| percutaneous nephrolithotomy |
uses a scope placed through an incision in the side of the abdomen to remove a kidney stone that is too big to pass.
Ãâó: www.womenandinfants.com/body.cfm
|
|---|---|
| percutaneous |
Passing through the skin
Ãâó: glenlivet.mph.ed.ac.uk/endo/private/glossary.htm
|
| perception |
(hearing) - process of knowing or being aware of information through the ear.
Ãâó: www.luhs.org/health/topics/ent/glossary.htm
|
| percutaneous |
Denoting the passage of substances through unbroken skin, for example, by needle puncture, including introduction of wires and catheters.
Ãâó: www.nbc-med.org/SiteContent/MedRef/OnlineRef/Field...
|
| percent |
per one hundred, as in: The unemployment rate went down one percent.
Ãâó: www.business-words.com/dictionary/P_1.html
|
| perc | the act of exploding a percussion cap |
|---|---|
| perc | the act of playing drums |
| perc | tapping a part of the body for diagnostic purposes |
| perc | a detonator that explodes when struck |
| perc | a musical instrument in which the sound is produced by one object striking another |
| perc | a musician who plays percussion instruments |
| perc | involving percussion or featuring percussive instruments |
| perc | a musical instrument in which the sound is produced by one object striking another |
| perc | (medicine) a small hammer with a rubber head used in percussive examinations of the chest and in testing reflexes |
| perc | (pharmacology) through the unbroken skin (refers to medications applied directly to the skin (creams or ointments) or in time-release forms (skin patches)) |
| perc | English soldier killed in a rebellion against Henry IV (1364-1403) |
| perc | United States writer whose novels explored human alienation (1916-1990) |
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