Glossary entry (derived from question below)
Dutch term or phrase:
licht MI, licht TI, matig PI
English translation:
mild mitral insufficiency, mild tricuspid insufficiency, moderate pulmonary insufficiency.
Added to glossary by
Will Matter
Nov 4, 2006 15:50
17 yrs ago
1 viewer *
Dutch term
licht MI, licht TI, matig PI
Dutch to English
Medical
Medical: Cardiology
ER report
This is part of a TTE test for someone who had chest pains.
There is no further context.
Does anyone know what MI, TI and PI stand for?
The next sentence is that there is no periocardial fluid and no reasons to think of pulmonary hypertension.
Many thanks in advance.
--Ann
There is no further context.
Does anyone know what MI, TI and PI stand for?
The next sentence is that there is no periocardial fluid and no reasons to think of pulmonary hypertension.
Many thanks in advance.
--Ann
Proposed translations
(English)
4 +1 | Myocardial infarction | Will Matter |
4 +1 | minor myocardial infarction, moderate pericardial invasion (or involvement) and minor thoracic invas | Ballistic |
Proposed translations
+1
6 mins
Dutch term (edited):
licht MI
Selected
Myocardial infarction
If this is standard medical nomenclature MI usually stands for "myocardial infarction" which is a fancy way of saying "heart attack". In this case, it appears that the person involved had a mild heart attack. HTH.
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Note added at 37 mins (2006-11-04 16:28:28 GMT)
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I have found an alternate, consistent explanation that neatly covers all of the terms. Here it is: MI = mitral insufficiency. TI = tricuspid insufficiency. PI = pulmonary insufficiency. As you can see, all of these terms relate to the heart (and the proper function thereof) and they are standard medical abbreviations. Here's a reference; http://www.jdmd.com/glossary/med.abbr.pdf Hope this helps.
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Note added at 37 mins (2006-11-04 16:28:28 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
I have found an alternate, consistent explanation that neatly covers all of the terms. Here it is: MI = mitral insufficiency. TI = tricuspid insufficiency. PI = pulmonary insufficiency. As you can see, all of these terms relate to the heart (and the proper function thereof) and they are standard medical abbreviations. Here's a reference; http://www.jdmd.com/glossary/med.abbr.pdf Hope this helps.
Peer comment(s):
neutral |
Ballistic
: I figured that out too, but what are TI and PI then?
3 mins
|
Technically, asker should ask one term per question. Dank U wel.
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agree |
Dave Calderhead
35 mins
|
Thank you. I really thought it was the standard MI at first but now I think the added note makes it clear.
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Thanks, this answer fits exactly in the context of the entire report. The patient didn't have a heart attack...
Thanks,
--Ann"
+1
11 mins
minor myocardial infarction, moderate pericardial invasion (or involvement) and minor thoracic invas
minor myocardial infarction, moderate pericardial invasion (or involvement) and minor thoracic invasion
Hierzie.
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Note added at 41 mins (2006-11-04 16:32:30 GMT)
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I would tell you where I found the terms if I could, but there is no such thing as a English-Dutch glossary for medical terms (not that I know of). But some knowledge of thoracical surgery helps ;-) (and so does Google, by the way).
Hierzie.
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Note added at 41 mins (2006-11-04 16:32:30 GMT)
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I would tell you where I found the terms if I could, but there is no such thing as a English-Dutch glossary for medical terms (not that I know of). But some knowledge of thoracical surgery helps ;-) (and so does Google, by the way).
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Adam Smith
59 mins
|
neutral |
writeaway
: one term per question-a bit of solidarity wouldn't hurt. others may need to find the terms later.why make the glossary even less user-friendly?/yes-you've answered 3 questions not 1. should have been posted separately.see Will's comment to your neutral
1 hr
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Does this have anything to do with the actual question itself?
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Discussion
Could you also let me know where you found these terms? I would like to add them to my glossary.
I have a few other terms coming your way:-)
Thanks,
--Ann