| SAFTEE-SI | systematic assessment for treatment emergent events-systematic inquiry |
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| OMIM | Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man [database] |
| ICSB | International Committee on Systematic Bacteriology |
| SAFTEE-GI | systematic assessment for treatment emergent events-general inquiry |
| SAT | saliva alcohol test; satellite; serum antitrypsin; single-agent chemotherapy; slide agglutination te... |
| CCTR | Cochrane Controlled Trial Register |
|---|---|
| SELEX | Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment |
| STA | Systematic Toxicological Analysis |
| CPDB | Carcinogenic Potency Database |
| GPRD | General Practice Research Database |
| online systems | Systems where the input data enter the computer directly from the point of origin (usually a terminal or workstation) and/or in which output data are transmitted directly to that terminal point of origin. (12 Dec 1998) |
|---|---|
| database | A structured file of information or a set of logically related data stored and retrieved using computer-based means. (12 Dec 1998) |
| database management systems | Software designed to store, manipulate, manage, and control data for specific uses. (12 Dec 1998) |
| systematic | 1. <biology> Pertaining or according to a system. 2. <study> Systematics is the science of naming and classifying organisms in regard to their natural relationships, deals with populations, species and higher taxa. See: taxonomy. Origin: Gr. Systematikos (09 Jan 1998) |
| systematic anatomy | A description of, especially a treatise describing, physical structure, more particularly that of man. Synonym: systematic anatomy. (05 Mar 2000) |
| systematic desensitization | A type of behaviour therapy for eliminating phobias or anxieties: the patient and therapist construct a list of imagined scenes eliciting the phobia, ranked from least to most anxiety-producing; the patient then is trained in deep muscle relaxation, and is repeatedly asked to imagine himself in the presence of the least anxiety-producing scene on the list until he feels fully relaxed while doing so; the procedure is repeated for each scene on the list until the patient develops the capacity to feel relaxed with any of the anxiety-producing scenes; real life scenes are then substituted for the imagined scenes. Synonym: reciprocal inhibition. (05 Mar 2000) |
| systematic name | As applied to chemical substances, a systematic name is composed of specially coined or selected words or syllables, each of which has a precisely defined chemical structural meaning, so that the structure may be derived from the name. Water (trivial name) is hydrogen oxide (systematic). The systematic name of histamine (a semisystematic name) is imidazolethylamine, which indicates that a radical of imidazole replaces one hydrogen atom of ethylamine, which in turn is an ethyl group attached to an amine group. Dimethyl sulfoxide states that two methyl radicals are attached to a sulfur atom that holds an oxygen atom. Carbolic acid (trivial name) or phenol (semisystematic name) are, systematically, phenyl hydroxide or hydroxybenzene. See: semisystematic name. (05 Mar 2000) |
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