| ¿µ¹® | bypass | ÇÑ±Û | µÎ¸§¼ö¼ú, ¿¡µ¹±â |
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| ¼³¸í | 1. Á¤»óÀûÀÎ ÇØºÎÇÐÀû °æ·Î·ÎºÎÅÍ Ç÷¾×À̳ª ±× ¹ÛÀÇ ¾×üÀÇ È帧À» Àüȯ½ÃŰ´Â ¿Ü°úÀû ÀýÂ÷ ÁßÀÇ ÇϳªÀÌ´Ù. ÀϽÃÀûÀ̰ųª ¿µ±¸ÀûÀÏ ¼ö ÀÖÀ¸¸ç, Ãø·Î ¼ö¼úÀº ÀϹÝÀûÀ¸·Î ½ÉÀå°ú ¼Òȱ⠺´ÀÇ Ä¡·á·Î¼ ¼öÇàÇÑ´Ù. 2. Á¤»ó Åë·Î¿¡ ÀÖ´Â ³»¿ë¹°À» ÇÑ ºÎºÐ¿¡¼ ´Ù¸¥ ¸Õ ºÎºÐÀ¸·Î °¡´Â ±æÀ» º¯°æÇÏ´Â °Í. |
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| ¿µ¹® | coronary artery bypass surgery | ÇÑ±Û | ½ÉÀ嵿¸Æ µÎ¸§±æ¼ö¼ú, ½ÉÀ嵿¸Æ¿ìȸ·Î ¼ö¼ú |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼³¸í | ½ÉÀ嵿¸ÆÀ̶õ ½ÉÀå¿¡ Ç÷¾×À» °ø±ÞÇÏ´Â µ¿¸ÆÀ» À̸£´Â ¸»·Î ½ÉÀ忪½Ã ±ÙÀ°ÀÌ¾î¼ Ç÷¾×À» °ø±Þ¹Þ¾Æ¾ß ¼öÃàÀ» ÇÒ ¼ö°¡ ÀÖ´Ù. ½ÉÀ嵿¸ÆÀÌ Á¼¾ÆÁú °æ¿ì¿¡´Â ½ÉÀå¿¡ Ç÷¾×ÀÇ °ø±ÞÀÌ ¾ø¾îÁ®¼ ½ÉÀ嵿¸Æº´À̶ó´Â º´À» ÀÏÀ¸Å²´Ù. ½ÉÀ嵿¸Æ µÎ¸§±æ¼ö¼ú(coronary artery bypass surgery)À̶õ ½ÉÀ嵿¸Æº´¿¡¼ Á¼¾ÆÁø Ç÷°üºÎÀ§ ¶§¹®¿¡ »ý±â´Â Ç÷¾×°ø±ÞÀÌ Àû¾îÁø ºÎÀ§¿¡ Ç÷¾×°ø±ÞÀ» ¿øÈ°ÇÏ°Ô ÇØÁÖ´Â ¼ö¼ú¹æ¹ýÀ¸·Î ´Ù¸¥ ºÎÀ§ÀÇ Ç÷°üÀ̳ª ÀΰøÀûÀÎ ¹°ÁúÀ» ÀÌ¿ëÇØ¼ Á¼¾ÆÁø Ç÷°üºÎÀ§ÀÇ ¾Õ, µÚ¸¦ ¿¬°áÇÏ¿© Ç÷·ù°¡ Á¼¾ÆÁø ºÎºÐÀ» Áö³ªÁö ¾Ê°í »õ·Î ¿¬°áµÈ ºÎºÐÀ» Áö³ª°Ô ÇÏ¿© Ç÷·ù¸¦ Áõ°¡½ÃŰ´Â ¹æ¹ýÀÌ´Ù. |
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| EC-IC bypass | Extra-Cranial Intra-Cranial bypass |
|---|---|
| CABG | Coronary Artery Bypass Graft |
| CPB | Cardiopulmonary Bypass |
| WPW Syndrome | Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome ? CIx 1. Drugs; AV Conduct... |
| A-C | acromioclavicular; adult-versus-child; aortocoronary bypass |
| AGT | Alanine-Glyoxylate Aminotransferase |
|---|---|
| BVB | Biventricular bypass |
| BARI | Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation |
| CABG | CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS GRAFT |
| CABG | CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS GRAFTING |
| alanine-glyoxylate aminotransferase | <enzyme> Do not confuse with serine-pyruvate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.51), even though they may be products of the same gene; index whichever is discussed or both Registry number: EC 2.6.1.44 Synonym: pyruvate (glyoxylate) aminotransferase, kynurenine-glyoxylate aminotransferase, alanine-glyoxylate aminotransferase 1,dimethylarginine pyruvate aminotransferase, alanine-glyoxylate transaminase 1,alanine-glyoxylate aminotransferase 2 (26 Jun 1999) |
|---|---|
| glyoxylate aminotransferase | <enzyme> Various amino acids can serve as amino donors; with serine it is EC 2.6.1.45; best donors for rat liver and kidney enzyme are leucine and phenylalanine Registry number: EC 2.6.1.- (26 Jun 1999) |
| glyoxylate cycle | <biochemistry> Metabolic pathway present in bacteria and in the glyoxisome of plants, in which two acetyl CoA molecules are converted to a 4 carbon dicarboxylic acid, initially succinate. Includes two enzymes not found elsewhere, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase. Permits net synthesis of carbohydrates from lipid and hence is prominent in those seeds in which lipid is the principal food reserve. (18 Nov 1997) |
| glyoxylate synthetase | <enzyme> Catalyses the condensation of two formate molecules into glyoxylate; a tetramer with mw of 160 kD with a subunit mw of 40 kD; isolated from green potato-tuber chloroplasts Registry number: EC 4.1.3.- (26 Jun 1999) |
