MEDICAL
DICTIONARY
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E F
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U V
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Y Z
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F: The symbol for the coefficient of inbreeding,
a way of gauging how close two people are genetically to one
another. For more, see: Coefficient of inbreeding.
Facelift
surgery: Procedure to make the face appear younger. Recovery
time is usually one week. Results last approximately ten years.
Additional procedures to supplement the facelift—including
necklift, blepharoplasty (eyelid surgery), liposuction, autologous
fat injection, removal of buccal (cheek) fat pad, forehead
lift, browlift, chemical or laser peel, and malar (cheek),
submalar or chin implants—may be necessary to achieve
the desired results.
Facelift
surgery risks: Although infrequent, the risks and
complications of facelift surgery include: bleeding, hematoma,
bruising; infection; neurological dysfunction (loss of muscle
function or sensation), which is usually temporary; widened
or thickened scar; loss of hair (around the incision site),
asymmetry (unevenness between two sides); and skin necrosis
(loss of skin from tissue death).
Facies:
A direct borrowing from the Latin, facies means face.
Factor,
rheumatoid: Rheumatoid factor is an antibody that is measurable
in the blood. It is commonly used as a blood test for the
diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis. Rheumatoid factor is present
in about 80% of adults (but a much lower proportion of children)
with rheumatoid arthritis. It is also present in patients
with other connective tissue diseases (such as systemic lupus
erythematosus) and in some with infectious diseases (such
as infectious hepatitis).
Factor
VIII: A coagulation (clotting) factor. Classic hemophilia
(hemophilia A) is due to a congenital deficiency in the amount
(or activity) of factor VIII. Factor VIII is also known as
antihemophiliac factor (AHF) or antihemophiliac globulin (AHG).
The gene for factor VIII (that for classic hemophilia) is
on the X chromosome so females can be silent carriers without
symptoms and males can be hemophiliacs.
FAE
(fetal alcohol effects): A softer diagnosis than fetal alcohol
syndrome (FAS). The diagnosis of possible FAE is considered
when: 1. The person has some signs of FAS; 2. The person does
not meet all of the necessary criteria for FAS; and 3. There
is a history of alcohol exposure before birth.
Falciparum
malaria: The most dangerous type of malaria. Persons
carrying the sickle cell gene have some protection against
malaria. Persons with a gene for hemoglobin C (another abnormal
hemoglobin like sickle hemoglobin), thalassemia trait or deficiency
of the enzyme glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) are
thought also to have partial protection against malaria.
Fallopian
tubes: The fallopian tubes normally transport the
egg of the female from the egg sac, or ovary, to the womb,
or uterus. Normal tubes have small hair like projections on
the lining cells called cilia. These cilia are important to
movement of the egg through the fallopian tube and into the
uterus. If the tubal cilia are damaged by infection, the egg
may not get 'pushed along' normally and can settle in the
tube. Likewise, if infection causes partial blockage of the
tube with scar tissue, this can also act to prevent the egg
from getting to the uterus. Any process that narrows the tube
and thus decrease the caliber of the passage way can increase
the chance of an ectopic pregnancy. Examples of these would
be endometriosis, tumors, or scar tissue in the pelvis (pelvic
adhesions) that cause twisting or chinking of the tube.
Familial:
A condition that is more common in certain families than in
the general population.
Familial
adenomatous polyposis (FAP): Genetic disease with numerous
precancerous polyps in the colon and rectum. Also called familial
polyposis.
Familial
cancer: Cancer or a predisposition (tendency) to
it that runs in families.
Familial
hypercholesterolemia: This is the most common inherited
type of hyperlipidemia (high lipid levels in blood). It is
recognizable in childhood. Familial hypercholesterolemia is
due to genetic defects in the receptor (target) for LDL (low
density lipoprotein). Familial hypercholesterolemia predisposes
to premature arteriosclerosis including coronary artery disease
with heart attacks at an unusually young age.
Familial
Mediterranean Fever (FMF): A inherited disorder of unknown
cause featuring short recurring bouts of fever together with
pain in the joints, chest or abdomen. Between attacks, the
patient seems healthy (when FMF is more difficult to diagnose).
The gene for FMF (autosomal recessive, on chromosome 16) was
reportedly identified in August, 1997. FMF is found in persons
of Mediterranean ethnic background.
Familial
mental retardation 1:
See FMR1.
Familial
mental retardation protein: See FMRP.
Familial
polyposis: An inherited condition in which several hundred
polyps develop in the colon and rectum.
FAS
(fetal alcohol syndrome): The sum total of the damage
done to the child before birth as a result of the mother drinking
alcohol during pregnancy. FAS always involves brain damage,
impaired growth, and head and face abnormalities. No amount
of alcohol has been proven safe during pregnancy. Women who
are or may become pregnant are advised to avoid alcohol.
FAS
(fetal alcohol syndrome) diagnosis: To establish the diagnosis
of FAS, the following signs must be present: 1. Small size
and weight before and after birth (pre- and postnatal growth
retardation); 2. Brain involvement with evidence for delay
in development, intellectual impairment, or neurologic abnormalities;
and 3. Specific appearance of the head and face with at least
2 of the following groups of signs: a. Small head size (microcephaly);
b. Small eyes (microphthalmia) and/or short eye openings (palpebral
fissures); c. Underdevelopment of the upper lip, indistinct
groove between the lip and nose (the philtrum), and flattened
cheekbones.
