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isometric

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isometric

 [i″so-met´rik]
maintaining, or pertaining to, the same length; of equal dimensions.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

i·so·met·ric

(ī'sō-met'rik),
1. Of equal dimensions.
2. In physiology, denoting the condition when the ends of a contracting muscle are held fixed so that contraction produces increased tension at a constant overall length. Compare: auxotonic, isotonic (3), isovolumic.
[iso- + G. metron, measure]
Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

isometric

(ī′sə-mĕt′rĭk)
adj. also i′somet′rical (-rĭ-kəl)
1. Of or exhibiting equality in dimensions or measurements.
2. Of or being a crystal system of three equal axes lying at right angles to each other.
3. Physiology Of or involving muscular contraction against resistance in which the length of the muscle remains the same.
n.
A line connecting isometric points.

i′so·met′ri·cal·ly adv.
The American Heritage® Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2007, 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

exercise

Public health The rhythmic contraction of muscles against a force Pros ↓ risk of cholecystectomy, ↓ risk of CAD, CHD, CA–colorectal, breast, prostate, DM–improved insulin utilization, obesity, stroke, osteoporosis, stress, anxiety; ↑ sexual pleasure, strength, flexibility, stamina, psychological well-being, general health; improved reaction time, memory, moods, immune resistance, sleep, self-confidence, control of arthritis, weight, quality of life. See Aerobic exercise, Anaerobic exercise, Breathing exercise, Cardiovascular exercise, Codman's pendulum exercise, Hoshino exercise, Isometric exercise, Isotonic exercise, Pritikin exercise, Vigorous exercise.
Exercise
Muscle
Isometric Exercise against an unmoving resistance; isometric exercises consist of muscle contraction with a minimum of other body movements; isometric exercises build muscle strength and include weight-lifting or squeezing a tennis ball
Isotonic Dynamic exercise Isotonic exercise consists of continuous and sustained movement of the arms and legs; isotonic exercises are beneficial to the cardiorespiratory systems and include running and bicycling
Whole body
Low-impact aerobics Any type of aerobic exercise that promotes physical fitness, but does not stress musculoskeletal tissues, and joints; low-impact aerobic exercises include walking, swimming, bicycling
High-impact aerobics Any type of aerobic exercise that promotes physical fitness, at the risk of stress to musculoskeletal tissues, and joints; high-impact aerobic exercises include aerobic dancing, basketball, running, volleyball
Exercise-kcal consumed/hour
Distance running (15 km/hour)  1000
Contact sports (wrestling, karate)   900
Bicycling (25 km/hour)   800
Swimming, freestyle   800
Basketball, volleyball  700
Jogging (9 km/hour)  600
Tennis   500
Coitus   450
Walking  400
McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

i·so·met·ric

(ī'sō-met'rik)
1. Of equal dimensions.
2. physiology Denoting the condition when the ends of a contracting muscle are held fixed so that contraction produces increased tension at a constant overall length.
Compare: auxotonic, isotonic (3) , isovolumic
[iso- + G. metron, measure]
Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012

isometric

1. Of equal dimensions or length.
2. Of muscular tightening, in which an increase in tension occurs without shortening.
Collins Dictionary of Medicine © Robert M. Youngson 2004, 2005

isometric

  1. of similar or equal measure.
  2. pertaining to a muscle under tension without contraction or change in length.
Collins Dictionary of Biology, 3rd ed. © W. G. Hale, V. A. Saunders, J. P. Margham 2005

iso·met·ric

(ī'sō-met'rik)
Of equal dimensions.
[iso- + G. metron, measure]
Medical Dictionary for the Dental Professions © Farlex 2012
Mentioned in
References in periodicals archive
Typically, this data will be written onto isometric drawings of the equipment.
Integrating the plant design with NavisWorks, Autodesk's system for handling highly complex models such as buildings and all their subsystems in all the Autodesk and other CAD systems, the program allows output to isometric drawings for fabrication.
This exercise workbook for users of Advanced AutoCad 2010 offers step-by-step instructions for customizing workspaces, creating master setup and isometric drawings, understanding Blocks and Dynamic Blocks, using External Reference commands and learning the basics for 3D drawing.
provides, as well, complete detailed manuals and isometric drawings, in order to facilitate customer maintenance interventions and proper training of their operators.
Pupils will be given a brief to design a futuristic F-1 car, using PTC's Pro/DESKTOP software package, in addition to producing supporting evidence of their concept such as orthographic projections, colour isometric drawings and three-dimensional rendering.
Once the design was done, it was necessary to produce from scratch all of the spools, or isometric drawings, and other drawings needed for fabrication.
The components appear in a PDS three-dimensional model, in isometric drawings, and bills of material extracted from the model.
(For further assistance with isometric drawings, including more lessons on producing isometric drawings, visit http://isometrics.i-us.com.)
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