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  • coagulation disorder
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  • cognitive disorder
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  • communication disorder
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  • compulsive personality disorder
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  • conduct disorder
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  • conversion disorder
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  • coordination disorder
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  • traumatic lesion
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  • traumatic myalgia
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  • traumatic mydriasis
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  • traumatic neuritis
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  • traumatic neuroma
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  • traumatic neurosis
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  • hereditary coagulation disorder
    À¯Àü¼º ÀÀ °íÀå¾Ö.
  • hereditary disorder
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  • hereditary disorder
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  • hormonal disorder
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  • hyperkinetic disorder
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  • hypnotic-dependent disorder
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  • hypoactive sexual desire disorder
    ¼º¿å°¨¼ÒÀå¾Ö, ~º´
  • hypothalamic disorder
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  • identity disorder
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  • immune disorder
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  • impulse control disorder
    Ãæµ¿ Á¶ÀýÀå¾Ö, ~º´
  • impulse disorder
    Ãæµ¿ Àå¾Ö, Ãæµ¿º´
  • impulse disorder, hyperkinetic
    °úÀ׿¼º Ãæµ¿Àå¾Ö
  • impulse disorder, hyperkinetic
    °ú¿îµ¿¼º Ãæµ¿Àå¾Ö.
  • impulse-control disorder
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  • stress analgesia
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  • stress and coping model
    ½ºÆ®·¹½º¿Í ´ëó(Óßô¥)¸ðµ¨.
  • stress breaker
    ¿Ï¾ÐÀåÄ¡(èÐäâíûöÇ).
  • stress concentration
    ÀÀ·ÂÁýÁß(ëëæ³ó¢ñé).
  • stress diabetes
    ½ºÆ®·¹½º´ç´¢º´(¡­ÓØèñÜ»).
  • stress diabetes
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  • stress echocardiography
    ºÎÇϽÉÃÊÀ½ÆÄ °Ë»ç.
  • stress erythrocytosis
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  • stress erythrocytosis
    ½ºÆ®·¹½ºÀûÇ÷±¸Áõ°¡Áõ(¡­îåúìϹñòÊ¥ñø)
  • stress fracture
    ±äÀå °ñÀý(ÑÌíåÍéï¹), ÇÇ·Î °ñÀý.
  • stress fracture
    ±äÀå°ñÀý(ÑÌíåÍéï¹), ÇǷΰñÀý(ùªÖÌÍéï¹)
  • stress incontinence
    º¹¾Ð¼º ¿ä½Ç±Ý.[ÀÇ]±äÀ强 ½Ç±Ý(ÑÌíåàõã÷Ð×).
  • stress incontinence
    º¹¾Ð¼º ¿ä½Ç±Ý(ÜÙäâàõ èñã÷Ð×).±äÀ强 ½Ç±Ý(ÑÌíåàõã÷Ð×)
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  • stress management
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TBI thyroid-binding index; thyroxine-binding index; tooth-brushing instruction; total-body irradiation; ...
TECV traumatic epiphyseal coxa vara
TON traumatic optic neuropathy
tr tincture; trace; traction; transaldolase; trauma, traumatic; tremor; triradial
traum trauma, traumatic
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CISD Critical Incident Stress Debriefing
CISM Critical Incident Stress Management
DSE Dobutamine Stress Echocardiography
DASE Dobutamine atropine stress echocardiography
ES Emotional stress
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porcine stress syndrome A severe form of fever that occurs as a reaction to certain anaesthetic agents and muscle relaxants. Malignant hyperthermia is an inherited autosomal dominant condition.
Inheritance: autosomal dominant.
(27 Sep 1997)
posttraumatic stress A psychological disorder that develops in some individuals who have had major traumatic experiences (and, for example, have been in a serious accident or through a war). The person is typically numb at first but later has symptoms including depression, excessive irritability, guilt (for having survived while others died), recurrent nightmares, flashbacks to the traumatic scene, and overreactions to sudden noises. Posttraumatic stress became known in the 70s due to the adjustment problems of some vietnam veterans. It was listed as a diagnostic category by the american psychiatric association in 1980. Although the name post-traumatic stress was new, the condition was not. It was known as shell shock in world war i and battle fatigue during world war II.