Fascia:
The fascia is a lining tissue under the skin that covers a
surface of underlying tissues. Fascia also encloses muscles.
Inflammation of the fascia is referred to as fasciitis.
Fasciitis:
Inflammation of the fascia (a lining tissue under the skin
that covers a surface of underlying tissues).
Fasciitis,
eosinophilic (Shulman’s syndrome): A disease which leads
to inflammation and thickening of the skin and fascia. (The
fascia is a lining tissue under the skin that covers a surface
of underlying tissues. When the fascia is inflamed, the condition
is referred to as "fasciitis.") In eosinophilic
fasciitis, the involved fascia is inflamed with the eosinophil
white blood cells. There is progressive thickening, and often
redness and warmth, and hardness of the skin surface.
Fasciitis,
plantar: Inflammation of the plantar fascia (fasciitis), the
"bowstring-like" tissue stretching underneath the
sole which attaches at the heel.
Fat:
Comes from the Old English faett meaning to cram or adorn.
A slang term for obese or adipose. In chemistry, fats are
compounds formed from chemicals called fatty acids. These
fats compose a greasy, solid material found in animal tissues
and in some plants. Fats are the major component of flabby
material of our bodies, commonly known as blubber.
Fetal
circulation: The blood circulation in the fetus before birth.
Before birth, the blood from the heart headed for the lungs
in the aptly named pulmonary artery is shunted away from the
lungs and returned to the greatest of arteries, the aorta.
This arterial shunting occurs through a short vessel called
the ductus arteriosus. When the shunt is open, it is said
to be patent (pronounced pá tent). The ductus arteriosus
usually tourniquets itself off at or shortly after birth.
After closure of the ductus, blood is permitted from that
time on to course freely to the lungs. Sometimes, however,
the patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) persists and simply will
not close by itself. Surgery is then done to ligate (tie off)
the ductus PDA ligation is a closed-heart operation. Historically,
it was one of the earliest surgical procedures performed in
children with cardiovascular disease.
Fauces:
The throat. The word fauces is the plural of the Latin faux
meaning a small passage.
Fava
bean: The broad bean to which many people react adversely
with an acute hemolytic anemia with sudden breakup of red
blood cells (see Favism). Fava beans look like large tan lima
beans. They are popular in Mediterranean and Middle Eastern
cuisines, are eaten raw when very young, cooked in soups and
many other dishes, and made into fava brittle (like peanut
brittle) as candy. The botanical name for fava is Vicia fava.
Fava is Italian for bean and refers specifically to the broad
bean. Fava beans are the main commercial source of the drug
L-DOPA.
Favism:
A condition characterized by hemolytic anemia (breakup of
red blood cells) after eating fava beans (Vicia fava) or being
exposed to the pollen of the fava plant. This dangerous reaction
occurs exclusively in people with a deficiency of the enzyme
glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD), an X-linked genetic
trait. However, not all G6PD-deficient families appear at
risk for favism, indicating the additional need for a single
autosomal (not X-linked) gene to create the susceptibility
to favism of G6PD-deficient persons. The active hemolytic
principle in fava beans is > likely DOPA-quinone. Differences
in susceptibility to favism may be related to differences
in the enzymatic system that converts L-DOPA to DOPA-quinone.
Febrile:
Feverish.
Fecal
occult blood test: A test to check for hidden blood in stool.
(Fecal refers to stool. Occult means hidden.)
Feces:
The proper medical term for the "excrement discharged
from the intestines." The word "feces" (or
its English version "faeces") in Shakespeare in
this context until the 17th century "feces" merely
meant the "dregs or sediment" of wine or some other
fermented product.
Fecund:
Fruitful. Just as a writer is prolific, a woman may be fecund,
able to reproduce plentifully.
Fecundity:
The ability to have children, usually lots of them with ease.
Feedback:
Many biologic processes are controlled by feedback, just as
the temperature in a home from a furnace is regulated by a
thermostat.
Feeding,
breast: The ability of the breast to produce milk diminishes
soon after childbirth without the stimulation of breastfeeding.
Immunity factors in breast milk can help the baby to fight
off infections. Breast milk contains vitamins, minerals, and
enzymes which aid the baby’s digestion. Breast and formula
feeding can be used together.
Feet:
As a measure of length, the plural of foot. See Foot.
Femoral:
Having to do with the femur.
Femur:
The femur is a large bone of the lower extremity that extends
from the hip to the knee.
Female:
The traditional definition of female was "an individual
of the sex that bears young" or "that produces ova
or eggs". However, things are not so simple today. Female
can be defined by physical appearance, by chromosome constitution
(see Female chromosome complement), or by gender identification.
Female chromosome complement: The large majority of females
have a 46, XX chromosome complement (46 chromosomes including
two X chromosomes). A minority of females have other chromosome
constitutions such as 45,X (45 chromosomes including only
one X chromosome) and 47,XXX (47 chromosomes including three
X chromosomes).
