| surrogate |
A traditional surrogate is a woman who is inseminated with the sperm of a man who is not her partner in order to conceive and carry a child to be reared by the biological genetic father and his partner. In this procedure the surrogate is genetically related to the child. The biological father and his partner must usually adopt the child after its birth. Another type of surrogate is a gestational carrier. This process involves implanting a fertilized egg into the surrogate's uterus. ...
Ãâó: repro-med.net/glossary.php
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| surrogate |
A woman who becomes pregnant through insemination with the sperm of the husband of an infertile woman, and then following delivery , turns the child over for adoption by the couple.
Ãâó: www.rscboston.com/09_glossary_of_terms.html
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| surrogate marker |
an indirect measure of disease progression. In HIV disease, the number of CD4+ T cells per cubic millimeter of blood is often used as a surrogate marker.
Ãâó: www.opendoorclinic.org/hivglossary.htm
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| surrogate |
A substitute or stand-in. A surrogate mother carries a fetus that was conceived by another female and then implanted in her uterus.
Ãâó: ehrweb.aaas.org/ehr/books/glossary.html
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| surrogate |
Generally organic compounds which are not target analytes, but are similar to target analytes in chemical composition, extraction, and chromatography, but which are not normally found in environmental samples. These compounds are added to samples to assess analytical performance of a method. They are spiked into all blanks, samples, and spiked samples prior to analysis. Percent recoveries are calculated for each surrogate.
Ãâó: www.sbeach.navy.mil/Programs/Environmental/IR/Read...
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