Jump to content
RemedySpot.com
Sign in to follow this  
Guest guest

Re: Word help

Rate this topic

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

, I have never heard of it and can't find anything to back me up, but I can

see it as happening. Dysuria is pain with urination, so I can see terminal

dysuria as being pain only towards the end of urination, just as the patient is

only seeing blood towards the end of urination. Just my thoughts, Margaret

>>> Eckenrode 08/01/02 04:30PM >>>

Hi Gang,

Is there such a thing as " terminal dysuria. " I have been unable to find it.

The sentence goes " Approximately six weeks ago, he began noticing urgency,

frequency, q.1h., with terminal dysuria, and approximately one week ago noticed

some terminal hematuria. " I was able to find terminal hematuria. As per usual,

any help would be appreciated.

Thanks,

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

I believe terminal dysuria refers to what happens at the end of urination,

meaning it hurts at the end instead of the beginning. Same deal with terminal

hematuria... at the end. Hope this helps :)

Jan

jantranscribes@...

" Typing is my life. "

" Whoever signs the paycheck makes the rules. "

Word help

Hi Gang,

Is there such a thing as " terminal dysuria. " I have been unable to find it.

The sentence goes " Approximately six weeks ago, he began noticing urgency,

frequency, q.1h., with terminal dysuria, and approximately one week ago noticed

some terminal hematuria. " I was able to find terminal hematuria. As per usual,

any help would be appreciated.

Thanks,

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Terminal dysuria is correct. It means pain at the end of voiding. Frequently

that's a symptom of prostatitis.

J

MTEC *graduate*, 1 chiropractic account (so far)

old dog, new tricks, where's the bone?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Hi ! I found a definition for terminal dysuria (pain at the end of

voiding). Here's the link...

http://www.emedicine.com/med/topic3331.htm

<http://www.emedicine.com/med/topic3331.htm> and then scroll way, way down.

Hope it helps! :o)

Word help

Hi Gang,

Is there such a thing as " terminal dysuria. " I have been unable to find it.

The sentence goes " Approximately six weeks ago, he began noticing urgency,

frequency, q.1h., with terminal dysuria, and approximately one week ago

noticed some terminal hematuria. " I was able to find terminal hematuria.

As per usual, any help would be appreciated.

Thanks,

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Deborah, that would be Clostridium difficile, which may doctors will pronounce

as C. diff. Margaret

>>> " Deborah " 08/01/02 04:42PM >>>

I have a dictation that I cannot figure out what the abbreviation she is

using is for, the dictation is as follows:

" Since we treated this patient for s/l cdif he has gained weight. "

Thanks in advance.

Deborah Horton/39/married 12 years/3 boys ages 10, 9, 6

MT 10 Months With Data Dynamics

Montana

http://www.geocities.com/momuvthree/splashy.html

---

Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.

Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).

Version: 6.0.380 / Virus Database: 213 - Release Date: 7/24/2002

TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to

nmtc-unsubscribe

PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Margaret,

Thanks, I always try to see if I can find it first. I always appreciate

help from you and the other members of the list. Now that it was

explained, it makes a whole lot of sense.

Re: Word help

> , I have never heard of it and can't find anything to back me up, but

I can see it as happening. Dysuria is pain with urination, so I can see

terminal dysuria as being pain only towards the end of urination, just as

the patient is only seeing blood towards the end of urination. Just my

thoughts, Margaret

>

> >>> Eckenrode 08/01/02 04:30PM >>>

> Hi Gang,

>

> Is there such a thing as " terminal dysuria. " I have been unable to find

it. The sentence goes " Approximately six weeks ago, he began noticing

urgency, frequency, q.1h., with terminal dysuria, and approximately one week

ago noticed some terminal hematuria. " I was able to find terminal

hematuria. As per usual, any help would be appreciated.

>

>

> Thanks,

>

>

>

>

>

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Rugosal? The " ridged folds " in the inner surface of the stomach and of the

vaginal walls are called " rugae. " One fold would be a " ruga. " The word

describing the type of surface that has those folds would be

" rugose. " Noun, ruga; plural, rugae; adjective form, rugose. According to

Dorland's, " rugosity " describes the condition of possessing those ridged

folds.