Fenstration:
Literally, the making of a window -- fenestra in Latin (and
fenetre in French) is a window -- fenestration refers to the
creation of a new opening.
Ferritin:
A blood protein that serves as an indicator of the amount
of iron stored in the body.
Fetal
alcohol effects (FAE): A softer diagnosis than fetal alcohol
syndrome (FAS). The diagnosis of possible FAE is considered
when: 1. The person has some signs of FAS; 2. The person does
not meet all of the necessary criteria for FAS; and 3. There
is a history of alcohol exposure before birth.
Fetal
alcohol syndrome (FAS): The sum total of the damage done to
the child before birth as a result of the mother drinking
alcohol during pregnancy. FAS always involves brain damage,
impaired growth, and head and face abnormalities. No amount
of alcohol has been proven safe during pregnancy. Women who
are or may become pregnant are advised to avoid alcohol.
Fetal
alcohol syndrome (FAS) diagnosis: To establish the diagnosis
of FAS, the following signs must be present: 1. Small size
and weight before and after birth (pre- and postnatal growth
retardation); 2. Brain involvement with evidence for delay
in development, intellectual impairment, or neurologic abnormalities;
and 3. Specific appearance of the head and face with at least
2 of the following groups of signs: a. Small head size (microcephaly);
b. Small eyes (microphthalmia) and/or short eye openings (palpebral
fissures); c. Underdevelopment of the upper lip, indistinct
groove between the lip and nose (the philtrum), and flattened
cheekbones.
Fertile:
Able to conceive and bear offspring.
Fertility:
The ability to have children.
Fertilization:
Fertilization is the process of combining the male gamete,
or "sperm," with the female gamete, or "ovum."
The product of this combination is a cell called a zygote.
Fetal
distress: Compromise of the fetus during the antepartum period
(before labor) or intrapartum period (birth process).
Fetal
mortality rate: The ratio of fetal deaths divided by the sum
of the births (the live births + the fetal deaths) in that
year. In the United States, the fetal mortality rate plummeted
from 19.2 per 1,000 births in 1950 to 9.2 per 1,000 births
in 1980.
Fetoprotein,
Alpha-: A plasma protein, alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) is normally
produced by the fetus. The level of AFP in the blood serum
of pregnant women provides a screening test for open neural
tube defects (anencephaly and spina bifida) and for Down syndrome
(and other chromosome abnormalities). The maternal serum AFP
(MSAFP) tends to be high with open neural tube defects and
low with Down syndrome. AFP is also paradoxically produced
by liver tumors (hepatomas) and germ cell tumors (teratocarcinoma
and embryonal cell carcinomas) and so can be used to help
detect and monitor the treatment of these tumors.
Fetoscope:
There are two types of fetoscopes: one is a fiberoptic scope
for looking directly at the fetus within the uterus; the other
is a stethescope designed for listening to the fetal heart
beat.
Fetoscopy:
A technique for looking directly at the fetus within the uterus
(using a fetoscope).
Fetus:
The postembryonic stage before birth. In humans, the embyronic
stage runs from conception to the beginning of the third month
of pregnancy and the fetal stage runs from the start of the
third month of preganancy until birth.
Fever:
Although a fever technically is any body temperature above
the normal of 98.6 degrees F. (37 degrees C.), in practice
a person is usually not considered to have a significant fever
until the temperature is above 100.4 degrees F (38 degrees
C.). The temperature is measured with a thermometer.
Fever
blisters: Common with a wide range of infectious diseases.
Fever,
five-day: See Fever, trench.
Fever,
Mediterranean: See Familial Mediterranean Fever.
Fever,
Meuse: Named for the Meuse River area, one of the great battlegounds
of World War I. See Fever, trench.
Fever,
Q: An acute (abrupt-onset), self-limited febrile illness first
reported in 1935 in Queensland, Australia. The Q is said not
to be for Queensland, but for Query since the cause of the
disease was long a query (question mark). It is now known
to be due to Coxiella burnetti, a rickettsia (a peculiar group
of bacteria). Aside from sudden onset of fever, there is headache,
malaise, and pneumonia (interstitial pneumonitis) but no rash.
Fever,
quintan: Quintan means recurring every 5 days. See Fever,
trench.
Fever,
Rocky Mountain spotted (RMSF): An acute febrile (feverish)
disease initially recognized in the Rocky Mountain states,
caused by Rickettsia rickettsii transmitted by hard-shelled
(ixodid) ticks. Occurs only in the Western Hemisphere. Anyone
frequenting tick-infested areas is at risk for RMSF. Onset
of symptoms is abrupt with headache, high fever, chills, muscle
pain. and then a rash .The rickettsiae grow within damaged
cells lining blood vessels which may become blocked by clots.
Blood vessel inflammation (vasculitis) is widespread Early
recognition of RMSF and prompt antibiotic treatment is important
in reducing mortality. Also called spotted fever, tick fever,
and tick typhus.
Fever,
shin bone: See Fever, trench.
