| ICG test | Indo-Cyanine Green loading test; Indo-Cyanine Green »ö¼Ò ºÎÇϰ˻ç |
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| CL | capillary lumen; cardiolipin; cell line; centralis lateralis; chemiluminescence; chest and left arm ... |
| DLT | dihydroepiandrosterone loading test; double lung transplantation; double-lumen endotracheal tube |
| LD | labor and delivery; laboratory data; labyrinthine defect; lactate dehydrogenase; laser Doppler; lear... |
| TPL | third party liability; titanium proximal loading; tumor progression locus; tyrosine phenol-lyase |
| OLR | Organic loading rate |
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| IRL | inspiratory resistive loading |
| LD | loading dose |
| loading | Administration of a substance for the purpose of testing metabolic function. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| 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) |
| 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) |
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| 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 |
load: weight to be borne or conveyed load: a quantity that can be processed or transported at one time; "the system broke down under excessive loads" the ratio of the gross weight of an airplane to some factor determining its lift cargo: goods carried by a large vehicle the labor of putting a load of something on or in a vehicle or ship or container etc.; "the loading took 2 hours"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| loading |
Where material or substances of any kind are loaded on any vessel or aircraft for the purpose of being dumped into the sea.
Ãâó: www.deh.gov.au/coasts/pollution/dumping/guidelines...
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| loading |
It is the excess of the gross premiums over net premiums. It also refers to amount added to an installment agreement to cover selling and administrative overhead, interest, risk and so on or monies added to the prorated market price of underlying securities, representing fees and overhead.
Ãâó: www.indiainfoline.com/bisc/jmfl.html
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| loading |
The addition of inductance to a line in order to minimize amplitude distortion. Used commonly on public telephone lines to improve voice quality, it can make the lines impassable to high speed data, and baseband modems.
Ãâó: members.lycos.co.uk/ahsanshahzad/network_glossary....
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| loading |
means the quantity of a specific substance present per unit of surface area, such as the amount of lead in micrograms contained in the dust collected from a certain surface area divided by the surface area in square feet or square meters.
Ãâó: www.setonresourcecenter.com/cfr/40CFR/P745_004.HTM
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| loading | the labor of loading something |
|---|---|
| loading | goods carried by a large vehicle |
| loading | weight to be borne or conveyed |
| loading | a quantity that can be processed or transported at one time |
| loading | the ratio of the gross weight of an airplane to some factor determining its lift |
| loading | designed for use in loading e.g. cargo |
| loading | a stop where carriers can be loaded and unloaded |
| loading | a platform where trucks or trains can be loaded or unloaded |
| loading | a stop where carriers can be loaded and unloaded |
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