Do you suppose the physician made up the word? To me, saying " rugosal "

folds is like saying " full backal nudity " to refer to movies or TV shows

with back views of nekked guys.

Just my 2 cents.

Valeria

At 10:23 AM 8/1/2002 -0500, Sharon Link wrote:

>Perhaps someone can enlighten me here. I've gotten a correction back on

>one of my reports and I'm not able to document the word.

>

>PELVIC: Reveals pink vaginal mucosa with normal " rugosal " folds.

>

>I've found rugose - which means wrinkles, but wouldn't that be rundant

>saying wrinkle folds?

>

>Sharon

>

>

>

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Rugosal? The " ridged folds " in the inner surface of the stomach and of the

vaginal walls are called " rugae. " One fold would be a " ruga. " The word

describing the type of surface that has those folds would be

" rugose. " Noun, ruga; plural, rugae; adjective form, rugose. According to

Dorland's, " rugosity " describes the condition of possessing those ridged

folds.

Do you suppose the physician made up the word? To me, saying " rugosal "

folds is like saying " full backal nudity " to refer to movies or TV shows

with back views of nekked guys.

Just my 2 cents.

Valeria

At 10:23 AM 8/1/2002 -0500, Sharon Link wrote:

>Perhaps someone can enlighten me here. I've gotten a correction back on

>one of my reports and I'm not able to document the word.

>

>PELVIC: Reveals pink vaginal mucosa with normal " rugosal " folds.

>

>I've found rugose - which means wrinkles, but wouldn't that be rundant

>saying wrinkle folds?

>

>Sharon

>

>

>

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Rugosal? The " ridged folds " in the inner surface of the stomach and of the

vaginal walls are called " rugae. " One fold would be a " ruga. " The word

describing the type of surface that has those folds would be

" rugose. " Noun, ruga; plural, rugae; adjective form, rugose. According to

Dorland's, " rugosity " describes the condition of possessing those ridged

folds.

Do you suppose the physician made up the word? To me, saying " rugosal "

folds is like saying " full backal nudity " to refer to movies or TV shows

with back views of nekked guys.

Just my 2 cents.

Valeria

At 10:23 AM 8/1/2002 -0500, Sharon Link wrote:

>Perhaps someone can enlighten me here. I've gotten a correction back on

>one of my reports and I'm not able to document the word.

>

>PELVIC: Reveals pink vaginal mucosa with normal " rugosal " folds.

>

>I've found rugose - which means wrinkles, but wouldn't that be rundant

>saying wrinkle folds?

>

>Sharon

>

>

>

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Could your last s/l be defervesced? Did patient have fever?

defervescence: Falling of an elevated temperature; abatement of fever.

per SEMD

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Webmedx employee

Career Step graduate, 10/02/01

Experience: 9 months

My Home Page: http://www.renesue.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

word help

Hi all .... hope my problem with sending is finally solved.

This is from a discharge summary :PPD reactive. HTLA3 (is that correct?) s/l

screen pending. Sputum

cultures and smears for acid-fast s/l persidy were negative.

In a different SOAP.. i need help with one word .. under objective..

x-ray showed bilateral interstial infiltrate. He was changed to pentamidine

and his blood gasses slowly improved. The patient refused a bronchoscopy.

He was s/l defer bers and his ABG did improve.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Could your last s/l be defervesced? Did patient have fever?

defervescence: Falling of an elevated temperature; abatement of fever.

per SEMD

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Webmedx employee

Career Step graduate, 10/02/01

Experience: 9 months

My Home Page: http://www.renesue.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

word help

Hi all .... hope my problem with sending is finally solved.

This is from a discharge summary :PPD reactive. HTLA3 (is that correct?) s/l

screen pending. Sputum

cultures and smears for acid-fast s/l persidy were negative.

In a different SOAP.. i need help with one word .. under objective..

x-ray showed bilateral interstial infiltrate. He was changed to pentamidine

and his blood gasses slowly improved. The patient refused a bronchoscopy.

