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What's the meaning of “spike” in the context of “adrenaline spike”?


What's the meaning of “dump” in the context of “adrenaline dump”?“What's up with him?” vs. “What's with him?”The meaning of “inframarginal” in the contextHow to implement the idioms “In the context of” and “within the context” correctlyExpression in context : asking and reactingWhat's the meaning of “seems out of” and “proportion” in my sentence?Meaning of “Two can play this game”What is the difference between absorbance and absorption in the context of wavelength?meaning of “reflect judgement”What's the meaning “be from money”?Need help understanding the meaning of a word and looking for other ways to express the idea













2















What's the meaning of “spike” in the context of “adrenaline spike”? how does it relate to the meaning of “dump” in the context of “adrenaline dump”? and which of the two is the correct version?










share|improve this question









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  • 2





    Welcome to ELL.SE. As a reminder, questions posed on Stack Exchange should demonstrate some initial research efforts; looking up spike in Macmillan Dictionary, for example, directly gives the meaning a sudden increase in something.

    – choster
    9 hours ago











  • Related question

    – laugh
    9 hours ago















2















What's the meaning of “spike” in the context of “adrenaline spike”? how does it relate to the meaning of “dump” in the context of “adrenaline dump”? and which of the two is the correct version?










share|improve this question









New contributor




user91380 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 2





    Welcome to ELL.SE. As a reminder, questions posed on Stack Exchange should demonstrate some initial research efforts; looking up spike in Macmillan Dictionary, for example, directly gives the meaning a sudden increase in something.

    – choster
    9 hours ago











  • Related question

    – laugh
    9 hours ago













2












2








2








What's the meaning of “spike” in the context of “adrenaline spike”? how does it relate to the meaning of “dump” in the context of “adrenaline dump”? and which of the two is the correct version?










share|improve this question









New contributor




user91380 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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What's the meaning of “spike” in the context of “adrenaline spike”? how does it relate to the meaning of “dump” in the context of “adrenaline dump”? and which of the two is the correct version?







expressions technical






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share|improve this question









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edited 10 hours ago









SamBC

11.7k1544




11.7k1544






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asked 11 hours ago









user91380user91380

111




111




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New contributor





user91380 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






user91380 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 2





    Welcome to ELL.SE. As a reminder, questions posed on Stack Exchange should demonstrate some initial research efforts; looking up spike in Macmillan Dictionary, for example, directly gives the meaning a sudden increase in something.

    – choster
    9 hours ago











  • Related question

    – laugh
    9 hours ago












  • 2





    Welcome to ELL.SE. As a reminder, questions posed on Stack Exchange should demonstrate some initial research efforts; looking up spike in Macmillan Dictionary, for example, directly gives the meaning a sudden increase in something.

    – choster
    9 hours ago











  • Related question

    – laugh
    9 hours ago







2




2





Welcome to ELL.SE. As a reminder, questions posed on Stack Exchange should demonstrate some initial research efforts; looking up spike in Macmillan Dictionary, for example, directly gives the meaning a sudden increase in something.

– choster
9 hours ago





Welcome to ELL.SE. As a reminder, questions posed on Stack Exchange should demonstrate some initial research efforts; looking up spike in Macmillan Dictionary, for example, directly gives the meaning a sudden increase in something.

– choster
9 hours ago













Related question

– laugh
9 hours ago





Related question

– laugh
9 hours ago










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















8














One refers to a spike in a measurement, or a sharp rise (often followed by a fall that may not be as sharp, but is clear). This is because such measurements would be drawn with a moving needle on paper, or otherwise graphed after the fact, and the spike looks like, well, a spike.



Thus, in an adrenaline spike the level of adrenaline in a person's system has risen sharply, and may not be sustained. We don't generally have ongoing measurement of things like that, but it means that if we did have that sort of ongoing measurement, the graph would show a visible spike.



An adrenaline dump is also a sharp rise in adrenaline, speaking figuratively as the adrenal glands "dumping" a load of adrenaline into your system all at once.



