STAT means now. Everything else means consult a specialist.
A sign that something is wrong with your body, which your brain helpfully amplifies at 2 AM when you cannot reach a doctor and WebMD is your only friend. The body's version of a check engine light, equally vague and equally ignored.
Medical shorthand for the Latin word "statim" meaning immediately, which in a hospital translates to "sometime in the next twenty minutes unless there is a shift change." The word doctors yell to make everything sound like a television drama.
The bonus symptoms you get from medication that are supposed to help your original symptoms, creating a pharmaceutical game of whack-a-mole. The part of the drug commercial where the narrator starts speaking at double speed while showing people riding bicycles through meadows.
The process of asking another doctor to confirm that the first doctor was not just making stuff up, which is both a patient's right and a doctor's nightmare. The medical equivalent of asking a friend if your outfit looks okay after your spouse already said it was fine.
The level of treatment any competent doctor should provide, which is medicine's baseline for "you should at least be this good." The medical equivalent of a passing grade, below which lawyers start sharpening their pencils.
A collection of symptoms that hang out together often enough that doctors gave them a group name, like a medical boy band. The healthcare equivalent of recognizing a pattern and saying "this happens a lot, we should call it something."
The legal boundaries of what a healthcare provider is allowed to do, which prevents your dentist from performing heart surgery and your podiatrist from giving you therapy, even if they really want to. Medicine's version of "stay in your lane."
The medical term for fainting or passing out. Because 'took an involuntary nap while standing' doesn't sound sufficiently scientific.
Any unintended consequence of a medication beyond its primary therapeutic purpose—ranging from mild annoyances to reasons you're calling your lawyer. The fine print that pharmaceutical commercials race through while showing people hiking.
A surgical procedure where doctors essentially perform a microscopic plumbing job on blocked Fallopian tubes, because even reproductive systems need a good Roto-Rooter service sometimes. This delicate operation unclogs the tubes so eggs can actually make the journey they're supposed to, often helping with fertility issues. It's like calling a plumber, but for your reproductive tract and with much higher stakes.
When bacteria crash your surgical wound healing party uninvited, causing redness, pus, and prolonged hospital stays. The complication that makes surgeons check their technique and hospitals review their sterilization protocols.
Medical jargon for anything relating to a septum, which is basically any wall-like structure dividing two cavities in your body. Most commonly refers to the thing in your nose that you probably deviated during that regrettable skateboarding incident. Doctors love throwing this word around to sound smart when they're really just talking about the wall between your nostrils or heart chambers.
The medical practice of drugging someone into calmness or unconsciousness before poking, prodding, or slicing them open—it's humanity's way of making healthcare tolerable. Ranges from 'minimal' (you're relaxed but chatty) to 'deep' (you're basically taking a forced nap). Anesthesiologists spend years learning to perfectly calibrate the line between 'pleasantly drowsy' and 'completely unconscious.'
A life-threatening condition where your immune system freaks out over an infection and starts attacking your own organs—friendly fire on a molecular level. The medical emergency that turns a simple infection into multi-organ failure.
The process of determining the order of elements, whether it's amino acids in proteins, bases in DNA, or beats in electronic music production. In bioinformatics, sequencing is how we map genomes and pretend we understand what all that ATCG means. Musicians use sequencers to arrange sounds, proving that whether you're coding life or coding music, it's all about getting the order right.
The aftereffects or complications that follow a disease or injury—basically the grudges your body holds long after the initial insult has healed.
The scientific study of blood serum, particularly the immune system's antibody responses. Detective work using your blood's memory of past infections.
A state of strong desire for sleep or drowsiness, the medical upgrade from 'sleepy' to 'pathologically sleepy.' It's what happens when 'tired' needs a doctor's note.
In medical contexts, it's the official term for that vial of your bodily fluids or tissue sample that gets sent to the lab for testing, because saying "pee cup" lacks professional gravitas. Scientists use this word to make collecting and analyzing your blood, urine, or other substances sound dignified and scientific. It's the difference between "we need a specimen" and "we need you to fill this cup."
The evolutionary process by which new species emerge, usually when populations get separated long enough to develop incompatible dating preferences. This biological phenomenon explains why Darwin's finches have different beaks and why your family reunions get weirder the more distant the relatives. In chemistry, it's about determining which molecular species are present, which is somehow less dramatic.
A tiny scaffolding tube that plays superhero when your blood vessels, ureters, or esophagus decide to narrow or collapse. Doctors insert these mesh or metal cylinders to prop open pathways like tiny structural engineers. Think of it as internal plumbing maintenance, but for humans instead of houses.
Precision brain surgery using 3D coordinates to target specific areas, like GPS for neurosurgeons except the stakes are infinitely higher than missing your exit. It's the medical technique that allows doctors to insert instruments into your brain with mathematical accuracy, because guessing would be problematic. Also refers to how organisms move when touched, but the surgery definition is way more dramatic.
Medical jargon for 'under the skin,' typically referring to injections that go into your fatty layer rather than muscle or veins. It's where insulin gets injected and where your body stores reserves for the apocalypse. Subcutaneous tissue is basically your meat suit's insulation and padding system.
Abnormal narrowing of blood vessels or other tubular structures in the body, like a traffic jam in your cardiovascular highway. It's constriction that causes problems downstream.