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risk reduction Techniques used to reduce your chances of getting a certain cancer. For example: reducing your dietary fat may help prevent breast cancer.
(09 Oct 1997)
risk-taking Undertaking a task involving a challenge for achievement or a desirable goal in which there is a lack of certainty or a fear of failure. It may also include the exhibiting of certain behaviours whose outcomes may present a risk to the individual or to those associated with him or her.
(12 Dec 1998)
competing risk An event that removes a subject from being at risk for an outcome under investigation.
(05 Mar 2000)
pregnancy, high-risk Pregnancy in which the mother and/or foetus are at greater than normal risk of morbidity or mortality. Causes include lack of adequate prenatal care, previous obstetrical history, pre-existing maternal disease or pregnancy-induced disease, and multiple gestation, as well as advanced maternal age.
(12 Dec 1998)
health risk assessment Method of describing an individual's chance of falling ill or dying of a specified condition, based on actuarial calculations that allow for known exposure to risk; expressed as expected age at which death or disease will occur, and intended as a way of drawing an individual's attention to the probable consequences of risk behaviour.
(05 Mar 2000)
oesophageal carcinoma risk factors <radiology> P Plummer-Vinson Web, A achalasia, alcohol, B Barrett oesophagus, S stricture, T tylosis, tobacco see: oesophageal carcinoma
(12 Dec 1998)
thyroid carcinoma risk factors <radiology> Increased risk of malignancy: young female, male, history of radiation to head or neck, hard lesion, other neck masses, no shrinkage on TSH, family hx of thyroid carcinoma see: thyroid carcinoma
(12 Dec 1998)
empiric risk The chance that a disease will occur in a family based upon experience (past history, medical records, etc.) rather than theory.
(12 Dec 1998)
absolute terminal innervation ratio The number of motor endplates divided by the number of terminal axons related to them.
(05 Mar 2000)
accommodative convergence-accommodation ratio The amount of convergence (measured in prism diopters of convergence) divided by the amount of accommodation (measured in diopters) required to direct both eyes upon an object.
(05 Mar 2000)
A/G ratio <abbreviation> Albumin-globulin ratio.
(05 Mar 2000)
albumin-globulin ratio The ratio of albumin to globulin in the serum or in the urine in kidney disease; the normal ratio in the serum is approximately 1.55.
(05 Mar 2000)
ALT:AST ratio The ratio of serum alanine aminotransferase to serum aspartate aminotransferase; elevated serum levels of both enzymes characterise hepatic disease; when both levels are abnormally elevated and the ALT:AST ratio is greater than 1.0, severe hepatic necrosis or alcoholic hepatic disease is likely; when the ratio is less than 1.0, an acute non-alcoholic hepatic condition is favoured.
(05 Mar 2000)
amylase-creatinine clearance ratio A test for the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis; it is determined by measuring amylase and creatinine in serum and urine in apparently healthy individuals the renal clearance of amylase is less than 5% that of creatinine; in acute pancreatitis the ratio is said to be greater than 0.05 or 5%.
(05 Mar 2000)
aspect ratio <radiobiology> In toroidal geometry, the ratio of the major diameter (total width of the torus) to the minor diameter (width of a slice taken through one side of the ring). In inertial-confinement fusion, aspect ratio refers to the ratio of a fuel pellet's radius to its wall thickness.
(09 Oct 1997)
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