| ERPF | Effective Renal Plasma Flow; À¯È¿½ÅÇ÷·ù·® |
|---|---|
| FEF | Forced Expiratory Flow |
| FEF25-75% | Forced Expiratory Flow from 25 to 75 % of the vital capacity |
| JVP | [POMD P 49 - 52] 1) Jugular Vein Pressure 2) Jugular Venous Pulse ... |
| MEFR | Maximal Expiratory Flow Rate |
| flow cytometry |
Flow Cytometry is a process in which cell or particle measurements are made while the cells or particles pass, preferably in single file, through the measuring apparatus in a fluid stream. Flow Sorting extends flow cytometry by using electrical or mechanical means to divert and collect cells with one or more measured characteristics falling within a range or ranges of values set by the user.
Ãâó: www.seagrant.sunysb.edu/BTRI/btriterms.htm
|
|---|---|
| flow cytometry |
a technique for rapid automatic separation of suspensions of living cells into defined sub-populations.
Ãâó: pewagbiotech.org/resources/glossary/
|
| flower |
The reproductive structure found on flowering plants (angiosperm) that contains male pollen-producing stamens and female egg-producing pistils.
Ãâó: www.natureshift.org/Whawk/glossary.html
|
| flower |
(grass flower) 2(-3) lodicules, (-1,-2) 3(-6)stamens, and pistil with 2(-3) stigma branches; flowers are within a and part of the floret.
Ãâó: www.csdl.tamu.edu/FLORA/taes/tracy/610/glossF.html
|
| flow cytometry |
This is a laboratory method where blood is placed into a machine that separates blood cells by size, shape, density and epitope (antennae) on their surface. The immunophenotype assay and the NK assay are tested by using this machine. Each cell in the machine passes a laser eye and the reflected light is analyzed by the machine. Each type of cell reflects light differently. An NK ( CD 56+) cell gives a different reflection than aB cell (CD 19+).
Ãâó: repro-med.net/glossary.php
|
| flow | bursting into flower |
|---|---|
| flow | woody oriental plant with smooth unfurrowed red fruit grown especially for its white or pale pink blossoms |
| flow | deciduous Chinese shrub or small tree with often trilobed leaves grown for its pink-white flowers |
| flow | shrubby ash of southwestern United States having fragrant white flowers |
| flow | shrubby California ash with showy off-white flowers |
| flow | southern Mediterranean ash having fragrant white flowers in dense panicles and yielding manna |
| flow | any of several shrubs or trees of the genus Prunus cultivated for their showy white or pink single or double blossoms |
| flow | small tree or shrub of southeastern United States |
| flow | derived from the Iowa crab and cultivated for its large double pink blossoms |
| flow | any fern of the genus Osmunda: large ferns with creeping rhizomes |
| flow | Australasian fern with clusters of sporangia on stems of fertile fronds |
| flow | the lower and stouter of the two glumes immediately enclosing the floret in most Gramineae |
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