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  • ¿µ¹®
    ÇѱÛ
  • silent receptor
    ¹«¹ÝÀÀ¼ö¿ëü
  • taste receptor
    ¹Ì°¢¼ö¿ë±â
  • T-cell antigen receptor
    T¼¼Æ÷Ç׿ø¼ö¿ëü
  • T-cell receptor
    T¼¼Æ÷¼ö¿ëü
  • tactile receptor
    Ã˰¢¼ö¿ë±â
  • vasopressor receptor
    Ç÷¾Ð»ó½Â¼ö¿ëü
  • visual receptor
    1. ½Ã°¢¼ö¿ë±â 2. °¨±¤Ã¼
  • volume receptor
    ¿ëÀû¼ö¿ë±â
  • abdominal colicky pain
    ±Þ°æ·Ãº¹Åë
  • anginal pain
    Çù½ÉÅëÁõ, °¡½¿Á¶ÀÓÅëÁõ
  • auditory pain
    û°¢ÅëÁõ
  • abdominal pain
    º¹Åë, ¹è¾ÎÀÌ
  • back pain
    µîÅëÁõ
  • birth pain
    ºÐ¸¸ÅëÁõ, »êÅë
  • bone pain
    »ÀÅëÁõ
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  • ¿µ¹®
    ÇѱÛ
  • tension receptor
    Àå·Â¼ö¿ëü
  • vasopressor receptor
    Ç÷°ü¼öÃà¼ö¿ëü
  • visual receptor
    ½Ã°¢¼ö¿ëü, °¨±¤Ã¼
  • volume receptor
    ¿ëÀû¼ö¿ëü
  • abdominal pain
    º¹Åë
  • anginal pain
    Çù½ÉÁõÅë, ¾Ó±â³ªÅëÁõ
  • auditory pain
    û°¢ÅëÁõ
  • back pain
    ¿äÅë, µîÅëÁõ
  • birth pain
    »êÅë, ºÐ¸¸ÅëÁõ
  • bone pain
    »ÀÅëÁõ
  • boring pain
    ÂÅëÁõ, õÀÚÅë
  • burning pain
    ÀÛ¿­Åë
  • cancer pain
    ¾ÏÅëÁõ
  • causalgic pain
    ÀÛ¿­Åë
  • central pain
    ÁßÃß¼ºÅëÁõ
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  • ¿µ¹®
    ÇѱÛ
  • First pain
    ÀÏÂ÷Åë(ìéó­÷Ô)
  • McGill Pain Questionaire
    ¸ÆÁúÅëÁõ¼³¹®Æò°¡¹ý
  • abdominal pain =abdominalgia, celialgia
    º¹Åë(ÜÙ÷Ô).
  • after-pain
    ÈÄÁøÅë(ý­òæ÷Ô).
  • anginal pain
    Çù½ÉÁõÅë.
  • galvanic pain
    Àü·ù¼º µ¿Åë(ï³êüàõÔÙ÷Ô).
  • genital pain
    À½ºÎÅë?
  • girdle pain
    ´ë»ó µ¿Åë.
  • girdle pain
    ´ë»óµ¿Åë.
  • girdle pain
    ´ë»óµ¿Åë
  • gnawing pain
    ¼±Åë, ÂɾƳ»´Â µíÇÑ ¾ÆÇÄ.
  • griping pain
    ½ÉÇѺ¹Åë, ¿òÄÑÁã´Â µíÇÑ ¾ÆÇÄ.
  • heterotopic pain
    À̼ÒÅëÁõ.
  • homotopic pain
    µ¿¼Òµ¿Åë.
  • hysterical pain
    È÷½ºÅ׸®Åë.
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  • ¿µ¹®
    ÇѱÛ
  • neuromuscular receptor
    ½Å°æ±Ù¼ö¿ëü
  • nicotinic receptor
    ´ÏÄÚÆ¾ ¼ö¿ëü
  • olfactory receptor
    Èİ¢°¨¼ö±â
  • olfactory receptor cells
    Èİ¢¼ö¿ë¼¼Æ÷
  • opiate receptor
    ¾ÆÆí¼ö¿ëü(áôé»ô÷)
  • opiate receptor
    ¾ÆÆí¼ö¿ëü.
  • opioid receptor
    ¾ÆÆí¾ç¼ö¿ëü
  • opioid receptor
    ¾ÆÆí°è¹°Áú¼ö¿ëü.