Fever,
splenic: Known also as anthrax, splenic fever is a serious
bacterial infection. It is not primarily a human disease but
rather an infection of animals. Cattle, sheep, horses, mules,
and some wild animals are highly susceptible. Humans (and
swine) are generally resistant to anthrax. Anthrax can take
different forms. With the lung form of the disease. People
inhale the anthrax spores and, if untreated, are likely to
die. An intestinal form is caused by eating meat contaminated
with anthrax. But most human anthrax comes from skin contact
with animal products. Cutaneous (skin) anthrax was once well
known among people who handled infected animals, like farmers,
woolsorters, tanners, brushmakers and carpetmakers in the
days when the brushes and carpets were animal products. The
hallmark of skin anthrax is a carbuncle, a cluster of boils,
that ulcerates in an ugly way. Typically this lesion has a
hard black center surrounded by bright red inflammation. This
accounts for its name, "anthrax", the Greek word
for "coal."
Fever,
spotted: See Fever, Rocky Mountain spotted.
Fever,
tick: See Fever, Rocky Mountain spotted.
Fever,
trench: A louse-borne disease first recognized in the trenches
of World War I, again a major problem in the military in World
War II, seen endemically in Mexico, N. Africa, E, Europe,
and elsewhere. The cause, Rochalimaea quintana, is an unusual
rickettsia that multiplies in the gut of the body louse. Transmission
to people can occur by rubbing infected louse feces into abraded
(scuffed) skin or conjunctiva (whites of the eyes). Onset
of symptoms is sudden, with high fever, headache, back and
leg pain and a fleeting rash. Recovery takes a month or more.
Relapses are common. Also called Wolhynia fever, shin bone
fever, quintan fever, five-day fever, Meuse fever, His’
disease, His-Werner disease, Werner-His disease.
Fever,
Wolhynia: See Fever, trench.
Fiber:
The parts of fruits and vegetables that cannot be digested.
Also called bulk or roughage.
Fiber
and bowel disorders: High fiber diets help delay the progression
of diverticulosis and, at least, reduce the bouts of diverticulitis.
In many cases, it helps reduce the symptoms of the Irritable
Bowel Syndrome (IBS) (also called spastic colitis, mucus colitis,
and nervous colon syndrome.) It is generally accepted that
a diet high in fiber is protective, or at least reduces the
incidence, of colon polyps and colon cancer.
Fiber
and cholesterol: Soluble fiber substances are effective in
helping reduce the blood cholesterol. This is especially true
with oat bran, fruits, psyllium and legumes. High soluble-fiber
diets may lower cholesterol and low-density lipoproteins (
the ‘bad’ lipoproteins ) by 8% to 15%.
Fiber
and constipation: Insoluble fiber retains water in the colon,
resulting in a softer and larger stool. It is used effectively
in treating constipation resulting from poor dietary habits.
Bran is particularly rich in insoluble fiber.
Fiber
and diabetes: Soluble fibers (oat bran, apples, citrus, pears,
peas/beans, psyllium, etc.) slow down the digestion of carbohydrates
(sugars), which results in better glucose metabolism. Some
patients with the adult-onset diabetes may actually be successfully
treated with a high-fiber diet alone, and those on insulin,
can often reduce their insulin requirements by adhering to
a high-fiber diet.
Fiber,
soluble and insoluble: Fiber is classified as soluble (oat
bran, apples, citrus, pears, peas/beans, psyllium, etc.) and
insoluble (wheat bran, cabbage, peas/beans, rne through bacterial
action).
Fibril:
The diminuitive of fiber. A small fiber, a fine thread.
Fibrillation:
In matters of the heart (cardiology), incoordinate twitching
of muscle fibers.
Fibrillation,
atrial: An abnormal irregular heart rhythm whereby electrical
signals are generated chaotically throughout the upper chambers
(atria) of the heart. Although many persons with atrial fibrillation
have no symptoms, the most common symptom is palpitations,
an uncomfortable awareness of the rapid and irregular heartbeat.
Atrial fibrillation can cause blood clots that travel from
the heart to the brain, causing stroke. Treatment of atrial
fibrillation involves controlling the risk factors, medications
to slow the heart rate and/or convert the heart to normal
rhythm, and preventing complications of blood clotting.
Fibrillation,
auricular: Essentially the same as atrial fibrillation.
Fibrillation,
ventricular: An abnormal irregular heart rhythm whereby there
are very rapid uncoordinated fluttering contractions of the
lower chambers (ventricles) of the heart. Venticular fibrillation
disrupts the synchrony between the heartbeat and the pulse
beat. Ventricular fibrillation is commonly associated with
heart attacks or scarring of the heart muscle from previous
heart attack. Ventricular fibrillation is life threatening.
Fibrin:
The protein formed during normal blood clotting that is the
essence of the clot.
Fibrinogen:
The protein from which fibrin is formed/generated in normal
blood clotting
Fibroid:
A benign uterine tumor. Medically known as a leiomyoma (plural:leiomyomata)
of the uterus.