(12 Dec 1998)
posttraumatic stress syndrome <syndrome> A disorder appearing after a physically or psychologically traumatic event outside the range of usual human experience, (e.g., a serious threat to one's life or seeing a loved one killed), characterised by symptoms of re-experiencing the event, numbing of responsiveness to the environment, exaggerated startle response, guilt feelings, impairment of memory, and difficulties in concentration and sleep.
(05 Mar 2000)
shear stress The force acting in shear flow expressed per unit area; units in the CGS system: dynes/cm2.
(05 Mar 2000)
stress 1. Forcibly exerted influence, pressure. In dentistry, the pressure of the upper teeth against the lower in mastication.
2. The sum of the biological reactions to any adverse stimulus, physical, mental or emotional, internal or external, that tends to disturb the organisms homeostasis, should these compensating reactions be inadequate or inappropriate, they may lead to disorders. The term is also used to refer to the stimuli that elicit the reactions.
(18 Nov 1997)
stress-bearing area Surfaces of structures that resist forces, strains, or pressures brought upon them during function.
(05 Mar 2000)
stress breaker A device that relieves the abutment teeth, to which a fixed or removable partial denture is attached, of all or part of the forces generated by occlusal function.
(05 Mar 2000)
stress disorders, posttraumatic Anxiety disorders manifested by the development of characteristic symptoms following a psychologically traumatic event that is outside the normal range of usual human experience. Symptoms include re-experiencing the traumatic event and numbing of responsiveness to or reduced involvement with the external world.
(12 Dec 1998)
stress echocardiogram <investigation> An echocardiogram that is performed after a period of physical exertion. Chemical stimulation of the heart (to mimic exertion) is used in some cases where physical activity is not possible. In some cases, exertion may manifest a cardiac abnormality not obvious during echocardiography in the resting heart.
(27 Sep 1997)
stress echocardiography Echocardiographic monitoring of a circulatory challenge, usually exercise.
Transesophageal echocardiography, recording of the echocardiogram from a transducer swallowed by the patient to predetermined distances in the oesophagus and stomach.
Transthoracic echocardiography, the standard echocardiography recorded from echocardiographic "windows" on the precordium.
Two-dimensional echocardiography, echocardiography in which an image is reconstructed from the echoes stimulated and detected by a linear array or moving transducers.
Synonym: B-mode echocardiography, cross-sectional echocardiography.
(05 Mar 2000)
stress fibre <physiology> Long bundles of microfilaments made up of actin subunits.
They are involved in the attachment of cultured cells to a substratum, the determination of cell shape and may be involved in cellular mobility.
They are found in most cells and have been shown to be contractile, have a periodicity reminiscent of the sarcomere and are anchored at one end to a focal adhesion, although sometimes between two focal adhesions.
(17 Jul 2002)
stress fracture <orthopaedics, radiology> A hairline or microscopic break in the bone that is not demonstrable with conventional X-rays.
Symptoms include a dull aching pain with tenderness at the site. Symptoms often increase with activity and diminish with rest. Nuclear bone scanning will reliably demonstrate stress fractures where conventional radiographs often fail. Although they may occur in most any location, they are most common in the tibia, fibula and metatarsal bones.
(27 Sep 1997)
stress immunity Insusceptibility or resistance to the effects of emotional strain.
(05 Mar 2000)
stress induced protein <molecular biology> Alternative and preferable name for heat-shock proteins of eukaryotic cells, which emphasises that the same small group of proteins is stimulated both by heat and various other stresses.
(18 Nov 1997)
stress, mechanical A purely physical condition which exists within any material because of strain or deformation by external forces or by non-uniform thermal expansion; expressed quantitatively in units of force per unit area.
(12 Dec 1998)
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