Both of those terms are 'correct', they are just looking at it from a different perspective.



If you're really being a purist about the terminology, a spike shouldn't be sustained, whereas a dump might be. In practice, they are used reasonably interchangeably, in my experience.






share|improve this answer

























  • The adrenaline dump causes a spike in it's blood level.

    – RonJohn
    25 mins ago


















6














The term comes from the appearance on a graph. There are four main spikes in the following picture.




spike



6 a : a pointed element in a graph or tracing



https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/spike




enter image description here






share|improve this answer






























    3














    Spike in this context means a sharp increase in the magnitude or concentration of something.



    Adrenaline spike would indicate an increase in adrenaline production






    share|improve this answer


















    • 1





      It might be worth noting that a spike in this context relates to the measurement of something by a measurement device and the output of that device on a graph. A spike indicates the device has detected whatever it is trying to detect.

      – Sarriesfan
      11 hours ago











    • @Sarriesfan That may be the origin, but we often use it to refer to the thing being measured as well. You can say that a runner experiences an adrenaline spike when he's nearing the finish line, even if he's not connected to a measuring device.

      – Barmar
      3 hours ago











    • @Barmar that why I suggested that it was worth noted the term spike comes from this original source.

      – Sarriesfan
      56 mins ago











    • @Sarriesfan I thought you were suggesting a correction to the answer. There are already several other answers that explain the relationship with measurements, including one that actually shows the graphics.

      – Barmar
      54 mins ago











    • @Barmar those answers were not there when I first made the comment 10hrs ago, SamBC answers was posted 9hrs ago.

      – Sarriesfan
      8 mins ago


















    1














    An adrenaline rush is when one experiences a sudden increase in the hormone adrenaline (also known as epinephrine). Apparently adrenaline dump has the same meaning, as I see from looking this up, though I’ve never heard dump used in this context. I guess spike (or surge) could be used as a synonym of one of those other words. However, as an American native speaker, the only one I’d say and that I think is most idiomatic is adrenaline rush. Also, if you’re asking what this means, it’s a biological process in response to fear and/or excitement. You might get this feeling while riding on a roller coaster or while skydiving, for example.






    share|improve this answer























    • What you describe is indeed an adrenaline rush (more info here), but the question is about the word spike, which is a sharp increase followed by a sharp decrease, as illustrated in this related WordReference answer. The terms adrenaline rush and adrenaline spike (and also adrenaline dump) may refer to the same phenomena, but the meaning is not the same - "rush" does not describe a fast decrease.

      – laugh
      9 hours ago











    • @laugh I agree with your definition of spike in general- a sudden increase followed by a sudden decrease. None of (rush, dump, or surge) imply a sharp decrease. But what about a spike in blood glucose? I believe this refers to a sharp increase that is sustained, whose long term effects are dangerous. In other words, it seems to me that certain words are used loosely in medical contexts. Therefore, as you say, an adrenaline rush and an adrenaline spike may refer to the same phenomenon.

      – Mixolydian
      8 hours ago


















    0














    In practice, a spike in something really refers to any abrupt increase, even if the decrease afterwards is not abrupt. The visual image definitely is a time-series plot where you would see a spike-like projection if there was a rapid increase and a rapid decrease afterwards. But people are more concerned about the consequences of any rapid increase, so the term came to be used more broadly.



    If you imagine a graph depicting the rate of change, rather than the level of the quantity, then an abrupt increase followed by a leveling off or a decline will always look like a spike. But I am not sure people thought it through in that much detail.






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      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes








      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      8














      One refers to a spike in a measurement, or a sharp rise (often followed by a fall that may not be as sharp, but is clear). This is because such measurements would be drawn with a moving needle on paper, or otherwise graphed after the fact, and the spike looks like, well, a spike.



      Thus, in an adrenaline spike the level of adrenaline in a person's system has risen sharply, and may not be sustained. We don't generally have ongoing measurement of things like that, but it means that if we did have that sort of ongoing measurement, the graph would show a visible spike.



