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rapport 1. A feeling of relationship, especially when characterised by emotional affinity.
2. A conscious feeling of harmonious accord, trust, empathy, and mutual responsiveness between two or more persons (e.g., physician and patient) that fosters the therapeutic process.
Origin: Fr.
(05 Mar 2000)
acid loading test <nephrology> This is a test used in the diagnosis of renal tubular acidosis. The patient takes ammonium chloride capsules for 3 days to acidify the blood (lower blood pH). A sample of the urine and the blood is then collected and the results are interpreted.
(27 Sep 1997)
carbohydrate loading A procedure popular with long-distance runners and other athletes of filling muscles with a large glycogen pool prior to an athletic event; often, the athlete consumes very few carbohydrates for three days followed by a largely carbohydrate diet for the last three days before the event.
(05 Mar 2000)
volume loading rate The rate of raw materials put into a fermenter or aerobic digester, expressed in terms of material weight per unit volume per unit time.
(09 Oct 1997)
wall loading <radiobiology> Fusion reactor thermal output power divided by the area of the wall facing the plasma. (Neutron wall loading is 4/5 of the total for D-T fusion.)
(09 Oct 1997)
salt loading The administration of 2 g of sodium chloride (with a regular diet) 3 times a day for 4 days; a diagnostic test in primary aldosteronism, in which the salt loading produces the typical plasma electrolyte pattern.
(05 Mar 2000)
soda loading A procedure adopted by a number of athletes of ingesting sodium bicarbonate in an attempt to buffer the production of protons during exercise.
(05 Mar 2000)
loading Administration of a substance for the purpose of testing metabolic function.
(05 Mar 2000)
loading dose <pharmacology> A quantity higher than the average or maintenance dose, used at the initiation of therapy to rapidly establish a desired level of the drug
(18 Nov 1997)
abdominal ring The opening in the transversalis fascia through which the ductus deferens (or round ligament in the female) and gonadal vessels enter the inguinal canal. Located midway between anterior superior iliac spine and pubic tubercle, it is bounded medially by the lateral umbilical ligament (inferior epigastric vessels) and inferiorly by the inguinal ligament. Indirect inguinal hernias exit the abdominal cavity via the deep inguinal ring
Synonym: annulus inguinalis profundus, abdominal ring, annulus abdominalis, internal inguinal ring.
(05 Mar 2000)
amnion ring The ring formed by the attachment of the amnion to the umbilical cord at its point of emergence from the umbilicus.
(05 Mar 2000)
annuloplasty ring The dilated annulus is sutured, often to a prosthetic ring, thereby reducing it to its normal systolic size.
(05 Mar 2000)
anterior limiting ring The periphery of the cornea marking the termination of Descemet's membrane and the anterior border of the trabecular meshwork; an important landmark in gonioscopy.
Synonym: Schwalbe's ring.
(05 Mar 2000)
Balbani ring An extremely large puff at a band of a polytene chromosome.
(05 Mar 2000)
Balbiani ring <cell biology, genetics> The largest puffs seen on the polytene chromosomes of Diptera are called Balbiani rings after the nineteenth century microscopist who first described polytene chromosomes.
(18 Nov 1997)
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