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| LAF | laminar air flow; Latin American female; leukocyte-activating factor; lymphocyte-activating factor |
|---|---|
| LAFR | laminar air flow room |
| LAFU | laminar air flow unit |
| CBF | capillary blood flow; cerebral blood flow; ciliary beat frequency; coronary blood flow; cortical blo... |
| HBF | hand blood flow; hemispheric blood flow; hemoglobinuric bilious fever; hepatic blood flow; hypothala... |
| LAF | Laminar Air Flow |
|---|---|
| IGLE | intraganglionic laminar ending |
| CBF | 1--Cerebral blood flow |
| ATBF | Adipose tissue blood flow |
| ABF | Aortic blood flow |
| laminar flow | The relative motion of elements of a fluid along smooth parallel paths, which occurs at lower values of Reynolds number. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| laminar air flow unit | An air-filtering system used at some transplant facilities to remove particulate matter and fungi from the air. (16 Dec 1997) |
|---|---|
| laminar | 1. Arranged in plates or laminae. Synonym: laminated. 2. Relating to any lamina. (05 Mar 2000) |
| laminar cortical necrosis | The breaking down of a definite cell layer in the cerebral cortex, encountered typically after temporary cardiac arrest or perinatal hypoxia. (05 Mar 2000) |
| laminar cortical sclerosis | A degeneration of nerve fibres in the corona radiata in a laminar pattern. (05 Mar 2000) |
| average flow rate | <physiology> The flow rate determined by dividing the total volume passed in a time period divided by the time period, usually quoted in mls per minute. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Bingham flow | The flow characteristics exhibited by a Bingham plastic. (05 Mar 2000) |
| blood flow velocity | A value equal to the total volume flow divided by the cross-sectional area of the vascular bed. (12 Dec 1998) |
| gene flow | The movement of genes from one population to another viainterbreeding. (09 Oct 1997) |
| maximal expiratory flow rate | <chest medicine, physiology> Measurement of rate of airflow during the first liter expired after the first 200 ml have been exhausted during a forced vital capacity determination. Common abbreviations are MEFR, FEF 202-1200, and fef 0.2-1.2. Acronym: MEFR (21 Jun 2000) |
| maximal expiratory flow-volume curve | <chest medicine> Curves depicting maximal expiratory flow in liters/second at each point of lung inflation (expressed in liters or percentage of forced vital capacity) during a forced vital capacity determination. Common abbreviation is mefv. (12 Dec 1998) |
| maximal midexpiratory flow rate | Measurement of rate of airflow over the middle half of a forced vital capacity determination (from the 25 percent level to the 75 percent level). Common abbreviations are mmfr and fef 25%-75%. (12 Dec 1998) |
| renal blood flow, effective | The amount of blood flowing to the parts of the kidney that are involved with the production of constituents of urine. It is that portion of the total renal blood flow that perfuses functional renal tissue (e.g., the glomeruli). It should be differentiated from renal plasma flow, effective which is based on the amount of plasma rather than on total renal blood. (12 Dec 1998) |
| renal plasma flow | <physiology> The amount of plasma that perfuses the kidneys per unit time, approximately 10% greater than effective renal plasma flow. It should be differentiated from the renal blood flow which refers to the total volume of blood flowing through the renal vasculature, while the renal plasma flow refers to the rate of plasma flow. (12 Dec 1998) |
| peak expiratory flow | The maximum flow at the outset of forced expiration, which is reduced in proportion to the severity of airway obstruction, as in asthma. (05 Mar 2000) |
| peak expiratory flow rate | Measurement of the maximum rate of airflow attained during a forced vital capacity determination. Common abbreviations are pefr and pfr. (12 Dec 1998) |
| laminar flow |
nonturbulent streamline flow in parallel layers (laminae)
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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|---|---|
| laminar flow |
(Also called sheet flow, streamline flow.) A flow regime in which fluid motion is smooth and orderly, and in which adjacent layers or laminas slip past each other with little mixing between them. Exchange of material across laminar layers occurs by molecular diffusion, a process about 10 6 times less effective than turbulence. Laminar flow can be easily predicted as velocity increases at a steady rate from a boundary. This contrasts with the chaotic and random nature of turbulent flow. ...
Ãâó: amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/browse
|
| laminar flow |
Air that flows in a single pass, in a single direction, with uniform velocity through a cleanroom or clean zone with generally parallel streamline. See also Unidirectional Airflow
Ãâó: https://wpb1.webproductionsinc.com/danforthfilter/...
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| laminar flow |
A type of flow in which the fluid moves in parallel lines. Contrast with turbulent flow.
Ãâó: imnh.isu.edu/digitalatlas/glossary/letter.asp
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| laminar flow |
Nonturbulent flow of air in layers (flowing in a vertical direction in the case of a biosafety hood).
Ãâó: www.hardydiagnostics.com/Glossary-L.html
|
| laminar flow | nonturbulent streamline flow in parallel layers (laminae) |
|---|---|
| laminar flow | a clean room free of all extraneous particles |
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