| MMS | Mohs Micrographic Surgery |
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| MHN | massive hepatic necrosis; Mohs hardness number; morbus hemolyticus neonatorum |
| MMS | Mohs Micrographic Surgery |
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| Mohs, Friedrich | <person> German mineralogist, 1773-1839. See: Mohs scale. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| Mohs' chemosurgery | A technique for removal of skin tumours with a minimum of normal tissue, by prior necrosis with zinc chloride paste, mapping of the tumour site, and excision and microscopic examination of frozen section of thin horizontal layers of tissue, until all of the tumour is removed. More recently, the preliminary step of chemical necrosis has been omitted. Synonym: microscopically controlled surgery, Mohs' micrographic surgery, Mohs' surgery. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| Mohs, Frederic | <person> U.S. Surgeon, *1910, who as a medical student devised a system of microscopicaly controlled removal of skin tumours. See: Mohs' fresh tissue chemosurgery technique, Mohs' chemosurgery. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Mohs' fresh tissue chemosurgery technique | Chemosurgery in which superficial cancers are excised after fixation in vivo. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Mohs' micrographic surgery | A technique for removal of skin tumours with a minimum of normal tissue, by prior necrosis with zinc chloride paste, mapping of the tumour site, and excision and microscopic examination of frozen section of thin horizontal layers of tissue, until all of the tumour is removed. More recently, the preliminary step of chemical necrosis has been omitted. Synonym: microscopically controlled surgery, Mohs' micrographic surgery, Mohs' surgery. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Mohs scale | A qualitative scale in which minerals are classified in order of their increasing hardness, based on the fact that the harder of two materials will scratch the softer and will not be scratched by it. The scale lists 15 substances: 1, talc; 2, gypsum; 3, calcite; 4, fluorite; 5, apatite; 6, orthoclase, periclase; 7, vitreous pure silica; 8, quartz, stellite; 9, topaz; 10, garnet; 11, tantalum carbide, fused zirconia; 12, fused alumina; 13, silicon carbide; 14, boron carbide; 15, diamond. Synonym: Mohs scale. (05 Mar 2000) |
| mohs surgery | A surgical technique used primarily in the treatment of skin neoplasms, especially basal cell or squamous cell carcinoma of the skin. This procedure is a microscopically controlled excision of cutaneous tumours either after fixation in vivo or after freezing the tissue. Serial examinations of fresh tissue specimens are most frequently done. (12 Dec 1998) |
| Mohs' surgery | A technique for removal of skin tumours with a minimum of normal tissue, by prior necrosis with zinc chloride paste, mapping of the tumour site, and excision and microscopic examination of frozen section of thin horizontal layers of tissue, until all of the tumour is removed. More recently, the preliminary step of chemical necrosis has been omitted. Synonym: microscopically controlled surgery, Mohs' micrographic surgery, Mohs' surgery. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Ammon, Friedrich von | <person> German ophthalmologist and pathologist, 1799-1861. See: Ammon's fissure, Ammon's prominence. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Bezold, Friedrich | <person> German otologist, 1842-1908. See: Bezold's abscess, Bezold's mastoiditis, Bezold's sign, Bezold's symptom, Bezold's triad. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Call, Friedrich von | <person> Austrian physician, 1844-1917. See: Call-Exner bodies. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Gauss, Carl Friedrich | <person> German mathematician, astronomer and physicist who defined the unit of magnetic field strength (CGS units) 10,000 gauss = 1 tesla Lived: 1777-1855. (13 Nov 1997) |
| Reichel, Friedrich | <person> German gynecologist and surgeon, 1858-1934. See: Reichel-Polyastomach resection. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Reinke, Friedrich | <person> German anatomist, 1862-1919. See: Reinke crystalloids. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Voltolini, Friedrich | <person> German laryngologist, 1819-1889. See: Voltolini's disease. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Pelizaeus, Friedrich | <person> German neurologist, 1850-1917. See: Merzbacher-Pelizaeus disease, Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease. (05 Mar 2000) |
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