Building on foundational terms, Part 2 dives into specialized medical language used in laboratory medicine, diagnostic imaging, and subspecialties. These high-yield terms appear daily in test results, radiology reports, and specialist consultations. Mastery of this vocabulary enables you to interpret complex diagnostic data, understand consultant recommendations, and communicate effectively across all healthcare settings.
๐ฌ Gastrointestinal System Terms
GI complaints are ubiquitous in primary care and emergency medicine. Precise terminology prevents diagnostic delays.
| Term | Meaning | Clinical Context |
|---|---|---|
| Dyspepsia | Indigestion, upper GI discomfort | "Functional dyspepsia with postprandial fullness" |
| Odynophagia | Painful swallowing | "Odynophagia suggests esophagitis" |
| Hematemesis | Vomiting blood | "Hematemesis with coffee-ground emesis" |
| Melena | Black, tarry stools from upper GI bleed | "Melena indicates bleeding proximal to ligament of Treitz" |
| Hematochezia | Bright red blood per rectum | "Hematochezia usually from lower GI source" |
| Ascites | Fluid accumulation in peritoneal cavity | "Cirrhotic patient with tense ascites requiring paracentesis" |
| Jaundice (Icterus) | Yellow discoloration from bilirubin | "Scleral icterus noted on exam" |
| Hepatomegaly | Enlarged liver | "Hepatomegaly palpable 4 cm below costal margin" |
| Splenomegaly | Enlarged spleen | "Massive splenomegaly in CML" |
| Hepatosplenomegaly | Both liver and spleen enlarged | "Hepatosplenomegaly in mononucleosis" |
| Cholecystitis | Gallbladder inflammation | "Acute cholecystitis with positive Murphy's sign" |
| Cholelithiasis | Gallstones | "Symptomatic cholelithiasis requiring cholecystectomy" |
| Pancreatitis | Pancreas inflammation | "Acute pancreatitis with lipase 850 U/L" |
| Peritonitis | Peritoneal inflammation | "Diffuse peritonitis with board-like abdomen" |
| Ileus | Non-mechanical bowel obstruction | "Post-operative ileus delaying discharge" |
๐ฉธ Renal & Urological Terms
Kidney and urinary tract terminology is essential for managing fluid balance, electrolytes, and urological emergencies.
| Term | Meaning | Clinical Context |
|---|---|---|
| Hematuria | Blood in urine | "Gross hematuria with clots requires cystoscopy" |
| Proteinuria | Protein in urine | "Nephrotic-range proteinuria >3.5 g/day" |
| Pyuria | Pus/white cells in urine | "Pyuria suggests UTI" |
| Dysuria | Painful urination | "Dysuria and frequency in cystitis" |
| Polyuria | Excessive urination (>2.5 L/day) | "Polyuria in uncontrolled diabetes" |
| Oliguria | Decreased urine output (<400 mL/day) | "Oliguria indicating acute kidney injury" |
| Anuria | No urine output (<100 mL/day) | "Anuria in complete urinary obstruction" |
| Nocturia | Excessive urination at night | "Nocturia 4-5 times per night in BPH" |
| Urinary Retention | Inability to empty bladder | "Acute urinary retention requiring catheterization" |
| Incontinence | Involuntary urine leakage | "Stress incontinence with coughing/sneezing" |
| Azotemia | Elevated BUN and creatinine | "Pre-renal azotemia from dehydration" |
| Uremia | Toxic syndrome from kidney failure | "Uremic symptoms: nausea, confusion, pericarditis" |
| Nephrolithiasis | Kidney stones | "5mm renal calculus causing nephrolithiasis" |
| Hydronephrosis | Kidney swelling from urine backup | "Bilateral hydronephrosis from bladder outlet obstruction" |
| Nephropathy | Kidney disease | "Diabetic nephropathy with declining GFR" |
๐ฉบ Hematology & Oncology Terms
Blood disorders and cancers require specialized vocabulary for accurate diagnosis and treatment planning.
