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  • bouillon filter
    °í±âÁó¿©°ú±â, °í±âÁó°Å¸£°³
  • compensating filter
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  • cutoff filter
    Â÷´Ü¿©°ú±â, Â÷´Ü°Å¸£°³
  • diatomaceous earth filter
    ±ÔÁ¶Åä¿©°ú±â, ±ÔÁ¶Åä°Å¸£°³
  • filter
    ¿©°ú±â, °Å¸£°³, ÇÊÅÍ
  • flattening filter
    ÆíÆòÈ­¿©°ú±â, ÆíÆò°Å¸£°³
  • high frequency filter
    °íÁÖÆÄ¿©°ú±â, °íÁ֯İŏ£°³
  • high-pass filter
    °íÁÖÆÄÅë°ú¿©°ú±â, °íÁÖÆÄÅë°ú°Å¸£°³
  • interference filter
    °£¼·¿©°ú±â, °£¼·°Å¸£°³, °£¼·ÇÊÅÍ
  • low-pass filter
    ÀúÁÖÆÄÅë°ú¿©°ú±â, ÀúÁÖÆÄÅë°ú°Å¸£°³
  • molecular filter
    ºÐÀÚ¿©°ú±â, ºÐÀڰŸ£°³
  • membrane filter
    ¸·¿©°ú±â, ¸·°Å¸£°³, ¸·ÇÊÅÍ
  • protective mask filter
    ¹æÈ£¸¶½ºÅ©¿©°ú±â
  • sterile filter
    ¼¼±Õ¿©°ú±â, ¼¼±Õ°Å¸£°³
  • suction filter
    ÈíÀο©°ú±â, ÈíÀΰŸ£°³
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  • compensating filter
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  • cutoff filter
    Â÷´Ü°Å¸£°³, Â÷´ÜÇÊÅÍ
  • diatomaceous earth filter
    ±ÔÁ¶Åä°Å¸£°³
  • filter
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  • flattening filter
    ÆíÆò°Å¸£°³, ÆíÆòÈ­¿©°ú±â
  • high frequency filter
    °íÁ֯İŏ£°³, °íÁÖÆÄ¿©°ú
  • high-pass filter
    °íÁÖÆÄÅë°ú°Å¸£°³, °íÁÖÆÄÅë°úÇÊÅÍ
  • interference filter
    °£¼·°Å¸£°³, °£¼·ÇÊÅÍ
  • low-pass filter
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  • membrane filter
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  • molecular filter
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  • protective mask filter
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  • sintered glass filter
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  • slow sand filter
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  • sterile filter
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  • rupture of bag
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  • rupture of bag
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  • saddle bag area
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  • single bag
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  • triple bag
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  • arterial filter
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  • bacterial filter
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  • bacteriological filter
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  • bacteriological filter
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  • barrier filter
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  • biological filter
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  • bouillon filter
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  • candle filter
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  • compensating filter
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  • cut-off filter
    Â÷´Ü ÇÊÅÍ
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OA/BVM oral airway/bag-valve-mask
PUBS percutaneous umbilical blood sampling; purple urine bag syndrome
RBOW rupture of the bag of waters
DEFT direct epifluorescent filter technique
ESF electron scatter function; electrosurgical filter; erythropoietic stimulating factor
KMLE ÀÚµ¿ÃßÃâ ÀÇÇоà¾î »çÀü À¯»ç °Ë»ö °á°ú : 1 ÆäÀÌÁö: 2
MF membrane filter
CancerWEB ¿µ¿µ ÀÇÇлçÀü À¯»ç °Ë»ö °á°ú : 15 ÆäÀÌÁö: 2
farding-bag The upper stomach of a cow, or other ruminant animal; the rumen.
Origin: Of uncertain origin; cf. Fardel.
Source: Websters Dictionary
(01 Mar 1998)
absolute filter <apparatus> A fine-pored, steam-sterilisable filter that is used to trap airborne microorganisms. The filter's pores are about 2 micrometres in diameter, smaller than the particles it is designed to remove.
