Dictionary Definition
blush
Noun
1 a rosy color (especially in the cheeks) taken
as a sign of good health [syn: bloom, flush, rosiness]
2 sudden reddening of the face (as from
embarrassment or guilt or shame or modesty) [syn: flush]
Verb
1 turn red, as if in embarrassment or shame; "The
girl blushed when a young man whistled as she walked by" [syn:
crimson, flush, redden]
2 become rosy or reddish; "her cheeks blushed in
the cold winter air"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /blʌʃ/
- Rhymes with: -ʌʃ
Etymology 1
blyscan.Noun
Translations
an act of blushing
- Japanese: 赤面(せきめん, sekimen)
makeup
- Japanese: 頬紅(ほおべに, hōbeni)
color
- Japanese: 淡紅色(たんこうしょく, tankōshoku)
Verb
- To redden in the face from shame, excitement or embarrassment.
Translations
to redden in the face from shame, excitement or
embarrassment
- Afrikaans: bloos
- Dutch: blozen
- German: erröten
- Hebrew: להסמיק (le'hasmyq)
- Italian: arrossire
- Japanese: 赤面する(せきめんする, sekimensuru)
- Russian: краснеть (krasnét')
- Spanish: ruborizarse, enrojecerse, sonrojarse
Etymology 2
1486 Dame Julia Barnes. The Book of St Albans.Noun
- The collective noun for a group of boys.
- A blush of boys.
Usage notes
This is probably a fanciful expression and is not in common use.References
- Noun sense: 1986 Oxford Reference Dictionary: Appendix
Extensive Definition
expert-subject Biology To blush is
to display redness in one's
face; the term is usually
used when the redness is a result of an emotional response, which
could reflect embarrassment, shame, or modesty. Blushing can also be
associated with being in love. Blushing
is generally distinguished, despite a close physiological relation,
from flushing,
which is more intensive and extends over more of the body, and
seldom has a mental source.
If redness persists for abnormal amounts of time
after blushing, then it may be considered an early sign of rosacea.
A medical condition known as
Idiopathic craniofacial erythema exists, in which the sufferer
blushes strongly with little or no provocation.
Erythrophobia (literally "fear of redness")
refers to pathological blushing.
Physiological anatomy of the cutaneous blood circulation in humans
The function of cutaneous blood flow is nutrition of the skin and regulation of body heat. The higher the cutaneous blood flow, the more heat radiates. Restriction of cutaneous blood flow curtails the loss of body heat, which is important in a cold environment. The circulatory system of the skin contains three major types of blood vessels that enable it to fulfill these two important functions. The first type are arteries, capillaries, and veins that serve mainly nutrition needs. The second type is the subcutaneous venous plexus that plays a major role in the conduction of heat, and contains a major fraction of the cutaneous blood volume. The third type are arteriovenous anastomoses which can be found in areas of the body especially exposed to maximal cooling like the hands, feet, nose, lips and ears. These areas are called apical structures and are richly innervated. The anastomoses connect cutaneous arterioles and venules directly, playing an important role in the reduction of blood flow in a cold environment (Rowell. 1993; Guyton. 1981; Rowell. 1974).Regulation of blood flow in the skin
Blood flow in the cutaneous resistance vessels and the subcutaneous venous plexus are both neurally and locally regulated. However, there are some important differences. One is, that cutaneous resistance vessels exhibit a basal tone independently of innervation in reaction to passive stretch induced by blood pressure (Rowell. 1974). This intrinsic basal tone is normally absent in cutaneous capacitance vessels .Along with this basal tone, all resistance
vessels in the skin receive a tonic outflow from sympathetic
vasoconstrictor fibers. This tonic outflow is inversely associated
with body temperature. Vasodilation therefore occurs passively in
resistance vessels the (alpha-adrenergic) vasoconstrictor tone
decreases. Furthermore, an active neurogenic vasodilation must be
assumed in the human skin. However, it is not clear if this
vasodilation is mediated by specific vasodilator nerve fibers or if
neuro-humoral effects are involved that are associated with the
sympathetic cholinergic activation of sweat glands (Rowell. 1993;
Lembeck & Holzbauer. 1988). Although some experiments lead to
the conclusion that sympathetic outflow is involved in facial
vasodilation (Drummond & Lance. 1987), 40 years of research
have not clarified the mechanism behind active vasodilation.
Cutaneous veins also are richly innervated with
sympathetic vasoconstrictor fibers. The effect of activation of the
outflow of these fibers is reduced by local cooling. In addition,
cutaneous veins are temporarily reactive to various other stimuli.