| Term | Meaning | Clinical Context |
|---|---|---|
| Anemia | Low red blood cell count/hemoglobin | "Microcytic anemia from iron deficiency" |
| Polycythemia | Elevated red blood cell count | "Secondary polycythemia from chronic hypoxia" |
| Leukopenia | Low white blood cell count | "Chemotherapy-induced leukopenia" |
| Leukocytosis | Elevated white blood cell count | "Leukocytosis with left shift in bacterial infection" |
| Thrombocytopenia | Low platelet count | "ITP causing thrombocytopenia and petechiae" |
| Thrombocytosis | Elevated platelet count | "Reactive thrombocytosis in inflammation" |
| Pancytopenia | Decrease in all blood cell types | "Aplastic anemia causing pancytopenia" |
| Coagulopathy | Abnormal blood clotting | "Hepatic coagulopathy with elevated INR" |
| Petechiae | Small red/purple skin spots from bleeding | "Petechiae on lower extremities" |
| Purpura | Larger purple patches from bleeding | "Palpable purpura in vasculitis" |
| Ecchymosis | Bruising | "Extensive ecchymosis after fall" |
| Lymphadenopathy | Enlarged lymph nodes | "Cervical lymphadenopathy in infectious mono" |
| Metastasis | Cancer spread to distant sites | "Lung cancer with brain metastases" |
| Neoplasm | Abnormal tissue growth (tumor) | "Benign neoplasm vs malignant neoplasm" |
| Carcinoma | Cancer from epithelial cells | "Adenocarcinoma of the colon" |
| Sarcoma | Cancer from connective tissue | "Osteosarcoma of femur" |
| Leukemia | Blood/bone marrow cancer | "Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL)" |
| Lymphoma | Lymphatic system cancer | "Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma diagnosed" |
๐งช Laboratory Values & Interpretations
Understanding lab terminology is crucial for diagnosis and monitoring. These are the most commonly ordered tests.
Complete Blood Count (CBC) Components
| Component | Abbreviation | What It Measures | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hemoglobin | Hgb, Hb | Oxygen-carrying protein | Low = anemia; High = polycythemia |
| Hematocrit | Hct | % of blood that's RBCs | Low = anemia; High = dehydration/polycythemia |
| White Blood Cells | WBC | Infection-fighting cells | High = infection/inflammation; Low = immunosuppression |
| Platelets | Plt | Clotting cells | Low = bleeding risk; High = clotting risk |
| Mean Corpuscular Volume | MCV | Average RBC size | Low = microcytic (iron deficiency); High = macrocytic (B12/folate deficiency) |
| Red Cell Distribution Width | RDW | RBC size variation | High = mixed anemia or early deficiency |
Basic Metabolic Panel (BMP)
| Test | Abbreviation | What It Measures | Abnormality Terms |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sodium | Na+ | Electrolyte balance | Hyponatremia (low) / Hypernatremia (high) |
| Potassium | K+ | Cardiac function | Hypokalemia (low) / Hyperkalemia (high) |
| Chloride | Cl- | Acid-base balance | Hypochloremia / Hyperchloremia |
| Bicarbonate | HCO3- | Acid-base buffer | Low in metabolic acidosis; High in alkalosis |
| Blood Urea Nitrogen | BUN | Kidney function | Elevated in renal failure or dehydration |
| Creatinine | Cr | Kidney function | Elevated in acute kidney injury |
| Glucose | Gluc | Blood sugar | Hypoglycemia (low) / Hyperglycemia (high) |
Liver Function Tests (LFTs)
| Test | Abbreviation | What It Indicates |
|---|---|---|
| Alanine Aminotransferase | ALT | Hepatocellular injury (liver-specific) |
| Aspartate Aminotransferase | AST | Liver or muscle damage |
| Alkaline Phosphatase | Alk Phos, ALP | Biliary obstruction or bone disease |
| Total Bilirubin | T Bili | Liver function, jaundice |
| Direct (Conjugated) Bilirubin | D Bili | Obstructive jaundice |
| Albumin | Alb | Liver synthetic function, nutrition |
| Prothrombin Time | PT/INR | Clotting function, liver synthesis |
๐ธ Diagnostic Imaging Terms
Radiology reports use specific terminology to describe findings. Understanding these terms helps you interpret results and communicate with radiologists.
