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Hypoglycemia
Hypoglycemia Low levels of blood sugar.
RELATED TERMS--------------------------------------
Blood The life-maintaining fluid which is made up of plasma, red blood cells (erythrocytes), white blood cells (leukocytes), and platelets; blood circulates through the body's heart, arteries, veins, and capillaries; it carries away waste matter and carbon dioxide, and brings nourishment, electrolytes, hormones, vitamins, antibodies, heat, and oxygen to the tissues.
Sugar A class of carbohydrates that taste sweet. Sugar is a quick and easy fuel for the body to use. Types of sugar are lactose, glucose, fructose, and sucrose.
SIMILAR TERMS--------------------------------------
Hypodermic Beneath the skin.
Hypoglicemia A condition in which the blood sugar is lower than normal.
Hypoglycemia Unawareness A situation in which the usual epinephrine-induced symptoms of a fall in blood sugar are, for a variety of reasons, either not felt or not recognized. |This situation may be dangerous, as the patient may go from functioning normally to unconscious within a short time. It is generally thought that if such a patient is allowed to maintain somewhat elevated blood sugar levels for several weeks, that the hypoglycemic unawareness may resolve.
Hypoparathyroidism Parathyroid hormone insufficiency due to lack of secretion of the parathyroid gland.
Hypophilia A condition or syndrome, variable in etiology and diagnosis, of being sexuoerotically substandard or deficient, particularly with respect to some aspect of genital functioning at the acceptive phase; impaired or deficient in sexual and genital responsiveness or frequency. The condition of being subnormal in sexual and genital responsiveness or frequency.
Hypophosphataemic rickets X-linked, vitamin D-resistant. May resemble ankylosing spondylitis.
Hypophosphatasia Rare autosomal recessive cause of rickets. Associated with a lack of alkaline phosphatase.
Hypophysis Pituitary gland.
Hypopituitarism A generalized endocrine deficiency condition produced by failure, either partial or complete, of the pituitary gland to secrete its proper hormones. Failure after surgery for a pituitary tumor is usually complete. Idiopathic failure may be either complete or partial. In some instances, partial failure may involve chiefly the secretion of pituitary gonadotropins, the hormones that stimulate the ovaries or the testes to produce their own hormones.
Hypoplasia Underdevelopment of a tissue or organ usually due to a decrease in the number of cells.
Hyposensitisation See specific allergy vaccination.
Hyposensitization To treat with frequent, small injections of an antigen to decrease the symptoms of an allergy to that antigen. Also called desensitization.
Hypospadias A birth defect in the positioning of the urethral (urinary meatus) opening on the penis in males or into the vagina in females. In mild male hypospadias, the opening is only slightly displaced from the tip of the penis. In severe male hypospadias, the opening is in the female position, at the base of the scrotum, and the penis has an open gutter on its underside, instead of a covered urinary canal. A hypospadiac penis may be normal sized or small. 2. A birth defect in the male in which the urinary opening is on the underside of the shaft of the penis anywhere from the glans (first degree) to the perineum (third degree or penoscrotal hypospadias). A small penis with a severe degree of hypospadias is identical in appearance with an enlarged clitoris below which is a single opening or urogenital sinus leading to both the urethra and the vagina. Artificial hypospadias may occur as a sequel to an injury, as in a circumcision accident, or be self-inflicted.
Hypotension Subnormal arterial blood pressure.
Hypothalamus The portion of the brain's limbic system that integrates incoming information, and either increases or decreases the release of certain hormones that instruct the pituitary gland to release hormones.
Hypothermia Low body temperature.
Hypothyroidism Deficiency of thyroid hormone; the opposite of hyperthyroidism. The thyroid gland is in the throat, near the larynx or Adam's apple.
Hypotonia Abnormally decreased tonicity, tension or strength; ocular hypotony refers to low intraocular pressure.
Hypotonicity Diminished muscle tone; limp muscles.
Hypovolemia A decreased amount of blood in the body.
Hypoxemia Subnormal oxygenation of arterial blood, short of anoxia.
Hypoxia Abnormal oxygen content in the organs and tissues of the body.
Hypoxyphilia Asphyxiophilia [from Latin, hypoxia, oxygen deprivation + -philia].
PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS--------------------------------------
Human chorionic gonadotropin Hormone produced by the placenta during early pregnancy.
Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) Viruses that can cause warts. Some HPVs are sexually transmitted and cause wart-like growths on the genitals. HPV is a major risk factor for cervical cancer.
Hydrochloric acid An acid made in the stomach that works with pepsin and other enzymes to break down proteins.
Hydrogen breath test A test for lactose intolerance that measures breath samples for too much hydrogen.
Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) A bulge in the ventricle that causes impeded blood flow.
Hypoglycemia
Hypoxia Abnormal oxygen content in the organs and tissues of the body.
Hysterosalpingography X-ray examination of the uterus and fallopian tubes that uses dye and is often performed to rule out tubal obstruction.
Hysteroscope Visual examination of the canal of the cervix and the interior of the uterus using a viewing instrument (hysteroscope) inserted through the vagina.
Hyposensitisation See specific allergy vaccination.
Hematopoietic stem cell A stem cell from which all red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets develop.
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