(06 May 1997)
bandpass filter A device that allows a limited range of frequencies to pass.
(05 Mar 2000)
Berkefeld filter A bacterial filter used in 1891, made of earth known as Kieselguhr taken from the name of the mine in Hanover, Germany, from which the earth was found. Ground water at this mine had a clear blue colour suggesting the use of the earth as a filter.
Origin: Berkefield, name of owner of the mine from which the material to make the filter was taken
(05 Mar 2000)
bird's nest filter A wire mesh vena cava filter.
(05 Mar 2000)
bird's nest ivc filter <radiology> Introduced 1982; Cook Inc., Bloomington, IN advantages, low profile: 14.5 Fr introducer sheath, low recurrent PE rates (1.1 - 2.7% by clinical history), low IVC thrombosis rates (2.9 - 5.0% by clinical history), placement in large diameter IVCs (not greater than40mm), free-form configuration does not require centreing in IVC disadvantages: stainless steel: ferromagnetic = magnetic susceptibility artifact, more operator dependent, difficult to place in short IVCs (need about 7cm for proper placement), prolapse of filter wires (? clinical significance) see also: indications
(12 Dec 1998)
vena cava filter A filter used for interruption of IVC to prevent pulmonary embolism; e.g., Greenfield filter.
Synonym: venocaval filter.
(05 Mar 2000)
vena-tech ivc filter <radiology> Introduced as LGM (L.G. Medical, France), 1985; FDA aprroval 1991: Vena-Tech, Evanston, IL, 6-leg conical design with 6 stabilizing side bars, biocompatible metal known as Phynox (cobalt,chromium,iron,nickel,moly) Efficacy, recurrent PE: 2-6%, IVC occlusion: 8-24%, migration: 0-12% Advantages, ease of placement, excellent clot trapping efficiency, low profile, lacks ferromagnetic activity: minimal MRI artifacts Disadvantages, incomplete opening (6-19%): decreases clot-trapping efficiency, increased incidence from IJ approach, decreased with rapid deployment, increased IVC thrombosis rates: 8% initial reports; 22-24% on subsequent reports by ultrasound/MRI: 2-19% clinically symptomatic
(12 Dec 1998)
venocaval filter A filter used for interruption of IVC to prevent pulmonary embolism; e.g., Greenfield filter.
Synonym: venocaval filter.
(05 Mar 2000)
Rheinberg filter <equipment> A colour-filter disk to be placed, as a dark field stop would be placed, below the substage condenser.
The central circular area, that is filled with one of the two or three colour filters, should safely subtend the objective aperture. The annular quadrants around this are normally contrasting in colour. This is/are the colour shown by the organisms or other specimen detail against the coloured field. The effect is one kind of optical staining.
(05 Aug 1998)
Greenfield filter A multistrutted spring-styled filter usually placed in the inferior vena cava to prevent venous emboli from reaching the pulmonary circulation from the lower extremity.
(05 Mar 2000)
micropore filter A filter made of a meshwork of cellulose acetate or nitrate and with defined pore size. They can be autoclaved and the smaller pore sizes (0.22m,0.45m) are used for sterilising heat labile materials by filtering out micro organisms. Larger pore size filters are used in setting up Boyden chambers. They are about 150m thick and should be distinguished from Nucleopore filters. Millipore is a trade name for micropore filters.
(18 Nov 1997)
Millipore filter <cell culture, equipment> Trade name for a well known brand of micropore filters.
(12 Jan 1998)
hemming filter <apparatus> A filter placed between two tubes attached to each other, often used with centrifuges to selectively remove a substance of interest from a mixture in one tube and deposit the substance into the other tube.
(09 Oct 1997)
high-pass filter A device or material that allows high frequency signals to pass while attenuating other signals.
(05 Mar 2000)
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