He was s/l defer bers and his ABG did improve.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Could your last s/l be defervesced? Did patient have fever?

defervescence: Falling of an elevated temperature; abatement of fever.

per SEMD

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Webmedx employee

Career Step graduate, 10/02/01

Experience: 9 months

My Home Page: http://www.renesue.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

word help

Hi all .... hope my problem with sending is finally solved.

This is from a discharge summary :PPD reactive. HTLA3 (is that correct?) s/l

screen pending. Sputum

cultures and smears for acid-fast s/l persidy were negative.

In a different SOAP.. i need help with one word .. under objective..

x-ray showed bilateral interstial infiltrate. He was changed to pentamidine

and his blood gasses slowly improved. The patient refused a bronchoscopy.

He was s/l defer bers and his ABG did improve.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Stedman's Dermatology Words does list moccasin

under " foot " and I have typed this already. I am not

sure but I think there is a mocassin-type of fungus or

athlete's foot.

Lee

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Stedman's Dermatology Words does list moccasin

under " foot " and I have typed this already. I am not

sure but I think there is a mocassin-type of fungus or

athlete's foot.

Lee

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Stedman's Dermatology Words does list moccasin

under " foot " and I have typed this already. I am not

sure but I think there is a mocassin-type of fungus or

athlete's foot.

Lee

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

LOLOLOL! I won't even ask about that example?

----Original Message Follows----

To: " Sharon Link " ,<nmtc >

Subject: Re: word help

Date: Thu, 01 Aug 2002 23:24:39 -0400

Rugosal? The " ridged folds " in the inner surface of the stomach and of the

vaginal walls are called " rugae. " One fold would be a " ruga. " The word

describing the type of surface that has those folds would be

" rugose. " Noun, ruga; plural, rugae; adjective form, rugose. According to

Dorland's, " rugosity " describes the condition of possessing those ridged

folds.

Do you suppose the physician made up the word? To me, saying " rugosal "

folds is like saying " full backal nudity " to refer to movies or TV shows

with back views of nekked guys.

Just my 2 cents.

Valeria

At 10:23 AM 8/1/2002 -0500, Sharon Link wrote:

>Perhaps someone can enlighten me here. I've gotten a correction back on

>one of my reports and I'm not able to document the word.

>

>PELVIC: Reveals pink vaginal mucosa with normal " rugosal " folds.

>

>I've found rugose - which means wrinkles, but wouldn't that be rundant

>saying wrinkle folds?

>

>Sharon

>

>

>

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

LOLOLOL! I won't even ask about that example?

----Original Message Follows----

To: " Sharon Link " ,<nmtc >

Subject: Re: word help

Date: Thu, 01 Aug 2002 23:24:39 -0400

Rugosal? The " ridged folds " in the inner surface of the stomach and of the

vaginal walls are called " rugae. " One fold would be a " ruga. " The word

describing the type of surface that has those folds would be

" rugose. " Noun, ruga; plural, rugae; adjective form, rugose. According to

Dorland's, " rugosity " describes the condition of possessing those ridged

folds.

Do you suppose the physician made up the word? To me, saying " rugosal "

folds is like saying " full backal nudity " to refer to movies or TV shows

with back views of nekked guys.

Just my 2 cents.

Valeria

At 10:23 AM 8/1/2002 -0500, Sharon Link wrote:

>Perhaps someone can enlighten me here. I've gotten a correction back on

>one of my reports and I'm not able to document the word.

>

>PELVIC: Reveals pink vaginal mucosa with normal " rugosal " folds.

>

>I've found rugose - which means wrinkles, but wouldn't that be rundant

>saying wrinkle folds?

>

>Sharon

>

>

>

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

LOLOLOL! I won't even ask about that example?

----Original Message Follows----

To: " Sharon Link " ,<nmtc >

Subject: Re: word help

Date: Thu, 01 Aug 2002 23:24:39 -0400

Rugosal? The " ridged folds " in the inner surface of the stomach and of the

vaginal walls are called " rugae. " One fold would be a " ruga. " The word

describing the type of surface that has those folds would be

" rugose. " Noun, ruga; plural, rugae; adjective form, rugose. According to

Dorland's, " rugosity " describes the condition of possessing those ridged

folds.