Each of the following can cause remarkably intense venoconstriction
without obvious value to the organism: emotional stimuli (e.g.
startle, apprehension, discomfort), hyperventilation, deep
inspiration, and the Valsalva
maneuver (Rowell. 1974).
In resistance vessels, increased pressure mainly
increases flow per time unit. In the cutaneous venous plexus with
its generally slow flow rate, pressure mainly influences volume.
Because of its enormous volume variability and its large potential
capacity the venous plexus is believed to determine skin color
(Rowell. 1993; Mellander, Andersson, Afzelius, & Hellstrand.
1982; Rowell. 1974). Since pronounced blushing is also
characterized by a deep reddening of the skin, vasodilation of the
venous plexus is probably the physical mechanism underlying it. But
why is emotional blushing only visible or apparent in a specific
area called the blush region? That area is restricted to the face,
ears, neck, and in some rare cases the upper body. Two main
hypotheses to explain this regional restriction have been proposed.
One is that vasodilation takes place throughout the entire skin of
the body but is only visible in the blush region due to special
anatomical structure of that region. The second is that a specific
form of vasodilation takes place exclusively in the blush region.
It is likely, that a combination of these two factors accounts for
blushing.
Physiology of blushing
There is evidence that the blushing region is anatomically different in structure. The facial skin, for example, has more capillary loops per unit area and generally more vessels per unit volume than other skin areas. In addition, blood vessels of the cheek are wider in diameter, are nearer the surface, and visibility is less diminished by tissue fluid. These specific characteristics of the architecture of the facial vessels led Wilkin in an overview of possible causes of facial flushing to the following conclusion: "[...] increased capacity and greater visibility can account for the limited distribution of flushing" (Wilkin. 1988).Evidence for special vasodilation mechanisms was
reported by Mellander and his colleagues (Mellander, Andersson,
Afzelius, & Hellstrand. 1982). They studied buccal segments of
the human facial veins in vitro. Unlike
veins from other areas of the skin, facial veins responded with an
active myogenic
contraction to passive stretch and were therefore able to develop
an intrinsic basal tone. Additionally Mellander et al. showed that
the veins in this specific area were also supplied with
beta-adrenoceptors
in addition to the common alpha-adrenoceptors. These
beta-adrenoceptors could exert a dilator mechanism on the
above-described basal tone of the facial cutaneous venous
plexus. Mellander and his colleagues propose that this
mechanism is involved in emotional blushing. Drummond has partially
confirmed this effect by pharmacological blocking experiments
(Drummond. 1997). In a number of trials, he blocked both
alpha-adrenergic
receptors (with phentolamine) and beta-adrenergic receptors
(with propranolol introduced transcutaneously by iontophoresis).
Blushing was measured at the forehead using a dual channel laser
Doppler flowmeter. Subjects were undergraduate students divided
into frequent and infrequent blushers according to self-report.
Their mean age was 22.9 years, which is especially favorable for
assessing blushing, since young subjects are more likely to blush
and blush more intensively. The subjects underwent several
procedures, one of which was designed to produce blushing.
Alpha-adrenergic blockade with phentolamine had no influence on the
amount of blushing in frequent or in infrequent blushers,
indicating that release of sympathetic vasoconstrictor tone does
not substantially influence blushing. This result was expected
since vasoconstrictor tone in the facial area is known to be
generally low (van der Meer. 1985). Beta-adrenergic blockade with
propranolol on the other hand decreased blushing in both frequent
and infrequent blushers. However, despite complete blockade, blood
flow still increased substantially during the embarrassment and
blushing inducing procedure. Additional vasodilator mechanisms must
therefore be involved. So far, no specific mechanism has been
suggested.
See also
References
blush in German: Erröten
blush in Hebrew: הסמקה
blush in Norwegian: Rødming
blush in Dutch: blozen
blush in Swedish: Rodna
blush in Japanese: 赤面
blush in Polish: rumieniec
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
be guilty, blanch, bloom, blossom, blushing, change color,
color, color up, coloring, crimson, crimsoning, darken, fieriness, flame, flush, flushing, glow, grow red, healthy glow,
hectic, hectic flush,
incandescence,
look black, look guilty, mantle, mantling, pale, pink, pudency, pudicity, redden, reddening, redness, rose, rosiness, rouge, rubefacient, rubescence, rufescence, squirm with
self-consciousness, stammer, suffusion, turn color, turn
pale, turn red, warm color, warmth, warmth of color, whiten, whiteness