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Chapter 2 Basic Term Components
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Origin of Medical Terms 0 Most medical terms have Greek or Latin origins. 0 Most diagnostic and surgical terms have Greek origins 0 Most anatomical terms have Latin origins 0 Once you learn the basic medical term structure, and memorize the most common term components, you can get the meaning of most medical terms by defining their parts
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Analysis of Term Components 0 Most medical terms have 3 components: 0 Root 0 Suffix 0 Prefix
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Analysis of Term Components 0 Root word 0 Foundation or subject of the word 0 Usually (but not always) indicates the involved body part. 0 Ex. cardi means heart 0 A combining form is a root word with a vowel at the end so that a suffix beginning with a consonant can be added. 0 When a combining form appears alone, it is shown with a slash (/) between the root word and the combining vowel. 0 Ex. cardi/o 0 The combining form vowel is added to the end of a root word under certain conditions to make the resulting medical term easier to pronounce. 0 The letter “o” is the most commonly used combining vowel.
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Analysis of Term Components 0 Suffix 0 Always found at the end of a medical term 0 Gives essential meaning to the root word by indicating the condition, disorder, disease, or procedure 0 Ex. -itis means inflammation 0 Prefix 0 Found at the beginning of a medical term 0 Not all medical terms contain a prefix 0 Only used when needed to further modify the root word 0 Ex. hyper-means excessive
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Word Part Combinations 0 Not all medical terms come in the form: prefix/root word/suffix 0 Other possible word part combinations: 0 Root word/suffix 0 Root word/root word/suffix 0 Prefix/root word/root word/suffix 0 Prefix/prefix/root/suffix 0 Prefix/suffix
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Rules for Forming Medical Terms 1. A combining vowel is used to join root to root as well as root to any suffix beginning with a consonant electr+cardi+-gram root rootsuffix electr/o/cardi/o/gram electrocardiogram 2. A combining vowel is NOT used before a suffix that begins with a vowel vas+-ectomy root suffix vas/ectomy vasectomy
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Rules for Forming Medical Terms 3. If the root ends in a vowel and the suffix begins with the same vowel, drop the final vowel from the root and do not use a combining vowel cardi+-itis root suffix card/itis carditis 4. Most often, a combining vowel is inserted between two roots even when the 2 nd root begins with a vowel cardi+esophag+-eal root root suffix cardi/o/esophag/eal cardioesophageal
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Review 1. A combining vowel is used when the suffix begins with a consonant 2. A combining vowel is NOT used when the suffix begins with a vowel (a, e, i, o, u) 3. A combining vowel is used when two or more root words are joined.
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Defining Medical Terms through Word Structure Analysis 0 You can usually define a term by interpreting the suffix first, then the prefix (if present), then the succeeding root or roots peri-+cardi/o+-itis pericarditis peri/card/itis around heart inflammation 2 3 1 Pericarditis inflammation around the heart
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Spelling Medical Terms 0 Many medical terms sound similar, but are spelled differently. 0 Ex:ilium (part of the hip bone) ileum (part of the intestine) **Because of this, context is key to spelling medical terms correctly.** 0 Some words sound similar but are spelled differently AND have different meaning, so be careful when pronouncing medical terms 0 Ex: adduction (to draw toward) abduction (to draw away from)
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Guidelines to Looking Up the Spelling of Unfamiliar Medical Terms 0 Many letters in medical terms are silent, and therefore often mistakenly omitted when the term is spelled. If is sounds like:It may begin with:Example: FFflatus PHphlegm JGgingivitis Jjaundice KCcrepitus CHcholera Kkyphosis QUquadriplegia SCcytology PSpsychology Sserum ZXxeroderma Zzygote
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