  • opioid receptor
    ¾ÆÆí¾ç¹°Áú¼ö¿ëü.
  • opioid receptor
    ¾ÆÆí¾ç¹°Áú¼ö¿ëü.
  • paciniform receptor
    ÆÄÄ¡´Ï¾ç °¨¼ö±â
  • pathogen receptor
    º´¿ø±Õ¼ö¿ëü
  • platelet receptor
    Ç÷¼ÒÆÇ¼ö¿ëü
  • postsynaptic receptor
    ¿¬Á¢Èļö¿ëü
  • prejunctional neuromuscular receptor
    ½Å°æ±ÙÁ¢ÇÕÀü¼ö¿ëü
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APS adenosine phosphosulfate; American Pain Society; American Pediatric Society; American Physiological ...
BOAT back pain outcome assessment team
BPCS back pain classification scale
BPI bacterial permeability-increasing [protein]; Basic Personality Inventory; beef-pork insulin; blood p...
BPQ Berne pain questionnaire
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PDI Pain Disability Index
PRI Pain Rating Index
PI Pain intensity
PID Pain intensity difference
PT Pain thresholds
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  • ¿µ¹®
    ÇѱÛ
    ¼³¸í
  • cheek pain
    ÇùÅë
  • chest pain
    ÈäÅë
  • chronic pain
    ¸¸¼º ÅëÁõ, ¸¸¼º µ¿Åë
    Àå¾Ö³ª ÁúȯÀÇ ´Ù¸¥ ¸éÀÌ ÇØ°áµÉ ¶§±îÁö Áö¼ÓµÇ´Â ÅëÁõÀ¸·Î¼­ Ư¡ÀûÀ¸·Î 6°³¿ù ÀÌ»ó Áö¼ÓµÇ°Å³ª ±Þ¼º ¿Ü»óÀ̳ª ÅëÁõÀÌ Ä¡À¯µÇ´Â µ¥ ÇÊ¿äÇÑ Á¤»óÀûÀÎ ½Ã°£ ÀÌ»óÀ¸·Î Áö¼ÓµÈ´Ù. Çൿ ¹× Á¤½Å»çȸÀû ¹ÝÀÀÀ» µ¿¹ÝÇÏ´Â ºÒÀ¯ÄèÇÑ °¨°¢, Áö°¢ ¹× Á¤½ÅÀû °æÇè°ú °ü·ÃµÉ ¼ö ÀÖ´Ù.
  • chronic pain cycle
    ¸¸¼º µ¿Åë ¼øÈ¯
  • chronic pain syndrome
    ¸¸¼º ÅëÁõ ÁõÈıº, ¸¸¼º µ¿Åë ÁõÈıº
  • chronic pathologic pain
    ¸¸¼º º´¸®Àû µ¿Åë
  • colicky pain
    »êÅë
  • collicky pain
    »êÅë
  • complex pain
    º¹ÇÕ ÅëÁõ, º¹ÇÕ µ¿Åë
  • constant pain
    Áö¼ÓÅë
  • continuous deep pain
    Áö¼ÓÀûÀÎ ½ÉºÎ µ¿Åë
  • continuous pain
    Áö¼Ó¼º ÅëÁõ, Áö¼ÓÅë
  • cramp pain
    °æ·Ã ÁøÅë
    »ê¸ð°¡ ºÐ¸¸ ½Ã °Þ´Â ¸Å¿ì ½ÉÇÑ ÁøÅë. °£ÇæÀÌ ±ØÈ÷ ª°í °ÅÀÇ Áö¼ÓÀûÀÎ Àڱà ¼öÃàÀÌ ÀϾ ºÐ¸¸ÀÌ ¸÷½Ã Áö¿¬µÇ´Â °æ¿ì¸¦ ¸»ÇÑ´Ù. °æ·ÃÀÌ Àڱú® Àüü¿¡¼­ ÀϾ´Â °æ¿ì¿Í ÀϺο¡¼­¸¸ ÀϾ´Â °æ¿ì°¡ Àִµ¥, ¾î´À °æ¿ì¿¡³ª »ê¸ð´Â °Ý·ÄÇÑ »êÅëÀ¸·Î Å« °íÅëÀ» ¹ÞÀ¸¸ç, ¶§·Î´Â ±¸Åä°¡ ÀϾ°í, Á¦´ë ³»Áö ŹÝÀÇ ¾Ð¹ÚÀ¸·Î žư¡ °¡»ç »óÅ¿¡ ºüÁö´Â °æ¿ìµµ ÀûÁö ¾Ê´Ù. ºÐ¸¸ Á¦3±â¿¡ Àڱñ¸¿¡ ºÎºÐ °æ·ÃÀÌ ÀϾ¸é, ±× ºÎºÐ¿¡ ¸ð·¡½Ã°èó·³ ¼öÃàÀÌ ÀϾ¸ç, ŹÝÀÌ ¾ï·ùµÇ¾î ÅÂ¹Ý °¨µ·À» Çü¼ºÇÑ´Ù. ÀÌ·¯ÇÑ °æ¿ì ÁøÁ¤Á¦, ¸¶ÃëÁ¦¸¦ Åõ¿©ÇÏ¿© ÀÚ±ÃÀ» À̿ϽÃŲ ´ÙÀ½, Á¦¿ÕÀý°³, °âÀÚ ¼ö¼ú µîÀ» ½Ç½ÃÇÑ´Ù.
