| ¿µ¹® | facies, face | ÇÑ±Û | ¾ó±¼, ¸é |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼³¸í | 1. ´«, ÄÚ, ÀÔÀÌ ÀÖ´Â ¸Ó¸®ÀÇ ¾Õ¸é. Áï À̸¶¿¡¼ ÅαîÁö¸¦ Æ÷ÇÔ. 2. ½Åü Àüü, ±× ÀϺΠȤÀº Àå±âÀÇ Æ¯Á¤ Ç¥¸é. |
||
| F2F | face-to-face |
|---|---|
| AGN | acute glomerulonephritis; agnosia |
| agn | agnosia |
| FATS | face and thigh squeeze [position for bag mask ventilation] |
| fcc | face-centered-cubic |
| FACE | Fluorophore-Assisted-Carbohydrate Electrophoresis |
|---|---|
| FM | face mask |
| PF | protoplasmic face |
| agnosia | <neurology> Loss of ability to recognise objects, people, sounds, shapes or smells. Usually classified according to the sense or senses affected (hearing, sight, smell, taste, touch). Symptom common to tumours of the parietal lobe of the cerebral hemispheres. (16 Dec 1997) |
|---|---|
| auditory agnosia | The inability to recognise sounds, words, or music; caused by a lesion of the auditory cortex of the temporal lobe. (05 Mar 2000) |
| visual agnosia | The inability to recognise objects by sight; usually caused by bilateral parieto-occipital lesions. Synonym: optic agnosia. (05 Mar 2000) |
| visual-spatial agnosia | The inability to localise objects or to appreciate distance, motion, and spatial relationships; caused by lesion in the occipital lobe. Compare: simultanagnosia. (05 Mar 2000) |
| colour agnosia | The inability to name or identify specific colours by sight; caused by lesions of the dominant occipital and temporal lobes. (05 Mar 2000) |
| position agnosia | The failure to recognise the posture of an extremity. (05 Mar 2000) |
| optic agnosia | The inability to recognise objects by sight; usually caused by bilateral parieto-occipital lesions. Synonym: optic agnosia. (05 Mar 2000) |
| tactile agnosia | The inability to recognise objects by touch, in the presence of intact cutaneous and proprioceptive hand sensation; caused by lesion in the contralateral parietal lobe. Synonym: astereognosis, stereoagnosis, stereoanesthesia. (05 Mar 2000) |
| finger agnosia | The inability to name or recognise individual fingers, of one's own or of other persons; most often caused by lesion of or near the angular gyrus of the dominant hemisphere. (05 Mar 2000) |
| localization agnosia | The inability to recognise the area where the skin is touched. (05 Mar 2000) |
| bird face | bird face, abnormal shortness or recession of the mandible (27 Sep 1997) |
| masklike face | The expressionless or masklike facies characteristic of parkinsonism. Synonym: masklike face. (05 Mar 2000) |
| partial face-sparing lipodystrophy | A syndrome beginning at puberty that resembles total lipodystrophy but is inherited as an autosomal or X-linked dominant form. (05 Mar 2000) |
| regions of face | The topographical subdivisions of the face, including nasal, oral, mental, orbital, infraorbital, buccal, and zygomatic. Synonym: regiones faciales. (05 Mar 2000) |
| P face | Method of specimen preparation for the electron microscope in which rapidly frozen tissue is cracked so as to produce a fracture plane through the specimen. The surface of the fracture plane is then shadowed by heavy metal vapour, strengthened by a carbon film and the underlying specimen is digested away, leaving a replica that can be picked up on a grid and examined in the transmission electron microscope. The great advantage of the method is that the fracture plane tends to pass along the centre of lipid bilayers and it is therefore possible to get en face views of membranes that reveal the pattern of Integral membrane proteins. The E face is the outer lamella of the plasma membrane viewed as if from within the cell, the P face the inner lamella viewed from outside the cell. Fracture planes also often pass along lines of weakness such as the interface between cytoplasm and membrane, so that outer and inner membrane surfaces can be viewed. Further information about the structure can be revealed by freeze etching. Extremely rapid freezing followed by deep etching has allowed the structure of the cytoplasm to be studied without the artefacts that might be introduced by fixation. (18 Nov 1997) |
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