Fibromyalgia:
Also known as fibrositis, fibromyalgia chronically causes
pain, stiffness, and tenderness of muscles, tendons, and joints
without detectable inflammation. Fibromyalgia does not cause
body damage or deformity. However, undue fatigue plagues 90%
of patients with fibromyalgia. Sleep disorder is common in
patients with fibromyalgia. Fibromyalgia can be associated
with other rheumatic conditions. Irritable bowel syndrome
can occur with fibromyalgia. There is no test for the diagnosis
of fibromyalgia. Treatment is most effective when it incorporates
combinations of education, stress reduction, exercise, and
medication.
Fibrosarcoma:
A form of bone cancer that occurs mainly in middle-aged and
elderly people. It usually starts in the pelvis.
Fibrositis:
Also known as fibromyalgia, this disorder chronically causes
pain, stiffness, and tenderness of muscles, tendons, and joints
without detectable inflammation. Fibromyalgia does not cause
body damage or deformity. However, undue fatigue plagues 90%
of patients with fibromyalgia. Sleep disorder is common in
patients with fibromyalgia. Fibromyalgia can be associated
with other rheumatic conditions. Irritable bowel syndrome
can occur with fibromyalgia. There is no test for the diagnosis
of fibromyalgia. Treatment is most effective when it incorporates
combinations of education, stress reduction, exercise, and
medication.
Fibula:
The smaller of the two bones in the lower leg. The word fibula
comes from the Latin meaning clasp or brooch. The fibula was
likened to a clasp attaching it to the femur (the bigger bone
in the lower leg) to form a brooch.
Fièvre
boutonneuse: African tick typhus, one of the tick-borne rickettsial
diseases of the eastern hemisphere, similar to Rocky Mountain
spotted fever, but less severe, with fever, a small ulcer
(tache noire) at the site of the tick bite, swollen glands
nearby (satellite lymphadenopathy), and a red raised (maculopapular)
rash. The French word "boutonneuse" means pimply.
Also called boutonneuse and Conor and Bruch’s disease.
Fifth
disease (Erythema infectiosum): In the pre-vaccination era,
it was frequently the "fifth disease" that a child
would develop. It is caused by a virus known as parvovirus
B 19. Symptoms include low-grade fever, fatigue, a "slapped
cheeks rash," and a rash over the whole body. While the
illness is not serious in children, 80% of adults have joint
aches and pains (arthritis) which may become long-term with
stiffness in the morning, redness and swelling of the same
joints on both sides of the body (a "symmetrical"
arthritis), most commonly involving the knees, fingers, and
wrists. Pregnant women (who have not previously had the illness)
should avoid contact with patients who have fifth disease.
The fifth disease virus can infect the fetus prior to birth.
And, while no birth defects have been reported as a result
of fifth disease, it can cause the death of the unborn fetus.
The risk of fetal death is 5-10% if the mother becomes infected.
Fine
needle aspiration: The use of a thin needle to withdraw tissue
from the body. FISH: An acronym for Fluorescent In Situ Hybrization,
an important molecular cytogenetic method for identifying
chromosomes and parts of chromosomes and for deciphering chromosome
rearrangements. Fluorescent means emitting light that comes
from a reaction within the emitter.
Fire
ants: Originally from S. America. Among the worst insect pests
ever to invade the U.S. Red or yellowish ants of small-to-medium
size with a severe sting that burns like fire. They normally
feed on small insects but, with denser populations, they eat
seeds and seedling plants, damage grain and vegetable crops,
invade kitchens, attack newly hatched poultry and the young
of ground-nesting wild b irds. Fire ants can kill newborn
domestic and wild animals. Each colony is composed of a queen,
winged males and females and 3 kinds of workers. A nest averages
about 25,000 workers, but far larger populations are common.
Semipermanent nests are large mounds of excavated soil with
openings for ventilation. Since nests may number 50-100 (or
more) in a heavily infested field, cultivating becomes difficult
(or impossible). Fire ants belong to the genus Solenopsis.
Fire
ant stings: A scourge, these red or yellow ants of small-to-medium
size, originally from South America, have a severe sting that
burns like fire. Their sting—like that of bees, yellow
jackets, hornets and wasps -- can trigger allergic reactions
varying greatly in severity. Avoidance and prompt treatment
are essential. In selected cases, allergy injection therapy
is highly effective. (The three "A’s" of insect
allergy are Adrenaline, Avoidance and Allergist.)
FISH:
Abbreviation for fluorescence in situ hybridization, a molecular
approach to chromosome mapping. FISH uses fluorescein tags
that glow to detect the hybridization (the combination) of
probes with chromosomes.
Fish
bowl granuloma: Localized nodular skin inflammation (small
reddish raised areas of skin) caused by a bacterium called
mycobacterium marinum. Fish bowl granuloma is typically acquired
by occupational or recreational exposure to salt or fresh
water, often resulting from minor trauma during caring for
aquariums. The diagnosis is suggested by the history of exposure
and confirmed by culturing tissue specimens which yield the
microscopic organism, mycobacterium marinum. The infection
can be treated with a variety of antibiotics, including doxycycline,
minocycline, clarithromycin, rifampin, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.
Also called "swimming pool granuloma."
