| BIU | barrier isolation unit |
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| isol | isolation, isolated |
| IT | immunological test; immunotherapy; implantation test; individual therapy; information technology; in... |
| LIM | line isolation monitor |
| VI | Virus isolation |
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| HVI-CHP | hepatic venous isolation and charcoal hemoperfusion |
| isolation | <procedure> Any procedure in which a given species of organism, present in a particular sample or environment, is obtained in pure culture. (15 Oct 1997) |
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| gene isolation | A condition caused by a pair of alleles that, when present in the heterozygous form, inhibit the fertility of the organism that possessesthem. (09 Oct 1997) |
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| patient isolation | The segregation of patients with communicable or other diseases for a specified time. Isolation may be strict, in which movement and social contacts are limited; modified, where an effort to control specified aspects of care is made in order to prevent cross infection; or reverse, where the patient is secluded in a controlled or germ-free environment in order to protect him or her from cross infection. (12 Dec 1998) |
| social isolation | The separation of individuals or groups resulting in the lack of or minimizing of social contact and/or communication. This separation may be accomplished by physical separation, by social barriers and by psychological mechanisms. In the latter, there may be interaction but no real communication. (12 Dec 1998) |
| isolation |
a state of separation between persons or groups the act of isolating something; setting something apart from others a feeling of being disliked and alone (psychiatry) a defense mechanism in which memory of an unacceptable act or impulse is separated from the emotion originally associated with it a country's withdrawal from international politics; "he opposed a policy of American isolation"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| isolation-perfusion technique |
a technique for administering high doses of a chemotherapy agent to a region while protecting the patient from toxicity: the blood flow of the region is isolated, as by application of a tourniquet to an extremity, and the region is perfused by means of a pump-oxygenator; the drug is added to the perfusate, which may be heated by a heat exchanger to provide hyperthermia.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_hl_dorlands.jspz...
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| isolation |
1. The process of getting an organism in pure culture. 2. The pure culture itself. (17)
Ãâó: ppathw3.cals.cornell.edu/glossary/Defs_I.htm
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| isolation |
Separation of an ill person who has a communicable disease (eg, SARSpatient) from those who are healthy. Isolation prevents transmission of infection to others and also allows for the focused delivery of specialized health care to ill persons.
Ãâó: www.cdc.gov/ncidod/sars/guidance/core/app2.htm
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| isolation |
A defense mechanism operating unconsciously central to obsessive-compulsive phenomena in which the affect is detached from an idea and rendered unconscious, leaving the conscious idea colourless and emotionally neutral.
Ãâó: www.indianpsychiatry.com/Glossary.htm
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| isolation | the act of isolating something |
|---|---|
| isolation | a country's withdrawal from internal politics |
| isolation | preference for seclusion or isolation |
| isolation | a feeling of being disliked and alone |
| isolation | (psychiatry) a defense mechanism in which memory of an unacceptable act or impulse is separated from the emotion originally associated with it |
| isolation | a state of separation between persons or groups |
| isolation | a policy of nonparticipation in international economic and political relations |
| isolation | an advocate of isolationism in international affairs |
| isolation | of or relating to isolationism |
| isolation | of or relating to isolationism |
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