0 past simple and past participle of wean
1 to cause a baby or young animal to stop feeding on its mother's milk and to start eating other food, especially solid food, instead:
Regurgitation of the left atrioventricular valve was evaluated only after the patient had been weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass and was hemodynamically stable.
In their work the visitors aimed to prevent newly weaned infants from being fed with a dangerous bottle when they were at their most vulnerable.
The disease mostly caused low mortality, occurring as sporadic episodes of sudden death of a few (<10) suckling or weaned piglets.
In all these patients, embolization resulted in prompt clinical improvement, enabling them to be weaned from the ventilator.
At follow-up (11-90 months, median 49), 7 patients have been weaned from therapy, but 3 (with atrial tachycardia) are still on beta-blockers or flecainide.
These values improved rapidly as dexamethasone was weaned.
His condition improved so that he was weaned from ventilation within next day.
All were weaned from the second support but only three survived (38%).