Common Imaging Modalities
| Modality | Abbreviation | What It Shows | Common Uses |
|---|---|---|---|
| X-Ray (Radiograph) | XR | Bone, dense tissue, air | Fractures, pneumonia, bowel obstruction |
| Computed Tomography | CT | Cross-sectional anatomy | Trauma, cancer staging, acute abdomen |
| Magnetic Resonance Imaging | MRI | Soft tissue detail | Brain, spine, joints, cardiac |
| Ultrasound | US | Real-time soft tissue | Pregnancy, gallstones, DVT, cardiac |
| Positron Emission Tomography | PET | Metabolic activity | Cancer detection and staging |
| Fluoroscopy | Fluoro | Real-time X-ray | GI studies, vascular procedures |
Radiologic Descriptors
| Term | Definition | Example Usage |
|---|---|---|
| Radiolucent | Appears dark (less dense) | "Radiolucent area suggesting air in soft tissue" |
| Radiopaque | Appears white (more dense) | "Radiopaque foreign body in stomach" |
| Infiltrate | Abnormal lung density | "Right lower lobe infiltrate consistent with pneumonia" |
| Consolidation | Complete opacification of lung | "Lobar consolidation in bacterial pneumonia" |
| Mass | Abnormal tissue collection >3cm | "Lung mass concerning for malignancy" |
| Nodule | Round lesion <3cm | "4mm pulmonary nodule requires follow-up" |
| Effusion | Abnormal fluid collection | "Moderate pleural effusion blunting costophrenic angle" |
| Edema | Fluid in tissue | "Pulmonary edema with Kerley B lines" |
| Fracture | Bone break | "Non-displaced transverse distal radius fracture" |
| Dislocation | Joint displacement | "Posterior shoulder dislocation" |
| Herniation | Protrusion through defect | "L4-L5 disc herniation compressing nerve root" |
| Pneumothorax | Air in pleural space | "Small apical pneumothorax on CXR" |
๐ซ Obstetric & Gynecologic Terms
Women's health terminology is essential for prenatal care, labor management, and gynecologic diagnosis.
| Term | Meaning | Clinical Context |
|---|---|---|
| Gravida (G) | Number of pregnancies | "G3P2 = 3 pregnancies, 2 deliveries" |
| Para (P) | Number of births >20 weeks | "G2P1A1 = 2 pregnancies, 1 birth, 1 abortion" |
| Nulliparous | Never given birth | "Nulliparous patient in first pregnancy" |
| Multiparous | Given birth multiple times | "Multiparous grand multipara with 6 births" |
| Gestation | Pregnancy duration | "32 weeks gestation" |
| Trimester | 3-month pregnancy period | "First trimester (weeks 1-12)" |
| Antepartum | Before delivery | "Antepartum hemorrhage at 35 weeks" |
| Intrapartum | During labor/delivery | "Intrapartum fetal monitoring" |
| Postpartum | After delivery | "Postpartum hemorrhage requiring transfusion" |
| Amenorrhea | Absence of menstruation | "Primary amenorrhea by age 16" |
| Dysmenorrhea | Painful periods | "Severe dysmenorrhea requiring NSAIDs" |
| Menorrhagia | Heavy menstrual bleeding | "Menorrhagia with anemia" |
| Metrorrhagia | Irregular bleeding between periods | "Metrorrhagia requiring endometrial biopsy" |
| Eclampsia | Seizures in pregnancy hypertension | "Eclampsia at 38 weeks requiring delivery" |
| Preeclampsia | Pregnancy hypertension with proteinuria | "Severe preeclampsia with BP 180/110" |
๐ฆ Infectious Disease & Microbiology Terms
Infection terminology includes pathogens, transmission routes, and treatment responses.