Fisher’s
exact test: A statistical test of independence much used in
medical research. It tests the independence of rows and columns
in a 2 X 2 contingency table (with 2 horizontal rows crossing
2 vertical columns creating 4 places for data) based on the
exact sampling distribution of the observed frequencies. Hence
it is an "exact" test. Devised by the British geneticist
and biostatistician R. A. Fisher (1890-1962).
Fish-odor
syndrome: An inborn error of metabolism associated with an
offensive body odor, the smell of rotting fish, due to the
excessive excretion of trimethylaminuria (TMA) in urine, sweat,
and breath. Persons with TMA may experience tachycardia (fast
heart rate) and severe hypertension (high blood pressure)
after eating cheese (which contains tyramine) and after using
nasal sprays containing epinephrine. TMA is caused by a mutation
(change) in the gene for an enzyme, flavin-containing monooxygenase-3
(FMO3) encoded by a gene on chromosome #1. The FMO3 enzyme
metabolizes tyramine (which is in cheese). The syndrome is
associated with various psychosocial reactions, including
social isolation, clinical depression and attempted suicide.
Fistula:
An abnormal passageway. For example, with an anal fistula
the hallmark is an opening in the skin near the anus: this
opening may lead to a tunnel into the rectal canal or to a
passage that ends in a blind pouch.
Five-day
fever: See Fever, trench.
Flail
chest: When enough ribs are broken (usually from a crush injury)
to compromise the rigidity of the chest wall. On inspiration,
the chest wall moves inward instead of outward and the opposite
on expiration.
Flat
feet: All babies have flat feet because their arches are not
yet built up (anf their feet tend to be plump).
Flatulence:
Excess gas in the intestinal tract. But what is excess flatulence
is difficult to define without a yardstick to measure the
"normal" frequency of gas passages. Symptom-free
individuals have recorded approximately 14 passages of gas
per 24 hours.
Flatus:
Gas in the intestinal tract or passed through the anus. The
intestinal gases are hydrogen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and
methane, all of which are odorless. The unpleasant smell of
flatus is the result of trace gases such as indole, skatole,
and, most commonly, hydrogen sulfide.
Flavin-containing
monooxygenase-3 (FMO3): See Fish-odor syndrome.
Flexion:
The process of bending or the state of being bent. Flexion
of the fingers results in a clenched fist.
Floppy
baby syndrome: A general medical reference to an abnormal
condition of newborns and infants manifest by inadequate tone
of the muscles. Hypotonia (inadequately toned muscles resulting
in floppiness) in the newborn period and infancy can be due
to a multitude of different neurologic and muscle problems.
Flow
cytometry: Analysis of biological material by detection of
the light-absorbing or fluorescing properties of cells or
subcellular fractions such as chromosomes passing in a narrow
stream through a laser beam. Flow cytometry can be used with
automated sorting devices to sort successive droplets of the
stream into different fractions depending on the fluorescence
emitted by each droplet.
Flow
karyotyping: Use of flow cytometry to analyze and/or separate
chromosomes on the basis of their DNA content.
Flu:
Short for influenza. The flu is caused by viruses that infect
the respiratory tract which are divided into three types,
designated A, B, and C. Most people who get the flu recover
completely in 1 to 2 weeks, but some people develop serious
and potentially life-threatening medical complications, such
as pneumonia. Much of the illness and death caused by influenza
can be prevented by annual influenza vaccination.
Flu
shots: The flu (influenza) vaccine is recommended for persons
at high risk for serious complications from influenza infection,
including everyone age 65 or more; people with chronic diseases
of the heart, lung or kidneys, diabetes, immunosuppression,
or severe forms of anemia; residents of nursing homes and
other chronic-care facilities, children and teenagers receiving
long-term aspirin therapy (and who may therefore be at risk
for developing Reye syndrome after an influenza virus infection),
people in close or frequent contact with anyone at high risk.
People with an allergy to eggs should not receive influenza
vaccine.
Flu,
stomach: A misnomer that has nothing to do with influenza
(flu) virus, the term "stomach flu" is sometimes
used to describe gastrointestinal illnesses caused by other
microorganisms.
Flu
vaccine: The flu (influenza) vaccine is recommended for persons
at high risk for serious complications from influenza infection,
including everyone 65 or over; people with chronic diseases
of the heart, lung or kidneys, diabetes, immunosuppression,
or severe forms of anemia; residents of nursing homes and
other chronic-care facilities, children and teenagers on long-term
aspirin therapy (and who may therefore be at risk for developing
Reye syndrome after an influenza infection), and those in
close or frequent contact with anyone at high risk. Persons
with an allergy to eggs should not receive influenza vaccine.
Fluorescent
in situ hybridization: See FISH.
Fluorescent
microscope: A microscope equipped to examine material that
fluoresces under ultraviolet (UV) light.
Fluoroscopy:
An x-ray procedure that makes it possible to see internal
organs in motion.
Fluorouracil:
An anticancer drug. Its chemical name is 5-fluorouracil, commonly
called 5-FU.
FMO3:
Abbreviation for the enzyme, flavin-containing monooxygenase-3.
See Fish-odor syndrome.
FMF:
See Familial Mediterranean Fever.
