Erstens Erscheinungen, die sich auf die Zusammenfügung der Moleküle zu einer Zelle beziehn; man kann sie die plastischen Erscheinungen der Zellen nennen; zweitens Erscheinungen, die sich auf chemische Veränderungen, sowohl der Bestandtheile der Zelle selbst, als des umgebenden Cytoblastems beziehn; diese kann man metabolische Erscheinungen nennen (τὸ μεταβολικὸν [sic] was Umwandlung hervorzubringen oder zu erleiden geneigt ist)." — "The question, then, as to the fundamental powers of organized bodies resolves itself into that of the fundamental powers of the individual cells. We must now consider the general phenomena attending the formation of cells, in order to discover what powers may be presumed to exist in the cells to explain them. These phenomena may be arranged in two natural groups: first, those which relate to the combination of the molecules to form a cell, and which may be denominated the plastic phenomena of the cells; secondly, those which result from chemical changes either in the component particles of the cell itself, or in the surrounding cytoblastema [fluid held to be the formative substance from which cells arise], and which may be called metabolic phenomena (tò metabolikòn, implying that which is liable to occasion or to suffer change)." (Microscopical Researches into the Accordance in the Structure and Growth of Animals and Plants, translator Henry Smith, London, 1847).
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