      An adrenaline dump is also a sharp rise in adrenaline, speaking figuratively as the adrenal glands "dumping" a load of adrenaline into your system all at once.



      Both of those terms are 'correct', they are just looking at it from a different perspective.



      If you're really being a purist about the terminology, a spike shouldn't be sustained, whereas a dump might be. In practice, they are used reasonably interchangeably, in my experience.






      share|improve this answer

























      • The adrenaline dump causes a spike in it's blood level.

        – RonJohn
        25 mins ago















      8














      One refers to a spike in a measurement, or a sharp rise (often followed by a fall that may not be as sharp, but is clear). This is because such measurements would be drawn with a moving needle on paper, or otherwise graphed after the fact, and the spike looks like, well, a spike.



      Thus, in an adrenaline spike the level of adrenaline in a person's system has risen sharply, and may not be sustained. We don't generally have ongoing measurement of things like that, but it means that if we did have that sort of ongoing measurement, the graph would show a visible spike.



      An adrenaline dump is also a sharp rise in adrenaline, speaking figuratively as the adrenal glands "dumping" a load of adrenaline into your system all at once.



      Both of those terms are 'correct', they are just looking at it from a different perspective.



      If you're really being a purist about the terminology, a spike shouldn't be sustained, whereas a dump might be. In practice, they are used reasonably interchangeably, in my experience.






      share|improve this answer

























      • The adrenaline dump causes a spike in it's blood level.

        – RonJohn
        25 mins ago













      8












      8








      8







      One refers to a spike in a measurement, or a sharp rise (often followed by a fall that may not be as sharp, but is clear). This is because such measurements would be drawn with a moving needle on paper, or otherwise graphed after the fact, and the spike looks like, well, a spike.



      Thus, in an adrenaline spike the level of adrenaline in a person's system has risen sharply, and may not be sustained. We don't generally have ongoing measurement of things like that, but it means that if we did have that sort of ongoing measurement, the graph would show a visible spike.



      An adrenaline dump is also a sharp rise in adrenaline, speaking figuratively as the adrenal glands "dumping" a load of adrenaline into your system all at once.



      Both of those terms are 'correct', they are just looking at it from a different perspective.



      If you're really being a purist about the terminology, a spike shouldn't be sustained, whereas a dump might be. In practice, they are used reasonably interchangeably, in my experience.






      share|improve this answer















      One refers to a spike in a measurement, or a sharp rise (often followed by a fall that may not be as sharp, but is clear). This is because such measurements would be drawn with a moving needle on paper, or otherwise graphed after the fact, and the spike looks like, well, a spike.



      Thus, in an adrenaline spike the level of adrenaline in a person's system has risen sharply, and may not be sustained. We don't generally have ongoing measurement of things like that, but it means that if we did have that sort of ongoing measurement, the graph would show a visible spike.



      An adrenaline dump is also a sharp rise in adrenaline, speaking figuratively as the adrenal glands "dumping" a load of adrenaline into your system all at once.



      Both of those terms are 'correct', they are just looking at it from a different perspective.



      If you're really being a purist about the terminology, a spike shouldn't be sustained, whereas a dump might be. In practice, they are used reasonably interchangeably, in my experience.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 7 hours ago

























      answered 9 hours ago









      SamBCSamBC

      11.7k1544




      11.7k1544












      • The adrenaline dump causes a spike in it's blood level.

        – RonJohn
        25 mins ago

















      • The adrenaline dump causes a spike in it's blood level.

        – RonJohn
        25 mins ago
















      The adrenaline dump causes a spike in it's blood level.

      – RonJohn
      25 mins ago





      The adrenaline dump causes a spike in it's blood level.

