| HCV | Hepatitis C Virus |
|---|---|
| HCV | hepatitis C virus; hog cholera virus |
| HCVD | Hypertensive Cardio-Vascular Disease; °íÇ÷¾Ð ½ÉÀ强 Ç÷°ü Áúȯ |
| HCVD | hypertensive cardiovascular disease |
| HCVS | human coronavirus sensitivity |
| HCV | Anti-hepatitis C virus |
|---|---|
| HCV | Hepatitic C virus |
| HCV | Hepatitis C |
| HCV | Hepatitis C Viral |
| HCV | Hepatitis C virus infection |
| HCV | Hog Cholera Virus |
| HCV | Human coronavirus |
| HCV RNA | Hepatitis C virus RNA |
| HCVAb | hepatitis C virus antibody |
| HCVR | Hypercapnic ventilatory response |
| anti-HCV | Antibodies against HCV |
|---|---|
| anti-HCV | Antibodies to HCV |
| anti-HCV | Antibody to HCV |
| anti-HCV | Anti-hepatitis-C-virus |
| anti-HCV | Antibodies against hepatitis C virus |
| HCV | A non-A, non-B RNA virus causing post-transfusion hepatitis; it appears to be a member of the family Flaviviridae. (05 Mar 2000) |
|---|
| HCV |
a contagious viral disease that causes inflammation of the liver. A chronic carrier state occurs in some individuals and may result in life-threatening liver damage, cirrhosis, and/or liver cancer. HCV is spread mainly via contaminated blood products or shared needles. There is no standard treatment or vaccine.
Ãâó: www.thebody.com/sfaf/summer01/glossary.html
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|---|---|
| HCV |
is the maximum ambient water concentration of a substance at which a lifetime of exposure from either: drinking the water, consuming fish from the water, and water-related recreation activities; or consuming fish from the water, and water-related recreation activities, will represent a plausible upper-bound risk of contracting cancer of one in 100,000 using the exposure assumptions specified in the Methodologies for the Development of Human Health Criteria and Values in appendix C of this part.
Ãâó: www.setonresourcecenter.com/cfr/40CFR/P132_003.HTM
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| HCV |
In the United States, the most common Blood-borne infection and a major cause of liver damage. HCV is spread primarily through contact with infected Blood. It is responsible for 8,000 to 10,000 deaths in the United States annually. Many people have the disease for years before it is detected.
Ãâó: www.bloodbook.com/glossary.html
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| HCV |
A liver disease caused by the hepatitis C virus. The virus is transmitted through contaminated blood from other people who have the disease. The infection can be characterized by a prolonged symptom-free period of chronic infection. Progresses to chronic hepatitis in the majority of infections, and may ultimately lead to cirrhosis, liver failure and liver cancer. In technical terms, the virus is a positive stranded RNA virus of the Flavivirdae family. ...
Ãâó: www.texasliver.org/glossary.html
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| HCV |
A viral liver disease that can be acute, chronic or even life threatening.
Ãâó: www.mlaw.ie/index.php
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