Word Plays in Medicine Article



Introduction:

We at ProfitMTFuture medical transcription education/medical word editing education are hoping the article below will give you a laugh! It is an interesting look into the world of words in medicine! If you are not a medical transcriptionist, and it gives you a chuckle, then you're looking into the right field! We believe that a jot of humor in everything makes the world brighter!

We hope the "funny" below brightens your day. These are the words given by patients who don't quite "have it right" and the physician must decipher -- or physicians/authors who "don't quite say it right."
in everything makes the world brighter!

We also hope to see you in our classes, and offer you the best medical transcription education that you can obtain. Be sure and visit the American Association for Medical Transcription site - Professional Development - Training - and check out the recommendations from the national professional organization on the type of education the national organization recommends. www.aamt.org


Word Plays in Medicine

Contributed by a medical society:

The obituary gland seems a sad place to start. Moving down the ophagus tube, past the broccoli, a fundoapplication may help. You may recognize the psychiatric nerve, but what about the haricot veins? The introverted uterus is a little shy, but the crucial ligaments are obviously important. Platinums and playtex are everywhere.
(Pituitary gland, esophagus, bronchi, fundoplication, sciatic nerve, varicose veins, retroverted uterus, cruciate ligaments, platelets.)





Having sorted out the anatomy, the various ailments are next. There are many inflations in the vocabulary. Does the human Pavarotti virus affect the vocal chords? What organs are involved with a hippopotamus or a helicopter? (Inflammations, human papillomavirus, hypothalamus, Helicobacter.)

For the surgeons, we need help with the biblical hernias and erupted spleen. It may be a little more difficult to decide which specialist to refer a fractured zygote, a utopic pregnancy, bunyips, painful anodes and the occasional Arnold Curarie.
(Umbilical hernias, ruptured spleen, fractured zygoma, ectopic pregnancy, bunions, nodes, Arnold Chiari malformation.)


We could probably send the pigsty, cellutosis, cradle crop, scarytosis, and ectopic eczema to the dermatologists (if they are not at a conference in Barcelona or Melanesia), but who treats septic ulcers? (Stye, cellulitis, cradle cap, solar keratosis, atopic eczema, basal cell carcinoma, melanoma, peptic ulcers.)

The respiratory physicians, with their stereophone can move from sleep apathy to bronchial ecstasy, but should postnatal drips and reproductive coughs go to them or the obstetricians? Even more confusing are Alka Seltzer's disease, tetanus and tendonitis, which are not what they seem. The physicians could investigate grout, osteoferocious and facetious anaemia and handle a myocardial infraction. And for the lawyers - is needless dysplastic syndrome considered as incompetence or a minuscule tear?
(Stethoscope, sleep apnea, bronchiectasis, postnasal drip, productive cough, Alzheimer's disease, tinnitus, gout, osteoporosis, pernicious anemia, myocardial infarction, dysplastic nevus, incontinence, meniscal tear.)


Then there are the things that doctors do to patients which make one wonder about informed consent. If you seduced the patient into pornography what would you expect? A tubal litigation may follow, or perhaps swifter justice with a lumbar punch. Monograms and egg, lettuce and fried tomatoes are common investigations, but who wants the Geiger counter or MI5? If the patient asked for the locum, or, worse still, for the results of their own autopsy, how would you respond? They may be better going to the physioterrorist, or just to the choir practice.
(Induced, colostomy, tubal ligation, lumbar puncture, mammogram, E/LFT's, glucometer, MRI, local anaesthetic, biopsy, physiotherapist, chiropractor.)


But the best mispronunciations of all are the muddled medications. The metropolis tablets are real blocker beaters, and others prefer the condominium lifestyle, but on a bad day it may be necessary to retreat to Nimbin for a bit of peace and quiet. We could go there in the Valiant, filling up with Caltex on the way, but hopefully avoiding an argument when the map reading leads us astray.
(Metoprolol, beta blockers, Coumadin, Nemdyn ointment, Valium, Caltrate, Augmentin.)


The medical profession has all sorts of alternative remedies, for Anzacs and aristocrats and perhaps even the odd pessowary. These include marzipan, genetic tablets and those well-known urinal tablets, and Laminex, but there is less demand for the repulsive tablets.
(Zantac, Aristocort, pessary, temazepam, generic, Ural, Lasix, Propulsid.)


On that note, now that you are completely confused by trying to be bilingual, get out the Kleenex, sit back and hope it all goes into remittance.
(Nitrolingual, Keflex, remission.)


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