This information means there is only one renal artery per kidney and both of them are open and without any obstructions. Many times there are multiple renal arteries or renal artery branches on each side.
The phrase 'nares are patent' basically means that the nostrils are open. The opposite would be latent which means that the nostrils are hidden. This is not common.
An aneurysm is a medical condition that effects the arteries. An aneurysm is a blood filled sac that can form either from weakened blood vessels or by disease.
A patent is a grant from a patent office, such as the United States Patent Office. "Patent Pending" is a phrase that an application for a patent has been filed and is in some stage in the process of obtaining a patent. Thus, a patent can be presently enforced while a patent that is merely pending is unenforceable but can mature into a patent that can be enforced. Once the pending patent matures, the patent owner can sue for back damages or reasonable royalties starting from the filing date of the patent.
When looking at a phrase like this, it is easiest to break it down into individual words, until you become fluent in reading medical terminology. Atherosclerotic refers to the build up of atheroma, (cholesterol or fat) in the arteries, that leads to the passageway through the artery becoming narrow. Calcification is the build up of calcium, causing the artery to harden. Intracranial means within the cranium (Skull). Internal Carotid Arteries are major arteries that supply the brain. So this phrase means, there are fat and calcium salt deposits within some major arteries to the brain, that have caused the arteries to become more narrow and harden.
There is not a medical term for the phrase no bladder.
The phrase, The medical assistant acts as an agent of the physician means that the medical assistant takes the place of the physician and can treat the patient in the same manner as the physician can.
There is no suffix to this phrase.
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Larry D. Purnell has written: 'Clinical Spanish for medical professionals' -- subject(s): Spanish language, Textbooks for foreign speakers, Conversation and phrase books (for medical personnel), English 'Conversational medical Spanish' -- subject(s): Conversation and phrase books (for medical personnel), Spanish language
Neglect. The phrase is used often in medical malpractice.Also known as: "the four D's of medical negligence"
Lungs cta b/l (lungs clear to ausculation bilaterally) indicates that the lungs sounded normal. CXR WNL indicates the chest x-ray was normal.
In the United States? You can't. You might be able to copyright it, or if you own a business, you might be able to reserve it as your trade mark. MIGHT, but then again might not. Is it a phrase that people already use? Your chances are pretty slim. The only things you can patent in the USA are 'inventions' (i.e., new physical things that can be manufactured), processes (i.e., new ways of making stuff), and for some bizarre reason, the details of which I forget just at this moment, computer software. Maybe you can convince a patent examiner that your phrase actually is a piece of computer software, but even if you could, it probably wouldn't hold up in court. (Any patent that's worth any money usually ends up as the subject of at least a threatened lawsuit if not a real one with a judge and a jury and lawyers and all.)