      – RonJohn
      25 mins ago













      6














      The term comes from the appearance on a graph. There are four main spikes in the following picture.




      spike



      6 a : a pointed element in a graph or tracing



      https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/spike




      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer



























        6














        The term comes from the appearance on a graph. There are four main spikes in the following picture.




        spike



        6 a : a pointed element in a graph or tracing



        https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/spike




        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer

























          6












          6








          6







          The term comes from the appearance on a graph. There are four main spikes in the following picture.




          spike



          6 a : a pointed element in a graph or tracing



          https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/spike




          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer













          The term comes from the appearance on a graph. There are four main spikes in the following picture.




          spike



          6 a : a pointed element in a graph or tracing



          https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/spike




          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 5 hours ago









          chasly from UKchasly from UK

          2,247312




          2,247312





















              3














              Spike in this context means a sharp increase in the magnitude or concentration of something.



              Adrenaline spike would indicate an increase in adrenaline production






              share|improve this answer


















              • 1





                It might be worth noting that a spike in this context relates to the measurement of something by a measurement device and the output of that device on a graph. A spike indicates the device has detected whatever it is trying to detect.

                – Sarriesfan
                11 hours ago











              • @Sarriesfan That may be the origin, but we often use it to refer to the thing being measured as well. You can say that a runner experiences an adrenaline spike when he's nearing the finish line, even if he's not connected to a measuring device.

                – Barmar
                3 hours ago











              • @Barmar that why I suggested that it was worth noted the term spike comes from this original source.

                – Sarriesfan
                56 mins ago











              • @Sarriesfan I thought you were suggesting a correction to the answer. There are already several other answers that explain the relationship with measurements, including one that actually shows the graphics.

                – Barmar
                54 mins ago











              • @Barmar those answers were not there when I first made the comment 10hrs ago, SamBC answers was posted 9hrs ago.

                – Sarriesfan
                8 mins ago















              3














              Spike in this context means a sharp increase in the magnitude or concentration of something.



              Adrenaline spike would indicate an increase in adrenaline production






              share|improve this answer


















              • 1





                It might be worth noting that a spike in this context relates to the measurement of something by a measurement device and the output of that device on a graph. A spike indicates the device has detected whatever it is trying to detect.

                – Sarriesfan
                11 hours ago











              • @Sarriesfan That may be the origin, but we often use it to refer to the thing being measured as well. You can say that a runner experiences an adrenaline spike when he's nearing the finish line, even if he's not connected to a measuring device.

                – Barmar
                3 hours ago











              • @Barmar that why I suggested that it was worth noted the term spike comes from this original source.

                – Sarriesfan
                56 mins ago











              • @Sarriesfan I thought you were suggesting a correction to the answer. There are already several other answers that explain the relationship with measurements, including one that actually shows the graphics.

                – Barmar
                54 mins ago











              • @Barmar those answers were not there when I first made the comment 10hrs ago, SamBC answers was posted 9hrs ago.

                – Sarriesfan
                8 mins ago













              3












              3








              3







              Spike in this context means a sharp increase in the magnitude or concentration of something.



              Adrenaline spike would indicate an increase in adrenaline production






              share|improve this answer













              Spike in this context means a sharp increase in the magnitude or concentration of something.



              Adrenaline spike would indicate an increase in adrenaline production







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 11 hours ago









              eefareefar

              4729




              4729







              • 1





                It might be worth noting that a spike in this context relates to the measurement of something by a measurement device and the output of that device on a graph. A spike indicates the device has detected whatever it is trying to detect.

                – Sarriesfan
                11 hours ago











              • @Sarriesfan That may be the origin, but we often use it to refer to the thing being measured as well. You can say that a runner experiences an adrenaline spike when he's nearing the finish line, even if he's not connected to a measuring device.

                – Barmar
                3 hours ago











              • @Barmar that why I suggested that it was worth noted the term spike comes from this original source.

                – Sarriesfan
                56 mins ago











              • @Sarriesfan I thought you were suggesting a correction to the answer. There are already several other answers that explain the relationship with measurements, including one that actually shows the graphics.

                – Barmar
                54 mins ago











              • @Barmar those answers were not there when I first made the comment 10hrs ago, SamBC answers was posted 9hrs ago.

                – Sarriesfan
                8 mins ago












              • 1





                It might be worth noting that a spike in this context relates to the measurement of something by a measurement device and the output of that device on a graph. A spike indicates the device has detected whatever it is trying to detect.

