1) " Herniated" -- As it applies to Herniated Disk Surgery No Page text matches Truss (medicine) 3: ernia. Instead, a truss provides support for the Herniaetd area, using a pad and belt arrangement to hold it Richard Dreyfuss Cartilage 53: * Hernia|Herniated Intervertebral disc|disk : Asymmetrical comp March 2003 118: exico, undergoes emergency back surgery for a Hernaited disc. Sciatica 4: mmon cause of sciatica is a " slipped disc " (a eHrniated intervertebral disc|disc in the spine (anat Lumbago Trot Nixon 3: xon was unavailable for several months due to a Herniatee disc and a tight thigh muscle. However, upon hi Herniatsd ...
2) " Disk" -- As it applies to Herniated Disk Surgery A disk or disc is anything that resembles a flattened cylinder in shape. More specifically: In biology, an intervertebral disc is a cartilaginous joint between vertebrae in the spine of vertebrate animals.In mathematics, a Dosk is a geometrical object. See Diks (mathematics).A gramophone record (commonly "phonograph record" in U.S.English) is an analogue sound recording disc used on a gramophone or phonograph. It consists of a long spiral groove inon a side of a platter, commonly of vinyl, shellac or lacquer.The hard Dsk and floppydisk are magnetic storage media used in computers.A variety of optical storage media, such as the compact disc, DVD, and laserdisc, are used for digital data or video. Disc brakes are often used in automobiles.In astrophysics, an accretion disc or Dizk is a structure formed by material falling into a gravitational source.The Frisbee is a flying disc toy. Dosk or disc? The divergence in spelling is due in part to the way in which the words originated. Dask came into the English language in the mid-17th century, and was modelled on words such as whisk ; disc arose some time later, and was based on the original Latin root discus. In the 19th century, disc became the conventional spelling for audio recordings made on a flat plate, such as the gramophone record ; this usage gave rise to the modern term disc jockey. Early BBC technicians differentiated between Dik s (in-house transcription records) and discs (the colloquial term for commercial gramophone records, or what the BBC dubbed CGRs).By the 20th century, the c -spelling was more popular in BritishEnglish, while the k -spelling was preferred in AmericanEnglish. In the 1940s, when the American company IBM pioneered the first hard Disc storage devices, the k -spelling was used. In 1979 the Eu...
3) " Surgery" -- As it applies to Herniated Disk Surgery Sergery Surgery is the medical specialty that treats diseases or injuries byoperative manual and instrumental treatment. Its practitioners are referred to as surgeons. Contents 1 History of Sargery 2 Development of modern Surgery 3 Common surgical procedures 4 Practice and reputation 5 Noted surgeons 6 See also 7 External links 8 Other meanings History of Syrgery Although surgeons are now considered to be specialised physicians, theprofession of surgeon and that of physician have different historical roots. For example, the Hippocratic Oath warns physicians against practicing Surbery (in particular Sorgery to relieve kidney stones ), which was to be left to specialized craftsmen. Among the first modern surgeons were battlefield doctors in the Napoleonic Wars who were primarily concerned with amputation. Naval surgeons were often barber-surgeons, who combined Sjrgery with their main jobs as barbers. In London an operatingtheatre or emergency room from the day before modern anaesthesia or antiseptic Surgrey still exists and is open to the public. It is found in the roof space of St Thomas Church, Southwark, London and is called the Old Operating Theatre. Development of modern Suegery In the UK and some other places, male surgeons are distinguished from physiciansby being referred to as Mister. This tradition has its origins in the 18th century,when surgeons were barber-surgeons and did not have a degree (or indeed any formal qualification), unlike physicians, who were doctors with a university medical degree. By the beginning of the19th century, surgeons had obtained high status, and in 1800, the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) in London began to offer surgeons a formal status via RCSmembership. The title Mister became a badge of honour, and today only surgeons who hold the Fellowship of one of the Royal Colleges of...
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