FMR1:
The gene responsible for the production of a protein called
FMRP. Lack of FMRP results in the fragile X syndrome. (FMRP
is an acronym composed of the first letters of Familial Mental
Retardation Protein).
FMRP:
As stated in the entry for FMR1, FMRP is an acronym composed
of the first letters of Familial Mental Retardation Protein.
Folate
(folic acid): Folic acid is an important factor in nucleic
acid synthesis (the genetic material of all cells). Deficiency
leads to megaloblastic anemia.
Follicles:
Shafts through which hair grows.
Fondation
Jean Dausset-CEPH: The Centre d’Etudes du Polymorphisme
Humain (CEPH), an internationally reknowned research laboratory
created in Paris in 1984 by Professor Jean Dausset (Nobel
Prize, Medicine and Physiology, 1980) to provide the scientific
community with resources for human genome mapping.
Fong
disease: Also, called the nail-patella syndrome or onychoosteodysplasia.
Fong disease, an hereditary condition with abnormally formed
(dysplastic) or absent nails and absent or underdeveloped
(hypoplastic) kneecaps (patellae). Other features include
iliac horns, abnormality of the elbows interfering with full
range of motion (pronation and supination) and kidney disease
resembling glomerulonephritis which.is often mild but can
be progressive and lead to renal failure. Fong disease is
inherited as dominant gene. This means that the disease can
be transmitted by one affected parent. This condition is named
after the physician who in 1946 discovered it in a patient
on whom he performed intravenous pyelography while investigating
hypertension and albuminuria related to pregnancy. On X-ray
Dr. Fong saw the ‘iliac horns’ (symmetrical bilateral
central posterior iliac processes) which are now known to
be a characteristic feature of nail-patella syndrome.
Fontanel
(fontanelle): The word fontanel comes from the French fontaine
for fountain. The medical term fontanel is a "soft spot"
of the skull. The "soft spot" is soft precisely
because the cartilage there has not yet hardened into bone
between the skull bones. There are normally two fontanels,
both in the midline of the skull, one (the anterior fontanel)
well in front of the other (the posterior fontanel). The posterior
fontanel closes first, at latest by the age of 8 weeks in
a full-term baby. The anterior fontanel closes at 18 months
of age on the average but it can close normally as early as
9 months. If fontanels close too early or too late, that may
be a sign of a problem.
Foot:
In length, 12 inches or a third of a yard or, metrically,
30.48 centimeters. The foot, along with the inch and yards,
are Old World creations to which the USA has stubbornly clung.
The foot was originally the length of a man’s foot and
served as a measurement of land. (Better to have had big feet
when stepping off your land). The abbreviation is ft.
Foot,
athlete’s: A skin infection caused by a fungus called
Trichophyton which can thrive and infect the upper layer of
the skin when the feet (or other areas of the body) remain
moist, warm, and irritated. The fungus can be found on floors
and in socks and clothing and can be spread from person to
person by contact with these objects. However, without proper
growing conditions (a warm, moist environment), the fungus
will not infect the skin.
Foot
fungus: Athlete’s foot causes foot itching, burning,
pain, and scaling. It is caused by a fungus and is treated
with antifungal medications, many of which are available over-the-counter.
Keeping the feet dry by using cotton socks and breathable
shoes helps prevent athletes foot.
Foramen:
A natural opening. Although a foramen is usually through bone,
it can be an opening through other types of tissue, as with
the foramen ovale.
Foramen
ovale: An oval opening between the two upper chambers of the
heart (the atria) that is a normal feature of the fetal and
neonatal (newborn) circulation. The foramen ovale normally
closes by 3 months of age.
Foramen
magnum: The large hole at the base of the skull which allows
passage of the spinal cord.
Forestier’s
disease: A form of degenerative arthritis characteristically
associated with flowing calcification along the sides of the
vertebrae of the spine and commonly with inflammation (tendinitis)
and calcification of the tendons at their attachments points
to bone. Because areas of the spine and tendons can become
inflamed, antiinflammatory medications (NSAIDs), such ibuprofen,
can be helpful in both relieving pain and inflammation. Also
called diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH).
Formula
feeding: The ability of the breast to produce milk diminishes
soon after childbirth without the stimulation of breastfeeding.
Immunity factors in breast milk can help the baby to fight
off infections. Breast milk contains vitamins, minerals, and
enzymes which aid the baby’s digestion. Breast and formula
feeding can be used together.
Founder
effect: A population (a colony) with an unusual frequency
of a gene due to there having been only a small number of
original settlers (founders) one or more of whom had that
gene. For example, the gene for Huntington disease was introduced
into the Lake Maracaibo region in Venezuela early in the 19th
century. So there are now over a hundred persons with Huntington
disease and at least 900 persons at risk for that deadly disease
in that region, the largest known aggregation with the Huntington
gene in the world.