                – Sarriesfan
                11 hours ago











              • @Sarriesfan That may be the origin, but we often use it to refer to the thing being measured as well. You can say that a runner experiences an adrenaline spike when he's nearing the finish line, even if he's not connected to a measuring device.

                – Barmar
                3 hours ago











              • @Barmar that why I suggested that it was worth noted the term spike comes from this original source.

                – Sarriesfan
                56 mins ago











              • @Sarriesfan I thought you were suggesting a correction to the answer. There are already several other answers that explain the relationship with measurements, including one that actually shows the graphics.

                – Barmar
                54 mins ago











              • @Barmar those answers were not there when I first made the comment 10hrs ago, SamBC answers was posted 9hrs ago.

                – Sarriesfan
                8 mins ago







              1




              1





              It might be worth noting that a spike in this context relates to the measurement of something by a measurement device and the output of that device on a graph. A spike indicates the device has detected whatever it is trying to detect.

              – Sarriesfan
              11 hours ago





              It might be worth noting that a spike in this context relates to the measurement of something by a measurement device and the output of that device on a graph. A spike indicates the device has detected whatever it is trying to detect.

              – Sarriesfan
              11 hours ago













              @Sarriesfan That may be the origin, but we often use it to refer to the thing being measured as well. You can say that a runner experiences an adrenaline spike when he's nearing the finish line, even if he's not connected to a measuring device.

              – Barmar
              3 hours ago





              @Sarriesfan That may be the origin, but we often use it to refer to the thing being measured as well. You can say that a runner experiences an adrenaline spike when he's nearing the finish line, even if he's not connected to a measuring device.

              – Barmar
              3 hours ago













              @Barmar that why I suggested that it was worth noted the term spike comes from this original source.

              – Sarriesfan
              56 mins ago





              @Barmar that why I suggested that it was worth noted the term spike comes from this original source.

              – Sarriesfan
              56 mins ago













              @Sarriesfan I thought you were suggesting a correction to the answer. There are already several other answers that explain the relationship with measurements, including one that actually shows the graphics.

              – Barmar
              54 mins ago





              @Sarriesfan I thought you were suggesting a correction to the answer. There are already several other answers that explain the relationship with measurements, including one that actually shows the graphics.

              – Barmar
              54 mins ago













              @Barmar those answers were not there when I first made the comment 10hrs ago, SamBC answers was posted 9hrs ago.

              – Sarriesfan
              8 mins ago





              @Barmar those answers were not there when I first made the comment 10hrs ago, SamBC answers was posted 9hrs ago.

              – Sarriesfan
              8 mins ago











              1














              An adrenaline rush is when one experiences a sudden increase in the hormone adrenaline (also known as epinephrine). Apparently adrenaline dump has the same meaning, as I see from looking this up, though I’ve never heard dump used in this context. I guess spike (or surge) could be used as a synonym of one of those other words. However, as an American native speaker, the only one I’d say and that I think is most idiomatic is adrenaline rush. Also, if you’re asking what this means, it’s a biological process in response to fear and/or excitement. You might get this feeling while riding on a roller coaster or while skydiving, for example.






              share|improve this answer























              • What you describe is indeed an adrenaline rush (more info here), but the question is about the word spike, which is a sharp increase followed by a sharp decrease, as illustrated in this related WordReference answer. The terms adrenaline rush and adrenaline spike (and also adrenaline dump) may refer to the same phenomena, but the meaning is not the same - "rush" does not describe a fast decrease.

                – laugh
                9 hours ago











              • @laugh I agree with your definition of spike in general- a sudden increase followed by a sudden decrease. None of (rush, dump, or surge) imply a sharp decrease. But what about a spike in blood glucose? I believe this refers to a sharp increase that is sustained, whose long term effects are dangerous. In other words, it seems to me that certain words are used loosely in medical contexts. Therefore, as you say, an adrenaline rush and an adrenaline spike may refer to the same phenomenon.

