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<br><hr><P><marquee direction="right"><Font face="Brush Script MT"size=+3<b>Steve</b></font></marquee><br>
very good steve.....but you forgot...rodent rage.....a very serious, and deadly...for the rodents anyway....side effect of tx..and ribiviran.....not to mention that "rodent rage" is doubled or tripled when you tack on menopuase as well.....tee hee hee.....oh i love using this as an excuse to shoot those nasty little creatures destroying my house...think i'm becoming quite obsessed with this ....
What country are you from? Your syntax makes me think you are from Europe perhaps? (I taught English in Eastern Europe).
Thanks for asking the question. I've figured out most of the jargon (words or phrases used which are understood by a select group of people)and can't contribute much to what's been said already.
However, you have prompted me to ask my own question.
What is GI?
I used to think it was Gastroenterologist, but that would be GE.
General Internist? I doubt it, since this is a specialty group...although I could be wrong.
Hepatologist? Nahhhh....
Perhaps Erin could answer this...although I originally thought that GI.PA meant GI in PA (Pennsylvania)...but I wonder...
Erin?
GI?
PA?
Thanks.
gastro-enterologist, only GI is "in English"
Other abbreviations we use:
tx=treatment (generally, here, the pegylated interferon/
ribavirin tx for Hepatitis C, but could be other treatment)
sx=sides=side effects
bx=biopsy (we're usually concerned about the liver here)
dx=diagnosis
Rx=prescription
VL=viral load, usually expressed in I.U./mL (international units)
EVR=early viral responder
SVR=sustained viral responder, as in 6 or 12 months after
completion of tx
fog=mental confusion, bad memory, etc. as side effects of tx
PA=Physicians' Assistant (GIPA/Erin, for example)
ROFLMAO/LOL and variations: Laughing Out Loud or hysterically
http://www.janis7hepc.com/Labs.htm#c
Good Luck.....
i'll stick to Dasani. My dogs like it too, lol Joni