| ¿µ¹® | affect | ÇÑ±Û | Á¤µ¿ |
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| ECG | Electro-Cardio-Graphy(-Gram); ½ÉÀüµµ = EKG 1. Conducting System Structu... |
|---|---|
| M/A | male, altered [animal]; mood and/or affect |
| MAACL | Multiple Affect Adjective Check List |
| MAPS | Make a Picture Story [test]; Multidimensional Affect and Pain Survey |
| NPV | negative predictive value; pressure value; negative pressure ventilation; net present value; nuclear... |
| NA | Negative Affect |
|---|---|
| MAACL | Multiple Affect Adjective Check List |
| PA | Positive Affect |
| a | affect |
| CNS | Coagulase Negative Staphylococci |
| affect | The feeling-tone accompaniment of an idea or mental representation. It is the most direct psychic derivative of instinct and the psychic representative of the various bodily changes by means of which instincts manifest themselves. (12 Dec 1998) |
|---|---|
| affect displacement | A shift of feeling from the object originally arousing it to some associated object. (05 Mar 2000) |
| affect display | Facial expressions, postures, and gestures indicating emotional states. (05 Mar 2000) |
| affect hunger | Emotional hunger for maternal love and feelings of protection and care implied in the mother-child relationship. (05 Mar 2000) |
| affect memory | The emotional element recurring whenever a significant experience is recalled. (05 Mar 2000) |
| affect spasms | Rarely used term for spasmodic attacks of laughing, weeping, and screaming, accompanied by marked tachypnea. (05 Mar 2000) |
| blunted affect | A disturbance in mood seen in schizophrenic patients manifested by shallowness and a severe reduction in the expression of feeling. (05 Mar 2000) |
| inappropriate affect | An emotional tone or outward emotional reaction out of harmony with the idea, object, or thought accompanying it. (05 Mar 2000) |
| flat affect | The absence of or diminution in the amount of emotional tone or outward emotional reaction typically shown by others or oneself under similar circumstances; a milder form is termed blunted affect. (05 Mar 2000) |
| labile affect | The rapid shifts in outward emotional expressions; often associated with organic brain syndromes such as intoxication. (05 Mar 2000) |
| bone scan: falsely negative metastases | <radiology> Anaplastic tumours, reticulum cell sarcoma, renal cell carcinoma, thyroid carcinoma, histiocytosis, neuroblastoma, multiple myeloma (positive scan usually due to recent or impending fracture) (12 Dec 1998) |
| ventilators, negative-pressure | Body ventilators that assist ventilation by applying intermittent subatmospheric pressure around the thorax, abdomen, or airway and periodically expand the chest wall and inflate the lungs. They are relatively simple to operate and do not require tracheostomy. These devices include the tank ventilators ("iron lung"), portalung, pneumowrap, and chest cuirass ("tortoise shell"). (12 Dec 1998) |
| gram-negative | <microbiology> A common class of bacteria normally found in the gastrointestinal tract that can be responsible for disease in man (sepsis). Bacteria are considered to be gram-negative because of their characteristic staining properties under the microscope, where they either do not stain or are decolourised by alcohol during Gram's method of staining. This is a primary characteristic of bacteria that have a cell wall composed of a thin layer of peptidoglycan covered by an outer membrane of lipoprotein and lipopolysaccharide containing endotoxin. The gram staining characteristics of bacteria have resulted in an important classification system for the identification of bacteria. See: gram-positive (06 Oct 1997) |
| gram-negative aerobic bacteria | <microbiology> A large group of aerobic bacteria which show up as pink (negative) when treated by the gram-staining method. (12 Dec 1998) |
| gram-negative aerobic rods and cocci | <microbiology> A group of gram-negative bacteria consisting of rod- and coccus-shaped cells. They are both aerobic (able to grow under an air atmosphere) and microaerophilic (grow better in low concentrations of oxygen) under nitrogen-fixing conditions but, when supplied with a source of fixed nitrogen, they grow as aerobes. (12 Dec 1998) |
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