                – Mixolydian
                8 hours ago















              1














              An adrenaline rush is when one experiences a sudden increase in the hormone adrenaline (also known as epinephrine). Apparently adrenaline dump has the same meaning, as I see from looking this up, though I’ve never heard dump used in this context. I guess spike (or surge) could be used as a synonym of one of those other words. However, as an American native speaker, the only one I’d say and that I think is most idiomatic is adrenaline rush. Also, if you’re asking what this means, it’s a biological process in response to fear and/or excitement. You might get this feeling while riding on a roller coaster or while skydiving, for example.






              share|improve this answer























              • What you describe is indeed an adrenaline rush (more info here), but the question is about the word spike, which is a sharp increase followed by a sharp decrease, as illustrated in this related WordReference answer. The terms adrenaline rush and adrenaline spike (and also adrenaline dump) may refer to the same phenomena, but the meaning is not the same - "rush" does not describe a fast decrease.

                – laugh
                9 hours ago











              • @laugh I agree with your definition of spike in general- a sudden increase followed by a sudden decrease. None of (rush, dump, or surge) imply a sharp decrease. But what about a spike in blood glucose? I believe this refers to a sharp increase that is sustained, whose long term effects are dangerous. In other words, it seems to me that certain words are used loosely in medical contexts. Therefore, as you say, an adrenaline rush and an adrenaline spike may refer to the same phenomenon.

                – Mixolydian
                8 hours ago













              1












              1








              1







              An adrenaline rush is when one experiences a sudden increase in the hormone adrenaline (also known as epinephrine). Apparently adrenaline dump has the same meaning, as I see from looking this up, though I’ve never heard dump used in this context. I guess spike (or surge) could be used as a synonym of one of those other words. However, as an American native speaker, the only one I’d say and that I think is most idiomatic is adrenaline rush. Also, if you’re asking what this means, it’s a biological process in response to fear and/or excitement. You might get this feeling while riding on a roller coaster or while skydiving, for example.






              share|improve this answer













              An adrenaline rush is when one experiences a sudden increase in the hormone adrenaline (also known as epinephrine). Apparently adrenaline dump has the same meaning, as I see from looking this up, though I’ve never heard dump used in this context. I guess spike (or surge) could be used as a synonym of one of those other words. However, as an American native speaker, the only one I’d say and that I think is most idiomatic is adrenaline rush. Also, if you’re asking what this means, it’s a biological process in response to fear and/or excitement. You might get this feeling while riding on a roller coaster or while skydiving, for example.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 10 hours ago









              MixolydianMixolydian

              2,938511




              2,938511












              • What you describe is indeed an adrenaline rush (more info here), but the question is about the word spike, which is a sharp increase followed by a sharp decrease, as illustrated in this related WordReference answer. The terms adrenaline rush and adrenaline spike (and also adrenaline dump) may refer to the same phenomena, but the meaning is not the same - "rush" does not describe a fast decrease.

                – laugh
                9 hours ago











              • @laugh I agree with your definition of spike in general- a sudden increase followed by a sudden decrease. None of (rush, dump, or surge) imply a sharp decrease. But what about a spike in blood glucose? I believe this refers to a sharp increase that is sustained, whose long term effects are dangerous. In other words, it seems to me that certain words are used loosely in medical contexts. Therefore, as you say, an adrenaline rush and an adrenaline spike may refer to the same phenomenon.

                – Mixolydian
                8 hours ago

















              • What you describe is indeed an adrenaline rush (more info here), but the question is about the word spike, which is a sharp increase followed by a sharp decrease, as illustrated in this related WordReference answer. The terms adrenaline rush and adrenaline spike (and also adrenaline dump) may refer to the same phenomena, but the meaning is not the same - "rush" does not describe a fast decrease.

                – laugh
                9 hours ago











              • @laugh I agree with your definition of spike in general- a sudden increase followed by a sudden decrease. None of (rush, dump, or surge) imply a sharp decrease. But what about a spike in blood glucose? I believe this refers to a sharp increase that is sustained, whose long term effects are dangerous. In other words, it seems to me that certain words are used loosely in medical contexts. Therefore, as you say, an adrenaline rush and an adrenaline spike may refer to the same phenomenon.

