| SENS | sensitivity or sensitization; Stewart evaluation of nursing scale |
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| Stewart, Thomas Grainger | <person> 20th century English neurologist, 1877-1957. See: Stewart-Holmes sign. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| Alexander, W. Stewart | <person> 20th century New Zealand pathologist. See: Alexander's disease. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| Halsted, William Stewart | <person> U.S. Surgeon, 1852-1922. See: Halsted's law, Halsted's operation, Halsted's suture. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Hamilton-Stewart formula | Formula to calculate cardiac output after intravenous indicator dye injection; blood flow in liters per minute is given by dividing the amount of injectant in milligrams by the product of the average dye concentration in the initial curve of the dye concentration sampled at a given point in the circulation and multiplied by the dose of dye (in milligrams) to write the curve from appearance to disappearance (in the absence of any recirculation). Synonym: Hamilton-Stewart formula, Stewart-Hamilton method. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Hamilton-Stewart method | Formula to calculate cardiac output after intravenous indicator dye injection; blood flow in liters per minute is given by dividing the amount of injectant in milligrams by the product of the average dye concentration in the initial curve of the dye concentration sampled at a given point in the circulation and multiplied by the dose of dye (in milligrams) to write the curve from appearance to disappearance (in the absence of any recirculation). Synonym: Hamilton-Stewart formula, Stewart-Hamilton method. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Stewart, Fred Waldorf | <person> U.S. Physician, *1894. See: Stewart-Treves syndrome. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Stewart, George | <person> Canadian-U.S. Scientist, 1860-1930. See: Stewart's test, Stewart-Hamilton method. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Stewart-Hamilton method | Formula to calculate cardiac output after intravenous indicator dye injection; blood flow in liters per minute is given by dividing the amount of injectant in milligrams by the product of the average dye concentration in the initial curve of the dye concentration sampled at a given point in the circulation and multiplied by the dose of dye (in milligrams) to write the curve from appearance to disappearance (in the absence of any recirculation). Synonym: Hamilton-Stewart formula, Stewart-Hamilton method. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Stewart-Hamilton principle | Used to determine blood flow from the concentration of dye or temperature dilution. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Stewart-Holmes sign | <clinical sign> In cerebellar disease, the inability to check a movement when passive resistance is suddenly released. Synonym: rebound phenomenon. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Stewart-Morel syndrome | <syndrome> Hyperostosis frontalis interna in elderly women, with obesity and neuropsychiatric disorders of uncertain cause; at least sometimes familial. Synonym: metabolic craniopathy, Stewart-Morel syndrome. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Stewart, R | <person> 20th century English neurologist. See: Stewart-Morel syndrome. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Stewart's test | Estimation of the amount of collateral circulation, in case of an aneurysm of the main artery of a limb, by means of a calorimeter. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Stewart-Treves syndrome | <syndrome> Angiosarcoma arising in arms affected by postmastectomy lymphedema. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Doerfler-Stewart test | Examination of the patient's ability to respond to spondee words in the presence of a masking noise of the saw-tooth type; used especially in differentiating between functional and organic hearing loss. Synonym: D-S test. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Addison, Thomas | <person> English physician, 1793-1860. See: Addison's anaemia, Addison's disease, addisonian anaemia, addisonian crisis, Addison-Biermer disease. (05 Mar 2000) |
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