Infusion in a sentence as a noun

Why would they need such a huge infusion other than if they have run out of cash?

The profit from infusion clinics would be used to offset the loss from the purchase of the drug.

If you don't need a large infusion of capital, this is the whole point of an IPO. Who else is going to sell Facebook stock if not "insiders"?

Providers everywhere were starting their own infusion clinics and making a ton of money on it.

'He wishes he had never gone to the health center for help that night; as it turned out, the pills he took just made him sleepy and all he needed was an electrolyte infusion.

Or is this just their way of getting a much needed cash infusion after all other avenues have failed, so they can fund their ailing project and then worry about this one later?All this on top of the fact that their most recently released game, The Cave, was mediocre at best [2].

The ECT clinic was rated suitable by patients and offered appropriate levels of monitoring.\nConclusion: This small, open label naturalistic study shows that up to six low dose ketamine infusions can safely be given within an existing NHS clinical structure to patients who continue their antidepressants.

Infusion definitions

noun

a solution obtained by steeping or soaking a substance (usually in water)

See also: extract

noun

the process of extracting certain active properties (as a drug from a plant) by steeping or soaking (usually in water)

noun

(medicine) the passive introduction of a substance (a fluid or drug or electrolyte) into a vein or between tissues (as by gravitational force)

noun

the act of infusing or introducing a certain modifying element or quality; "the team's continued success is attributable to a steady infusion of new talent"