Computerized Axial Tomography, CAT, or Computed Tomography, CT Terms +

(a radiographic technique that produces an image of a detailed cross section of bodily tissue using a narrow collimated beam of x-rays that rotates in a full arc around a patient to image the body in cross-sectional slices)

spleen
An organ located in the upper left part of the abdomen near the stomach.

The spleen produces lymphocytes; it is the largest lymphatic organ in the body. The spleen also filters the blood, serves as a major reservoir for blood and destroys blood cells that are no longer viable.

surgery
Medical treatment in which a doctor cuts open a person's body for the treatment of disease, injuries, or deformities.

It is the branch of medicine concerned with diseases and conditions which require or are amenable to operative procedures done by a surgeon or surgeons.

tomogram
A radiograph (x-ray) of a selected layer of the body made by tomography.

A tomogram is a two-dimensional image representing a slice or section of the body through a three-dimensional object.

The term tomogram may be more specific; for example, a nephrotomogram (tomogram of the kidney).

tomography
A process that produces a tomogram, a two-dimensional image of a slice or section through a three-dimensional object.

Tomography achieves this result by simply moving an x-ray source in one direction as the x-ray film is moved in the opposite direction during the exposure to sharpen structures in the focal plane, while structures in other planes appear blurred.

The tomogram is the picture; the tomograph is the apparatus; and tomography is the process.

toxicity
The degree to which a substance or poison can harm humans or animals.
trauma
Any injury to the body, whether physically or emotionally inflicted.

Trauma has both a medical and a psychiatric definition. Medically, trauma refers to a serious or critical bodily injury, wound, or shock.

This definition is often associated with trauma medicine practiced in emergency rooms and represents a popular view of the term.

In psychiatry, trauma has assumed a different meaning and refers to an experience that is emotionally painful, distressful, or shocking, and which often results in long-term mental and physical effects.

trimester
The nine months of pregnancy which is traditionally divided into three trimesters or distinct periods of roughly three months in which different phases of fetal development progress.
ultrasound
High-frequency sound waves which can be bounced off body tissues using special devices during which echoes are converted into a picture called a sonogram.

Ultrasound imaging, referred to as ultrasonography, allows physicians and patients to get an inside view of soft tissues and body cavities, without using invasive techniques.

Ultrasound is often used to examine a fetus during pregnancy and so far there is no convincing evidence for any danger from ultrasound during pregnancy.

utereus
A womb that is a hollow, pear-shaped organ located in a woman's lower abdomen between the bladder and the rectum.

The narrow, lower portion of the uterus is the cervix; the broader, upper part is the corpus which consists up two layers of tissue.

vein
A blood vessel that carries blood low in oxygen content from the body back to the heart.

The deoxygenated form of hemoglobin (deoxyhemoglobin) in venous blood makes it appear dark and the veins are part of the afferent wing of the circulatory system which returns blood to the heart.

vertebrae
The preferred plural form of vertebra while vertebras is an alternative plural form.
X-ray, roentgenogram
Electromagnetic radiation used in diagnostic imaging to view shadows of tissue density in the body.
X-ray, x-ray
1. High-energy radiation with waves shorter than those of visible light.

X-rays possess the capabilities of penetrating most substances (to varying extents), of acting on a photographic film or plate (permitting radiography), and of causing a fluorescent screen to give off light (permitting fluoroscopy).

Formerly called a Roentgen ray, in low doses X-rays are used for making images that help to diagnose disease, and in high doses to treat cancer.