Do you suppose the physician made up the word? To me, saying " rugosal "

folds is like saying " full backal nudity " to refer to movies or TV shows

with back views of nekked guys.

Just my 2 cents.

Valeria

At 10:23 AM 8/1/2002 -0500, Sharon Link wrote:

>Perhaps someone can enlighten me here. I've gotten a correction back on

>one of my reports and I'm not able to document the word.

>

>PELVIC: Reveals pink vaginal mucosa with normal " rugosal " folds.

>

>I've found rugose - which means wrinkles, but wouldn't that be rundant

>saying wrinkle folds?

>

>Sharon

>

>

>

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

In a message dated 8/5/02 12:01:25 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

mgrant@... writes:

> but my docs usually use a Gomco

In my surgery words, a Gomco is a suction, as in Gomco suction, or Gomco

suction tube. Not sure how this would be used to circumcise? But I spent a

great deal of time searching for this too, and the only medical equipment

that Jenco produces are pH monitors, and temperature type probes, etc., which

does not apply here either! Stumped.....

Sue

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

In a message dated 8/5/02 12:01:25 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

mgrant@... writes:

> but my docs usually use a Gomco

In my surgery words, a Gomco is a suction, as in Gomco suction, or Gomco

suction tube. Not sure how this would be used to circumcise? But I spent a

great deal of time searching for this too, and the only medical equipment

that Jenco produces are pH monitors, and temperature type probes, etc., which

does not apply here either! Stumped.....

Sue

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

In a message dated 8/5/02 12:16:21 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

MGrant@... writes:

> Sue, I believe it is the Gomco bell clamp that is used. It can be found

> under Gomco in Stedman's Equipment words third edition. Margaret

Thanks, and they also have a Gomco bloodless circumcision clamp :-)

Sorry, didn't look under Gomco in my equipment book. So many books to search

through!

Sue

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

In a message dated 8/5/02 12:16:21 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

MGrant@... writes:

> Sue, I believe it is the Gomco bell clamp that is used. It can be found

> under Gomco in Stedman's Equipment words third edition. Margaret

Thanks, and they also have a Gomco bloodless circumcision clamp :-)

Sorry, didn't look under Gomco in my equipment book. So many books to search

through!

Sue

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Pattie, That one took some thinking, but it finally came to me. This might not

be it, but my docs usually use a Gomco. I couldn't find anything starting with

a J sound. Hope that helps, Margaret

>>> Pattie 08/05/02 02:49PM >>>

Gone for three days (my brother got married Saturday) and I come back to

a new account. Most family practice stuff so far, but it's getting used

to the formatting, style, etc. of the account.

Anyway, enough griping. :)

The doctor says: Circumsize with 1.1 **s/l jen-co** under sterile

conditions. Less than 1 cc blood loss noted.

Any ideas?

Thanks,

Pattie

TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to

nmtc-unsubscribe

PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Pattie, That one took some thinking, but it finally came to me. This might not

be it, but my docs usually use a Gomco. I couldn't find anything starting with

a J sound. Hope that helps, Margaret

>>> Pattie 08/05/02 02:49PM >>>

Gone for three days (my brother got married Saturday) and I come back to

a new account. Most family practice stuff so far, but it's getting used

to the formatting, style, etc. of the account.

Anyway, enough griping. :)

The doctor says: Circumsize with 1.1 **s/l jen-co** under sterile

conditions. Less than 1 cc blood loss noted.

Any ideas?

Thanks,

Pattie

TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to

nmtc-unsubscribe

PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest guest

Sue, I believe it is the Gomco bell clamp that is used. It can be found under

Gomco in Stedman's Equipment words third edition. Margaret

>>> 08/05/02 03:12PM >>>

In a message dated 8/5/02 12:01:25 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

mgrant@... writes:

> but my docs usually use a Gomco

In my surgery words, a Gomco is a suction, as in Gomco suction, or Gomco

suction tube. Not sure how this would be used to circumcise? But I spent a

great deal of time searching for this too, and the only medical equipment

that Jenco produces are pH monitors, and temperature type probes, etc., which

does not apply here either! Stumped.....

Sue

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
Sign in to follow this  

×
×
  • Create New...