Titrate in a sentence as a verb

When it's prescribed, it takes awhile to titrate for effect.

You need to titrate the pressure to each patient/setup, and often inhale vs exhale.

So there is a temptation on their part to give some dose, not titrate to effect, and then just “get on with it” to save time.

They choose to titrate their customer service staff such that none of their employees are ever idle while on the clock.

It takes several weeks or even a couple of months to titrate a drug to a dosage high enough to prove it doesn't work.

They try to titrate knowledge in a steady, regulated, and pedagogic way.

Maybe meth users titrate until they feel good, which means escalating dosages quickly due to tolerance.

The U of U-tube is a possibility for watched lab work, but the ability for someone to titrate, or weigh etc etc, is not well taught at the U of U-tube.

Or better yet titrate the addictive amphetamine down with adrafinil or modafinil.

You could argue that even protein binding sites that have no biological outcome titrate away transcription factors from other "active" regions.

Colonoscopies inhabit a grey area where you can do them with benzodiazepine sedation but they are better with propofol, the only issue being with propofol is you have to be on the ball to titrate the infusion as things progress.

All American public health officials I've heard have been pretty clear about their goals: we're trying to titrate our social distancing, finding the least severe restrictions necessary to keep cases from spiraling out of control and then staying there until a vaccine.

A friend of mine started taking Effexor, but then we found accounts of how it's impossible to stop taking Effexor: blood-curdling stories about pharmacists who'd dissassemble the pills and reassemble them to titrate the dose down, and who'd still be unable to get the dose to zero.

Titrate definitions

verb

measure by (the volume or concentration of solutions) by titration