Medical Dictionary Terms Beginning with W
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Warburg apparatus
Warburg apparatus: A venerable device used in biochemistry for measuring brathing (respiration) by tissues. Tissue slices are enclosed in a chamber in which the temperature and pressure are monitored and the amount of gas produced or consumed by the tiss
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Warburg's yellow enzyme
Warburg's yellow enzyme: A key respiratory enzyme discovered by the German biochemist Otto Heinrich Warburg (1883-1970), a pioneer in research on the respiration of cells and the metabolism of tumors. Warburg's yellow enzyme is a flavoprotein that cataly
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Wart
Wart: A local growth of the outer layer of the skin
(the epidermis) caused by a virus. The virus of warts (a
papillomavirus) is transmitted by contact. The contact can be with a
wart on someone else or one on oneself (autoinnoculation).
Warts tha
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Wart, genital
Wart, genital: A wart that is confined primarily to
the moist
skin of the genitals. These warts are due to viruses belonging to the
family of human papillomaviruses
(HPVs) which are transmitted through sexual contact. The virus can
also be
transm
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Wart, venereal
Wart, venereal: The same as a genital wart, a wart
that is confined primarily to
the moist
skin of the genitals. These warts are due to viruses belonging to the
family of human papillomaviruses
(HPVs) which are transmitted through sexual contact.
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Warts, plantar
Warts, plantar: Warts that grow on the soles of the feet.
Plantar warts are different from most other warts. They tend to be flat and cause the buildup of callus (that has to be peeled away before the plantar wart itself can be seen. Plantar warts may
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Wasp stings
Wasp stings: Stings from wasps and other large stinging
insects such as bees, hornets and yellow jackets can trigger allergic reactions varying
greatly in severity. Avoidance and prompt treatment are essential. In selected cases,
allergy injection ther
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Water-hammer pulse
Water-hammer pulse: A pulse that is full and then suddenly collapses.
This type of pulse is also called a Corrigan pulse after the Irish physician Dominic John Corrigan (1802-80) who described this finding in patients with aortic regurgitation caused by
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Wax, ear
Wax, ear:
The
ear canal is shaped somewhat like an hourglass. The skin on the outer
part of the canal
has special glands that produce earwax. The purpose of this natural
wax is to repel water
and to trap dust and sand particl
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WBC
WBC: Commonly used abbreviation for a white blood cell.
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Wegener's granulomatosis
Wegener's granulomatosis: An uncommon type of inflammation
of small arteries and veins (vasculitis) that classically involves
the vessels supplying the tissues of the lungs, nasal passages
(sinuses), and kidneys.
Wegener's granulomatosis usually
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Werner-His disease
Werner-His disease: Named for the German physician
Heinrich Werner (who did not describe Werner's prematute aging
syndrome) and the Swiss physician Wilhelm His, Jr. (who did describe
the bundle of His in the heart), this is a louse-borne disease th
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Western blot
Western blot: A technique in molecular biology, used to
separate and identify particular proteins. Called a Western blot merely because it has
some similarity to a Southern blot (which is named after its inventor, the British
biologist M.E. Southern).
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White blood cells
White blood cells: White blood cells (WBCs) are cells which
circulate in the blood and lymphatic system and harbor in the lymph glands and spleen.
They are part of the immune system responsible for both directly (T cells and macrophages)
and indirectly
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White matter
White matter: The part of the brain that contains myelinated nerve
fibers. The white matter is white because it is the color of myelin, the insulation
covering the nerve fibers. The white matter is as opposed to the gray matter (the cortex
of the brain
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White spots on the nails
White spots on the nails: Very common small semi-circular white spots on the nails.
These spots result from injury to the base (matrix) of the nail (the part under the visible nail) where the nail cells and the nail are produced.
The injury responsibl
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Whitmore's disease
Whitmore's disease: An infectious illness, also called melioidosis, that is most frequent in Southeast Asia and Northern Australia and is caused by a bacteria called "Pseudomonas pseudomallei" found in soil, rice paddies and stagnant waters. Humans catch
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WHO
WHO: World Health Organization, called alternatively (in French)
Organisation Mondiale de la SantΘ (OMS).
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Whooping cough
Whooping cough: Also known as pertussis, this is a
feared infectious disease that can strike the respiratory system and affect other organs
of the body. It has three stagesan initial stage with watery runny nose and eyes, a
progressive cough stag
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Will, living
Will, living: A living will is one form of advance
medical directive. Advance medical directives pertain to
treatment preferences and the designation of a surrogate
decision-maker in the event that a person should become unable to
make medical dec
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