| glyoxylate transacetylase | <enzyme> An important enzyme in the glyoxylic acid cycle which reversibly catalyses the synthesis of l-malate from acetyl-CoA and glyoxylate. Chemical name: L-Malate glyoxylate-lyase (CoA-acetylating) Registry number: EC 4.1.3.2 (12 Dec 1998) |
| serine-glyoxylate aminotransferase | <enzyme> Pea enzyme; also uses asparagine as amino donor with either pyruvate or glyoxylate as acceptor Registry number: EC 2.6.1.45 Synonym: asparagine aminotransferase (26 Jun 1999) |
| aortocoronary bypass | Vein grafts or other conduits shunting blood from the aorta to branches of the coronary arteries, to increase the flow beyond the local obstruction. Synonym: aortocoronary bypass. (05 Mar 2000) |
| aortoiliac bypass | An operation in which a vascular prosthesis is united with the aorta and iliac artery to relieve obstruction of the lower abdominal aorta, its bifurcation, and the proximal iliac branches. (05 Mar 2000) |
| aortorenal bypass | Insertion of a graft of autogenous artery, saphenous vein, or synthetic material between the aorta and the distal renal artery, to circumvent an obstruction of the renal artery. (05 Mar 2000) |
| bowel bypass | A surgical procedure consisting of the anastomosis of the proximal part of the jejunum to the distal portion of the ileum, so as to bypass the nutrient-absorptive segment of the small intestine, to treat morbid obesity. (12 Dec 1998) |
| bowel bypass syndrome | <syndrome> Fever, chills, malaise, and inflammatory cutaneous papules and pustules on the extremities and upper trunk, sometimes with polyarthralgia, with recurrent symptoms following bowel bypass surgery. (05 Mar 2000) |
| bypass | 1. A shunt or auxiliary flow. 2. <surgery> To create new flow from one structure to another through a diversionary channel. A by-passage, for a pipe, or other channel, to divert circulation from the usual course. See: shunt. Source: Websters Dictionary (20 Jun 2000) |
| bypass graft | <surgery> An alternative blood vessel that is created by a surgeon to reroute blood flow. Grafts may be synthetic (dacryon) or autologous (a vein from the patients own leg used as a substitute for the diseased vessel). (20 Mar 1998) |
| cardiopulmonary bypass | <procedure> This refers to the placement of the patient onto extracorporeal membrane oxygenation to bypass the heart and lungs as, for example, in open heart surgery. This device takes blood from the body, diverts it through a heart-lung machine (a pump-oxygenator) which oxygenates the blood prior to returning it to the systemic circulation under pressure. The machine does the work both of the heart (pump blood) and the lungs (supply red blood cells with oxygen). This allows the surgeon adequate time to perform primary heart surgery on a temporarily nonfunctioning heart. (20 Jun 1998) |
| gastric bypass | Surgical procedure in which the stomach is transected high on the body. The resulting proximal remnant is joined to a loop of the jejunum in an end-to-side anastomosis. This procedure is used frequently in the treatment of morbid obesity. (12 Dec 1998) |
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