| Term | Meaning | Clinical Context |
|---|---|---|
| Sepsis | Life-threatening organ dysfunction from infection | "Severe sepsis with lactate 4.2" |
| Septicemia | Bacteria in bloodstream | "Bacteremia progressing to septicemia" |
| Bacteremia | Bacteria in blood (may not be symptomatic) | "Transient bacteremia after dental procedure" |
| Viremia | Virus in bloodstream | "HIV viremia with high viral load" |
| Nosocomial | Hospital-acquired infection | "Nosocomial pneumonia developing post-op day 3" |
| Iatrogenic | Caused by medical treatment | "Iatrogenic C. diff from broad-spectrum antibiotics" |
| Immunocompromised | Weakened immune system | "Immunocompromised patient on chemotherapy" |
| Prophylaxis | Prevention treatment | "Antibiotic prophylaxis before surgery" |
| Colonization | Organism present without infection | "MRSA colonization in nares" |
| Antimicrobial Resistance | Bacteria resistant to antibiotics | "MDR (multi-drug resistant) tuberculosis" |
| Culture & Sensitivity | Growing organism and testing antibiotics | "Blood cultures with C&S pending" |
| Gram Positive/Negative | Bacterial classification by staining | "Gram-negative rods in urine culture" |
๐งฌ Endocrine & Metabolic Terms
Hormone and metabolism disorders require specialized vocabulary for diagnosis and management.
| Term | Meaning | Clinical Context |
|---|---|---|
| Hyperglycemia | High blood sugar | "Hyperglycemia with glucose 380 mg/dL" |
| Hypoglycemia | Low blood sugar | "Symptomatic hypoglycemia at 45 mg/dL" |
| Diabetic Ketoacidosis | Life-threatening diabetes complication | "DKA with pH 7.1, glucose 550" |
| Hyperosmolar Hyperglycemic State | Severe hyperglycemia without ketones | "HHS with glucose >600 mg/dL" |
| Thyrotoxicosis | Excessive thyroid hormone | "Thyrotoxicosis causing tachycardia and tremor" |
| Hypothyroidism | Low thyroid hormone | "Primary hypothyroidism with elevated TSH" |
| Hyperthyroidism | Excessive thyroid production | "Graves' disease causing hyperthyroidism" |
| Hypercalcemia | High calcium levels | "Hypercalcemia from hyperparathyroidism" |
| Hypocalcemia | Low calcium levels | "Hypocalcemia causing tetany and Chvostek's sign" |
| Hyperkalemia | High potassium (dangerous) | "Hyperkalemia K+ 6.8 with peaked T waves" |
| Hypokalemia | Low potassium | "Hypokalemia causing muscle weakness" |
| Hypernatremia | High sodium | "Hypernatremia from free water loss" |
| Hyponatremia | Low sodium | "SIADH causing hyponatremia" |
| Acidosis | pH <7.35 | "Metabolic acidosis in renal failure" |
| Alkalosis | pH >7.45 | "Respiratory alkalosis from hyperventilation" |
๐ฃ๏ธ Communication & Documentation Essentials
Professional medical communication requires standard formats and abbreviations.
