| NOAPP | National Organization of Adolescent Pregnancy and Parenting |
|---|---|
| ASSR | adult situation stress reaction |
| FTP | Failure To Progress, where dilation stalls or labor does not progress fast enough in the provider's ... |
| PAP | 1) Prostatic Acid Phosphatase; Àü¸³¼º »ê¼º ÀλêºÐÇØÈ¿¼Ò 2) Primary Atypical Pneumoni... |
| ACML | atypical chronic myeloid leukemia |
| PSI | Parenting Stress Index |
|---|---|
| A | Atypical |
| AMS | Atypical Mole syndrome |
| ASCUS | Atypical Squamous Cells of Undetermined Significance |
| AAH | Atypical adenomatous hyperplasia |
| parenting | Performing the role of a parent by care-giving, nurturance, and protection of the child by a natural or substitute parent. The parent supports the child by exercising authority and through consistent, empathic, appropriate behaviour in response to the child's needs. Parenting differs from child rearing in that in child rearing the emphasis is on the act of training or bringing up the children and the interaction between the parent and child, while parenting emphasizes the responsibility and qualities of exemplary behaviour of the parent. (12 Dec 1998) |
|---|---|
| psychoanalytic situation | The relationship, characteristically restricted to the therapist's office, between patient and therapist. (05 Mar 2000) |
| situation | The aggregate of biological, psychological, and sociological factors that affect an individual's behavioural pattern. (05 Mar 2000) |
| situation anxiety | Anxiety related to current life problems. (05 Mar 2000) |
| atypical | Irregular, not conformable to the type, in microbiology, applied specifically to strains of unusual type. Origin: Gr. Typos = type or model (16 Dec 1997) |
| atypical absence seizure | An absence seizure associated with an EEG pattern of irregular or slow spike and wave at less than 2.5 Hz or paroxysmal fast activity on an abnormally slow background EEG. (05 Mar 2000) |
| atypical achromatopsia | Incomplete achromatopsia with normal visual acuity and no nystagmus. Compare: dyschromatopsia. (05 Mar 2000) |
| atypical bacterial forms | Microorganisms that have undergone greater changes than normal in morphology, physiology, or cultural characteristics. (12 Dec 1998) |
| atypical cell | Not usual, abnormal. Cancer is the result of atypical cell division. (09 Oct 1997) |
| atypical facial neuralgia | Periodic pain in any region of the face, teeth, tongue, and occasionally in the occipital or shoulder area, which lasts several minutes to several days but has no trigger point and lacks the paroxysmal character of tic douloureux. Synonym: atypical facial neuralgia. (05 Mar 2000) |
| atypical fibroxanthoma | A solitary, often ulcerated, small cutaneous benign tumour composed of foamy histiocytes, spindle cells, and bizarre giant cells; usually found on the exposed skin of older people; microscopically, atypical fibroxanthoma closely resembles malignant fibrous histiocytoma, but originates in the dermis. (05 Mar 2000) |
| atypical gingivitis | Intense hyperaemic oedema and inflammation of the gingiva resulting from a hypersensitivity reaction. A dense plasma cell infiltrate is seen in the lamina propria. Synonym: atypical gingivitis. (05 Mar 2000) |
| atypical lipoma | <tumour> Lipoma, occurring primarily in older men on the posterior neck, shoulders, and back, which is benign but microscopically atypical, containing giant cells with multiple overlapping nuclei forming a circle. Synonym: pleomorphic lipoma. (05 Mar 2000) |
| atypical measles | Sometimes severe, unusual clinical manifestation of natural measles virus infection in persons with waning vaccination immunity, particularly in those who had received formaldehyde-inactivated vaccine; an accelerated allergic reaction apparently resulting from an anamnestic antibody response, characterised by high fever, absence of Koplik's spots, a shortened prodromal period, atypical rash, and pneumonia. (05 Mar 2000) |
| atypical melanocytic hyperplasia | Proliferation of melanocytes showing nuclear atypicality, especially as scattered single cells high in the epidermis; interpreted by some pathologists as malignant melanoma in situ. (05 Mar 2000) |
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