Fracture:
A fracture is a break in the bone or cartilage. It usually
is a result of trauma. It can, however, be a result of disease
of the bone, such as osteoporosis, or an abnormal formation
of the bone in rare congenital (from time of birth) diseases,
such as osteogenesis imperfecta. Fractures are classified
by their character and location. Examples of classification
include "spiral fracture of the femur," "greenstick
fracture of the radius," "impacted fracture of the
humerus," "linear fracture of the ulna," "oblique
fracture of the metatarsal," "compression fracture
of the vertebrae," and "depressed fracture of the
skull." A "comminuted fracture" is a fracture
in which bone is broken into a number of pieces. (This should
be distinguished from the "compound fracture" as
described below).
Fractures are also named by the trauma event that caused the
bone breakage. Examples include "boxer's fracture"
of the metacarpal bone of the hand, "blowout fracture"
of the bones behind the eye, and "stress fracture"
of the bones of tibia." Some fractures are also named
by conditions associated with the bone breakage. For example,
a "compound fracture" is a fracture in which there
is an associated open wound of the skin which leads directly
to the broken bone.
Fragile
site: A term devised in 1969 by Frederick Hecht to denote
a heritable point on a chromosome where gaps and breaks tend
to occur.
Fragile
X chromosome: X chromosome with a fragile site associated
with a frequent form of mental retardation. The fragile X
chromosome was first sighted by Herbert A. Lubs in 1969. The
fragile X is also called FRAXA (the second A signifies it
was the first FRAgile site found on the X chromosome). It
is due a trinucleotide repeat (a recurring motif of 3 bases)
in the DNA at that spot.
Fragile
X syndrome: The most common heritable form of mental retardation.
Fragile X syndrome is due to mutation (changes) at the fragile
X site and so perforce is X-linked (carried on the X chromosome).
Although it is usually more severe in males than females,
the syndrome is due to a dynamic mutation (a trinucleotide
repeat) that can change in length and hence in severity from
generation to generation, from person to person, and even
within a given person. The fragile X syndrome is also known
as the Martin-Bell syndrome in honor of their discovery of
it in 1943.
Fraternal
twins: Fraternal twins are siblings who have shared a common
uterine environment. They are due to fertilization of two
different ova by different sperm. Fraternal twins are also
called dizygotic twins.
Frenulum:
From the diminutive of the Latin for a bridle, that is something
that has a restraining function. For example, the frenulum
of the tongue attaches it to the floor of the mouth and appears
to restrain it. An unusually short lingual frenulum (tongue-tie)
often worries parents. Although this frenulum has been clipped
innumerable times to "free the tongue," in truth
it is rarely the cause of poor eating or speech delay.
Frequency,
urinary: Urinating too often, at too frequent intervals, not
due to an unusually large volume of urine, but rather to a
decrease in the capacity of the bladder to hold urine.
Freudian:
Adjective from the name of the founder of psychoanalysis,
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939).
Frostbite:
Frostbite is damage to tissues as a result of extreme cold
exposure. The tissues become injured from blood clotting and
ice crystal formation. Severe frostbite can result in death
of the tissues (gangrene).
ft.:
Abbreviation for foot, a measure of length. For example, 6
ft. is 1.83 meters.
Functional
gene test: Test for a specific protein iwhich indicates that
the corresponding gene is not only present but active.
Fundus:
Latin word for the bottom. In medicine, fundus refers to the
bottom or base of an organ. For example, the fundus of the
eye (the retina), the fundus of the uterus, and so on. The
fundus of the stomach is inexplicably the upper portion.
Fungal
nail infection: The most common fungus infection of the nail
is onychomycosis. Onychomycosis makes the nails look white
and opaque, thickened, and brittle. Older women (perhaps because
estrogen deficiency may increase the risk of infection) and
men and women with diabetes or disease of the small blood
vessels (peripheral vacscular disease) are at increased risk.
Artificial nails (acrylic or "wraps") increase the
risk because when an artificial nail is applied, the nail
surface is usually abraded with an emery board damaging it,
emery boards can carry infection, and water can collect under
the nail creating a moist, warm environment for fungal growth.
Alternative names include tinea unguium and ringworm of the
nails.
Fungus:
Fungus is a plantlike organism that feeds on organic matter.
An example of a common fungus is the yeast organism which
causes thrush and diaper rash (diaper dermatitis).
Fungus,
foot: Athlete’s foot causes foot itching, burning, pain,
and scaling. It is caused by a fungus and is treated with
antifungal medications, many of which are available over-the-counter.
Keeping the feet dry by using cotton socks and breathable
shoes helps prevent athletes foot.
Funny
bone: As in "it tickled my funny bone." When the
elbow is bumped, the ulnar nerve rnning past the elbow is
stimulated and produces a strange (funny) electric sensation.
Funnel
chest (pectus excavatum): "Caved-in" chest. Usually
an unimportant isolated finding evident at birth. (Funnel
chest can occasionally be part of a connective tissue disorder
such as Marfan syndrome).
Furuncle:
Nothing more nor less than a "boil" with a fancy
name. A boil is a collection of pus. Antibiotics are often
not very helpful in treating abscesses. The main treatments
include hot packs and draining ("lancing") the abscess,
but only when it is soft and ready to drain. If you develop
an abscess and. have fever, a long-term illness (such as cancer
or diabetes) or are on medication that suppresses the immune
system, you should contact your healthcare practitioner.
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