| H3, 3H, | H3 tritium |
|---|---|
| TNMR | tritium nuclear magnetic resonance |
| AGE | acrylamide gel; acute gastroenteritis; advanced glycation end product; agarose gel electrophoresis; ... |
| GFR | Glomerular Filtration Rate; »ç±¸Ã¼ ¿©°úÀ² 25 % °¨¼Ò½Ã Clinical Manifestation 5... |
| SCUF | Slow Continous Ultra-Filtration |
| GFC | gel filtration chromatography |
|---|---|
| CFC | Capillary filtration coefficient |
| DFPP | Double Filtration Plasmapheresis |
| FF | Filtration Fraction |
| FL | Filtration leukapheresis |
| gel filtration | <molecular biology> An important method for separating molecules according to molecular size by percolating the solution through beads of solvent permeated polymer that has pores of similar size to the solvent molecules. Unlike a continous filter that retards flow according to molecular size, separation is achieved because molecules that can enter the beads take a longer path (i.e. Are retarded) than those that cannot. Typical gels for protein separation are made from polyacrylamide or from flexible (Sephadex) or rigid (agarose, Sepharose) sugar polymers. The size separation range is determined by the degree of cross linking of the gel. (05 May 1997) |
|---|---|
| gel filtration chromatography | See: gel filtration. (05 Mar 2000) |
| tritium | <physics, radiobiology> Long lived radioactive isotope of hydrogen (half life 12.26 years). Weak emitter, very suitable for autoradiography and relatively easy to incorporate into complex molecules. (18 Nov 1997) |
| tritium-breeding ratio | <radiobiology> The amount of tritium generated by the breeding blanket of a D-T fusion reactor, divided by the amount of tritium burned in the reactor. A tritium breeding ration greater than unity is necessary for self-sufficient fueling. (09 Oct 1997) |
| tritium inventory | <radiobiology> Total quantity of tritium stored in a facility. Minimising this radioactive inventory is a key reactor design issue. (09 Oct 1997) |
| glomerular filtration rate | <nephrology> Measure of the kidneys' ability to filter and remove waste products. (09 Oct 1997) |
| filtration | The passage of a liquid through a filter, accomplished by gravity, pressure or vacuum (suction). (18 Nov 1997) |
| filtration angle | The acute angle between the iris and the cornea at the periphery of the anterior chamber of the eye. Synonym: angulus iridocornealis, angle of iris, angulus iridis, filtration angle. (05 Mar 2000) |
| filtration coefficient | A measure of a membrane's permeability to water; specifically, the volume of fluid filtered in unit time through a unit area of membrane per unit pressure difference, taking into account both hydraulic and osmotic pressures. (05 Mar 2000) |
| filtration fraction | The fraction of the plasma entering the kidney that filters into the lumen of the renal tubules, determined by dividing the glomerular filtration rate by the renal plasma flow; normally, it is around 0.17. (05 Mar 2000) |
| filtration slits | The intercellular clefts between the interdigitating pedicels of podocytes; they are part of the filtration barrier of renal corpuscles. Synonym: filtration slits. (05 Mar 2000) |
| filtration space | |
| agar-gel reaction | <immunology> The reaction between an antibody and an antigen during an immunology lab procedure where the two are allowed to diffuse toward each other through an agar-gel medium. Lines of precipitation form in the places on the gel where the two react with each other and shows where the reaction has occurred. (09 Oct 1997) |
| agarose gel electrophoresis | <procedure> A type of electrophoresis that uses a matrix of highly purified agar to separate large nucleotides in size. (06 May 1997) |
| aluminum hydroxide gel | A suspension containing Al2O3, mainly in the form of aluminum hydroxide, used as an antacid; a dried form, with the same use, is obtained by drying the product of interaction in aqueous solution of an aluminum salt with ammonium or sodium carbonate. (05 Mar 2000) |
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