| CAAH | chronic active autoimmune hepatitis |
|---|---|
| CAC/CIC | chronic active/inactive cirrhosis |
| CAH | chronic active hepatitis; chronic aggressive hepatitis; combined atrial hypertrophy; congenital adre... |
| CALD | chronic active liver disease |
| CALH | chronic active lupoid hepatitis |
| active site |
The specific portion of an enzyme that attaches to the substrate.
Ãâó: xray.bmc.uu.se/~kenth/bioinfo/glossary.html
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|---|---|
| active principle |
the main chemical constituent of a drug plant. Cocaine, for example, is the active principle of coca leaf. Although active principles may be responsible for many of the effects of drug plants, they do not exactly reproduce those effects and in pure form have higher toxicity and potential for abuse.
Ãâó: www.chamisamesa.net/glossa.html
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| active immunity |
The body produces it's own antibodies or killer T Cells
Ãâó: www.edu.pe.ca/threeoaks/science/grassroots/bio521/...
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| active immunization |
The administration of a vaccine to stimulate the host immune system to develop immunity (protection) against a specific pathogen or toxin. As of January 1999, vaccines are available for the following potential biological warfare agents: anthrax, Argentine hemorrhagic fever, botulinum toxin, plague, Q fever, Rift Valley Fever, smallpox, tularemia, Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE), and yellow fever. See also chemoprophylaxis; immunization.
Ãâó: www.merrea.org/glossary.html
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| active immunity |
Resistance developed in response to stimulus by an antigen (infecting agent or vaccine) and usually characterized by the presence of antibody produced by the host. See also host. Compare passive immunity.
Ãâó: www.merrea.org/glossary.html
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