  • deafferentation pain
    ±¸½É·Î Â÷´Ü¼º ÅëÁõ, Àý´Ü ÅëÁõ, ¼öÀÔ·Î Â÷´Ü¿¡ ÀÇÇÑ ÅëÁõ, ½Å°æ Àý´Ü ÅëÁõ, ±¸½É Â÷´Ü¼º µ¿Åë
    ±¸½É¼º ½Å°æ °æ·ÎÀÇ »ó½ÇÀ̳ª ºØ±«·Î ÀÎÇØ º¸Åë ±¹¼Ò ºÎÀ§¿¡¼­ ÅëÁõÀÌ Áö¼ÓÀûÀ¸·Î ´À²¸Áö´Â °Í.
  • deep pain
    ½ÉºÎ ÅëÁõ, ½ÉºÎ µ¿Åë, ½ÉºÎÅë
CancerWEB ¿µ¿µ ÀÇÇлçÀü À¯»ç °Ë»ö °á°ú : 15 ÆäÀÌÁö: 5
false pain <obstetrics> Ineffective uterine contractions, preceding and sometimes resembling true labour, but distinguishable from it by the lack of progressive effacement and dilation of the cervix.
(05 Mar 2000)
flashing pain syndrome <syndrome> Sudden, intermittent, and severe brief episodes of pain, without apparent cause, in the distribution of a spinal dermatome; resembles in character the pain of tic douloureux.
Compare: tic douloureux.
(05 Mar 2000)
law of referred pain Pain arises only from irritation of nerves which are sensitive to those stimuli that produce pain when applied to the surface of the body.
(05 Mar 2000)
low back pain A continuous pain in the lower back or lumbar region.
(12 Dec 1998)
acetylcholine receptor antibodies <neurology, investigation> A test used to measure the amount of antibodies to acetylcholine receptors on nerve endings. This is a diagnostic test for myasthenia gravis. A normal value is no antibodies in the bloodstream.
Acetylcholine receptor (AChR) binding autoantibodies (i.e. Antibodies reactive with several epitopes other than the binding site for acetylcholine or alpha-bungarotoxin) are present in approximately 88% of patients with generalised myasthenia gravis, 70% of ocular myasthenia and in approximately 80% of myasthenia gravis in remission.
Although serum concentrations of AChR binding autoantibodies do not in general correlate well with severity of weakness, there is typical decrease in concentration as weakness improves with immunosuppressive therapy.
AChR blocking autoantibodies (i.e., antibodies reactive with the AChR binding site) are present in about 50% of patients with myasthenia gravis, 30% with ocular myasthenia gravis and 20% of myasthenia gravis in remission, AChR blocking autoantibodies are the only AChR autoantibodies present in about 1% of myasthenia gravis.
AChR modulating autoantibodies (i.e., autoantibodies which cross-link AChRs and cause their removal from muscle membrane surfaces) are present in more than 90% of myasthenia gravis and occasionally are the only AchR autoantibodies detectable in mild, recent onset or ocular-restricted myasthenia gravis.
Results for AChR modulating autoantibodies can be transiently false-positive due to curare-like drugs used during general anesthesia. AChR autoantibodies of one or more types are found in at least 80% of ocular myasthenia gravis.