SOAP Note Components
- S (Subjective): What the patient tells you - Chief complaint, HPI (history of present illness), ROS (review of systems)
- O (Objective): What you observe - Vital signs, physical exam, lab/imaging results
- A (Assessment): Your clinical impression - Differential diagnosis, most likely diagnosis
- P (Plan): Treatment plan - Medications, procedures, follow-up, patient education
Common Medical Abbreviations - Additional
| Abbreviation | Meaning | Usage |
|---|---|---|
| CC | Chief Complaint | "CC: Chest pain x3 days" |
| HPI | History of Present Illness | "HPI: 55 yo M with sudden onset chest pain..." |
| PMH | Past Medical History | "PMH: HTN, DM, CAD" |
| PSH | Past Surgical History | "PSH: Appendectomy 2010" |
| FH | Family History | "FH: Father with MI at age 50" |
| SH | Social History | "SH: 20 pack-year smoking history" |
| ROS | Review of Systems | "ROS: + for SOB, - for fever/chills" |
| PE | Physical Exam | "PE: VS stable, CV RRR, Lungs CTAB" |
| A&O x3 | Alert & Oriented to person, place, time | "Patient A&O x3, no acute distress" |
| RRR | Regular Rate and Rhythm | "Cardiac: RRR, no murmurs" |
| CTAB | Clear To Auscultation Bilaterally | "Lungs: CTAB, no wheezes" |
| NKDA | No Known Drug Allergies | "Allergies: NKDA" |
| WNL | Within Normal Limits | "Labs all WNL" |
| F/U | Follow Up | "F/U in clinic in 2 weeks" |
| D/C | Discontinue OR Discharge | "D/C home with prescriptions" (context matters!) |
๐ฏ Integration Exercise: Complete Case
Here's how all these terms come together in a real patient presentation:
Emergency Department Case
CC: "Difficulty breathing"
HPI: 68 yo F with PMH of COPD, HTN, and CHF presents with progressive dyspnea x3 days, worse with exertion. Associated orthopnea (sleeping on 3 pillows), PND, bilateral lower extremity edema, and productive cough with white sputum. Denies fever, chest pain, or hemoptysis. NKDA.
PE: VS: T 37.2ยฐC, BP 168/95, HR 102, RR 24, SpO2 88% on RA. Gen: mild respiratory distress, A&O x3. CV: tachycardic, RRR, S3 gallop present, JVD to angle of jaw. Pulm: tachypneic, bilateral basilar rales, no wheezes. Ext: 2+ pitting edema to knees bilaterally.
Labs: BNP 2400 (elevated), Troponin <0.01 (negative), BMP WNL except Cr 1.4 (baseline 1.0), CBC: WBC 8.5, Hgb 11.2 (mild anemia), Plt 220.
Imaging: CXR: cardiomegaly, bilateral pulmonary edema with Kerley B lines, bilateral pleural effusions.
Assessment: Acute decompensated CHF with pulmonary edema, likely precipitated by dietary indiscretion and medication non-compliance.
Plan:
- Admit to telemetry floor
- Furosemide 40mg IV STAT, then 20mg IV BID
- Continuous pulse oximetry, supplemental O2 to maintain SpO2 >92%
- Strict I&Os, daily weights
- Sodium restriction <2g/day
- Cardiology consult for CHF optimization
- Echo to assess EF
- Repeat BMP in AM to monitor renal function
Translation for patient/family: "You're having a flare-up of your heart failure. Fluid is backing up into your lungs, making it hard to breathe. We're giving you water pills through your IV to remove the extra fluid. You'll need to stay in the hospital so we can monitor your heart and kidneys closely. Once you're stable, we'll work with you on medication adjustments and lifestyle changes to prevent this from happening again."
๐ Final Mastery Tips
Consolidate your learning with these proven strategies:
- Create Mnemonics: MUDPILES for metabolic acidosis causes (Methanol, Uremia, DKA, Propylene glycol, Isoniazid, Lactic acidosis, Ethylene glycol, Salicylates)
- Learn Root Patterns: Once you know "hepato" = liver, you understand hepatitis, hepatoma, hepatomegaly, hepatotoxic
- Read Radiology Reports: Practice interpreting imaging findings with attending explanation
- Shadow Different Specialties: Each specialty has unique vocabulary - exposure builds your lexicon
- Use Medical Dictionaries: Stedman's, Dorland's, or Taber's for quick reference
- Join Case Discussions: Presenting cases forces you to use terminology correctly
- Review Discharge Summaries: See how experienced physicians document complex patients
- Practice Patient Explanations: Ability to translate medical jargon shows true understanding