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procedure

 [pro-se´jer]
a series of steps for doing something; see also maneuver, method, operation, surgery, and technique. For specific types of procedures, see under the name.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

pro·ce·dure

(prō-sē'jŭr),
Act or conduct of diagnosis, treatment, or operation.
See also: method, operation, technique.
Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

procedure

Medtalk An 'invasive' service performed by a physician, which is arbitrarily divided into major–eg, general, orthopedic, cardiovascular, or other surgical procedures, ambulatory or outPt–eg, radial keratotomy procedures, and endoscopic procedures. See BAK procedure, Batista procedure, Booked procedure, Coronary revascularization procedure, Cough-inducing procedure, Cyclodestructive procedure, Diagnostic procedure, DIEP flap procedure, Disciplinary procedure, Dor procedure, Downstream procedure, Ertl procedure, Experimental procedure, Goebell-Stöckel procedure, Hartmann procedure, Hearing-sparing procedure, Heller-Dor procedure, High-discretion procedure, High-risk & complex procedure, High-yield procedure, In & out procedure, Indiana pouch procedure, Infection control procedure, Labyrnithine procedure, LEEP procedure, Life-prolonging procedure, Localization procedure, Low-yield procedure, LTPs procedure, Maintenance procedure, Manchester procedure, Marshall-Marchetti-Krantz procedure, Maze procedure, Minor procedure, Mumford procedure, Myocardial laser revascularization procedure, Neuroablative procedure, No/NA procedure, Overvalued procedure, Physician-performed microscopy procedure, Pinup procedure, Potts procedure, Regnauld procedure, Ross procedure, Sauvé-Kapandji procedure, Scalp-lifting procedure, Shirodkar procedure, Special firefighting procedure, Standard operating procedure, Upstream procedure, Ultra-rapid opiate detoxification procedure, Whipple procedure, Wrap-around procedure, Yes/no procedure, Yes/yes procedure. Cf Evaluation and management service, Physician test.
McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

pro·ce·dure

(prŏ-sē'jŭr)
Act or conduct of diagnosis, treatment, or operation.
See also: method, operation, technique
Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012

procedure 

A specific way of doing something. The term is commonly used for surgical operations. See method.
advancement procedure See recession.
Faden procedure A surgical procedure designed to weaken the action of an extraocular muscle by reattaching it to the globe posterior to its original insertion. By attaching the muscle to the eye at this point, the arc of contact of the muscle is changed, thus weakening the muscle in its field of action. The procedure can be used to treat dissociated vertical deviations, nystagmus, as well as cases of incomitant strabismus (e.g. Brown's superior oblique tendon sheath syndrome, Duane's syndrome). Syn. posterior fixation suture. See arc of contact; strabismus surgery.
Hummelsheim's procedure See transposition.
Jensen procedure See transposition.
Knapp procedure See transposition.
Tuck procedure A strabismus surgical procedure in which a muscle or tendon is folded upon itself in order to effectively shorten and strengthen it. This procedure is commonly performed in cases of superior oblique paresis. It may also be used in cases of mild ptosis to shorten the levator palpebrae aponeurosis.
Millodot: Dictionary of Optometry and Visual Science, 7th edition. © 2009 Butterworth-Heinemann

pro·ce·dure

(prŏ-sē'jŭr)
Act or conduct of diagnosis, treatment, or operation.
Medical Dictionary for the Dental Professions © Farlex 2012

Patient discussion about procedure

Q. What are the dangers of a liposuction procedure? I am nervous about my decision to do liposuction and wanted to know more about the risks in this procedure.

A. Liposuction complications may include: infection, extended healing time, allergic reaction to medication or anesthesia, fat or blood clots - clots can migrate to the lungs and lead to death, excessive fluid loss - fluid loss can lead to shock, fluid accumulation - fluid must be drained, friction burns, damage to the skin or nerves, damage to vital organs. The dangers of excessive liposuction include risks associated with removing too much fat from targeted areas at once, as well as having too much liposuction performed in a single day. Excessive liposuction can cause problems including dents, lumps, and sagging

Q. Has anyone had a bad experience with Lasik? I am considering the procedure but am worried about the risks.

A. i know several ophthalmologist- and they all ware glasses...it's like a giant experiment on people- no one really knows what will be the long reach out come of it. but then again, cellular radiation is also a world wide experiment..so i stay with my glasses for now, but that's because i'm not a big risk taker.

Q. I developed an AV Fistula after a heart catherization procedure. I am bleeding through the tissues in left arm I am on coumadin, but currently have a lower than usual INR. Corrective surgery was scheduled for yesterday, but had to be delayed. I am concerned that I have a large amount of blood (dark red) bleeding though the tissues right under the skin in my left arm. Should I seek immediate medical attention? The bleeding is over approximately a 3 and 1/2" area on my left arm. Came about in a period of a few minutes.

A. well, you are on blood thinners. i wouldn't take the chance. i mean- i'm not sure i follow what is happening over there. it could be a severe problem or nothing. i would let a doctor check it out. the worse thing that could happen is you wasting a day at the hospital, on the other end of that scenario- you can end up dead. i would go with the first one.

More discussions about procedure
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References in periodicals archive
the imperial governing apparatus, escheat radicalism gradually was
Whether this expedient would work remains to be tested; (162) the answer depends on (1) whether by virtue of its right of escheat, the state would then succeed to a right to challenge the trust, an issue on which cases have offered conflicting authority, (163) and (2) if not, whether the bar on capricious-purpose trusts is self-executing, empowering a court to intervene sua sponte.
(18) After early American colonists broke off from the Crown, the newly-formed federal government did not assert similar claims to escheat property.
state undertook only fourteen escheat actions, (79) illuminating that
* the income from feudal incidents, (11) reliefs, marriages, wardships, escheats, etc.; and
A city's zoning ordinances are the single most affective tool to implement the general plan, however, on the fringes, land use can be shaped through the governments right of taxation, eminent domain, and escheat (the right for the government to assume title in certain estate situation).
Some states exclude gift cards outright from the state escheat (defined as the reversion of property to the state in the absence of legal heirs or claimants) laws, while others (including New York) explicitly require unspent gift card funds to be paid to the state.
Every state has legislation that requires individuals and companies to escheat, or abandon property, to the state after some period.
In this regard, one could petition the king for a lettre de naturalite and thereby escape the royal right of escheat (a process that usually cost around 600 livres, a not inconsiderable sum that was out of reach for many immigrants).
Although fluid recovery may include mechanisms such as coupons, price rollbacks, or medical monitoring, the more relevant approaches for our purposes require deposit of all or part of the recovered money into a designated fund--accomplished, for example, by escheat to a general or specific state account, or by the establishment of a new consumer fund.
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