                – Mixolydian
                8 hours ago
















              What you describe is indeed an adrenaline rush (more info here), but the question is about the word spike, which is a sharp increase followed by a sharp decrease, as illustrated in this related WordReference answer. The terms adrenaline rush and adrenaline spike (and also adrenaline dump) may refer to the same phenomena, but the meaning is not the same - "rush" does not describe a fast decrease.

              – laugh
              9 hours ago





              What you describe is indeed an adrenaline rush (more info here), but the question is about the word spike, which is a sharp increase followed by a sharp decrease, as illustrated in this related WordReference answer. The terms adrenaline rush and adrenaline spike (and also adrenaline dump) may refer to the same phenomena, but the meaning is not the same - "rush" does not describe a fast decrease.

              – laugh
              9 hours ago













              @laugh I agree with your definition of spike in general- a sudden increase followed by a sudden decrease. None of (rush, dump, or surge) imply a sharp decrease. But what about a spike in blood glucose? I believe this refers to a sharp increase that is sustained, whose long term effects are dangerous. In other words, it seems to me that certain words are used loosely in medical contexts. Therefore, as you say, an adrenaline rush and an adrenaline spike may refer to the same phenomenon.

              – Mixolydian
              8 hours ago





              @laugh I agree with your definition of spike in general- a sudden increase followed by a sudden decrease. None of (rush, dump, or surge) imply a sharp decrease. But what about a spike in blood glucose? I believe this refers to a sharp increase that is sustained, whose long term effects are dangerous. In other words, it seems to me that certain words are used loosely in medical contexts. Therefore, as you say, an adrenaline rush and an adrenaline spike may refer to the same phenomenon.

              – Mixolydian
              8 hours ago











              0














              In practice, a spike in something really refers to any abrupt increase, even if the decrease afterwards is not abrupt. The visual image definitely is a time-series plot where you would see a spike-like projection if there was a rapid increase and a rapid decrease afterwards. But people are more concerned about the consequences of any rapid increase, so the term came to be used more broadly.



              If you imagine a graph depicting the rate of change, rather than the level of the quantity, then an abrupt increase followed by a leveling off or a decline will always look like a spike. But I am not sure people thought it through in that much detail.






              share|improve this answer



























                0














                In practice, a spike in something really refers to any abrupt increase, even if the decrease afterwards is not abrupt. The visual image definitely is a time-series plot where you would see a spike-like projection if there was a rapid increase and a rapid decrease afterwards. But people are more concerned about the consequences of any rapid increase, so the term came to be used more broadly.



                If you imagine a graph depicting the rate of change, rather than the level of the quantity, then an abrupt increase followed by a leveling off or a decline will always look like a spike. But I am not sure people thought it through in that much detail.






                share|improve this answer

























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  In practice, a spike in something really refers to any abrupt increase, even if the decrease afterwards is not abrupt. The visual image definitely is a time-series plot where you would see a spike-like projection if there was a rapid increase and a rapid decrease afterwards. But people are more concerned about the consequences of any rapid increase, so the term came to be used more broadly.



                  If you imagine a graph depicting the rate of change, rather than the level of the quantity, then an abrupt increase followed by a leveling off or a decline will always look like a spike. But I am not sure people thought it through in that much detail.






                  share|improve this answer













                  In practice, a spike in something really refers to any abrupt increase, even if the decrease afterwards is not abrupt. The visual image definitely is a time-series plot where you would see a spike-like projection if there was a rapid increase and a rapid decrease afterwards. But people are more concerned about the consequences of any rapid increase, so the term came to be used more broadly.



                  If you imagine a graph depicting the rate of change, rather than the level of the quantity, then an abrupt increase followed by a leveling off or a decline will always look like a spike. But I am not sure people thought it through in that much detail.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 6 hours ago









                  Mark FoskeyMark Foskey

                  1,11135




                  1,11135




















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