| SC | conditioned stimulus; sacrococcygeal; Sanitary Corps; scalenus [muscle]; scapula; Schwann cell; scia... |
|---|---|
| SCG | serum chemistry graft; serum chemogram; sodium cromoglycate; superior cervical ganglion |
| SG | Sachs-Georgi [test]; salivary gland; serum globulin; serum glucose; signs; skin graft; soluble gelat... |
| SPE | septic pulmonary edema; serum protein electrolytes; serum protein electrophoresis; streptococcal pyr... |
| SPI | Self-Perception Inventory; serum precipitable iodine; serum protein index; Shipley Personal Inventor... |
| foetal calf serum | <cell culture> The serum originating from embryonic calves and an expensive component of standard culture media for many types of animal tissue cells. It is used as an important part of growth media for promoting the growth of tissue cultures. It provides a source of growth hormones and other growth factors. (11 Nov 1997) |
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| foreign serum | A serum derived from an animal and injected into an animal of another species or into humans. (05 Mar 2000) |
| liquid human serum | The pool of fluids separated from blood withdrawn from human subjects and allowed to clot in the absence of any anticoagulant; not more than 10 separate donations are pooled; the contributions from donors of A, O, and either B or AB groups are represented in approximately the ratio 9:9:2. (05 Mar 2000) |
| serum |
The liquid part of blood (as opposed to blood cells) that makes up about half its volume. Serum differs from plasma in that the blood sample has clotted. A centrifuge is used in the laboratory to separate serum from cells after blood has clotted.
Ãâó: www.nutrabio.com/Definitions/definitions_s.htm
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| serum |
the fluid, noncellular portion of blood that remains after coagulation; lymphatic fluid.
Ãâó: www.thebody.com/sfaf/summer01/glossary.html
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| serum hepatitis |
a viral liver disease that may be acute or chronic, and can be life-threatening. Symptoms include fever, malaise, fatigue, jaundice, abdominal tenderness, and elevated liver enzymes. Some individuals are chronic asymptomatic carriers; chronic hepatitis B may result in liver cirrhosis and/or cancer. HBV can be transmitted by sexual contact, shared needles, or contaminated blood products. Interferon alpha is used as a treatment; two three-dose anti-HBV vaccines are available.
Ãâó: www.thebody.com/sfaf/summer01/glossary.html
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| serum albumin |
(noun) the main protein found in the blood
Ãâó: www.orgsites.com/fl/adjuvantdisease/_pgg9.php3
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| serum |
That part of blood that
Ãâó: www.jansen.com.au/Dictionary_SU.html
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