Although generally absent in neurological conditions other than myasthenia gravis(and consequently unlikely to cause confusion in neurodiagnosis), false-positive results for AChR autoantibodies occasionally occur in primary biliary cirrhosis, tardive dyskinesia, autoimmune thyroiditis, the elderly, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients treated with cobra venom and patients with thymoma in the absence of myasthenia gravis. Approximately 1% of patients with rheumatoid arthritis treated with D-penicillamine develop AChR autoantibodies and myasthenia gravis, both of which disappear when the drug is discontinued.
Babies born to ~10% of myasthenia gravis mothers have a transient neonatal form of myasthenia gravis that responds well to anticholinesterase therapy and usually remits within 1 month as maternal IgG disappears.
(29 Dec 1997)
amino acid receptor <biochemistry> Ligand gated ion channels with specific receptors for amino acid transmitters. An extended protein superfamily that also includes subunits of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor.
(18 Nov 1997)
AMPA receptor <cell biology> Glutamate operated ion channel.
See: excitatory amino acid receptor channels.
(05 Feb 1998)
ANP receptor <molecular biology> Family of 3 receptors for atrial natriuretic peptide. ANP A and ANP B have intracellular guanylate cyclase and protein kinase like domains. ANP C, shares the extracellular ligand binding and transmembrane domains, but lacks the functional intracellular domains and is not thought to be involved in signal transduction.
(18 Nov 1997)
asialoglycoprotein receptor A surface receptor found in hepatocytes that binds galactose-terminal glycoproteins; thus, this receptor removes those proteins from circulation and they are in turn acted upon by hepatocyte lysosomes.
(05 Mar 2000)
auditory receptor cells Columnar cell's in the epithelium of the organ of Corti, having hairs (stereocilia) on their apical ends.
See: Corti's cells.
(05 Mar 2000)
beta-adrenergic receptor blocking agent A class of drugs that compete with beta-adrenergic agonists for available receptor sites; some compete for both b1 and b2 receptors (e.g., propranolol) while others are primarily either b1 (e.g., metoprolol) or b2 blockers; used in the treatment of a variety of cardiovascular diseases where beta-adrenergic blockade is desirable.
Synonym: beta-adrenergic receptor blocking agent, beta-adrenoreceptor antagonist, beta-blocker.
(05 Mar 2000)
beta-adrenergic receptor kinase <enzyme> Cyclic-AMP protein kinase which specifically phosphorylates the agonist-occupied form of beta-adrenergic receptor
Registry number: EC 2.7.1.-
Synonym: beta-ar kinase, beta-adrenergic receptor kinase 1, g-protein-coupled receptor kinase 2, grk2 (kinase), beta-adrenergic receptor kinase 2, beta-ar kinase 2
(26 Jun 1999)
cAMP receptor protein catabolite (gene) activator protein
GABA receptor <physiology> Ligand gated chloride ion channel forming receptor opened by gamma aminobutyric acid. Two distinct types: A and B.
A receptor: One of a family of neurotransmitter receptors with fast intrinsic ion channels that includes the glycine receptor and the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. Distinct from another major receptor family, the muscarininc acetylcholine receptor and rhodopsin, with no intrinsic ion channel. The A receptor is specifically blocked by bicuculline. It consists of two pairs of protein chains forming an A2B2 complex, the A chains bind benzodiazepine and the B chains bind GABA. The 4 subunits are thought to form a tight group with the chloride channel in the middle. There is considerable similarity between the amino acid sequences of the receptor subunits and those of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor suggesting that both receptors are derived from some evolutionary ancestor.
See: amino acid receptor superfamily.
B receptor: Brain receptor (80 kD) for the inhibitory neurotransmitter gamma amino butyric acid. Differs from the A receptor both in agonist specificity (baclofen is a specific agonist) and its effects on cells. It modulates intracellular calcium levels through a Go mediated effect on N type calcium channels and also lowers intracellular cAMP levels by an effect on adenylyl cyclase, thereby reducing the secretion of catecholamines.
(05 Jan 1998)
p60 tumour necrosis factor receptor-associated kinase <enzyme> Interacts with and causes phosphorylation of the cytoplasmic domain of the tnf receptor
Registry number: EC 2.7.10.-
Synonym: p60 tnf receptor-associated kinase, p60-trak
(26 Jun 1999)
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