Two tubes that transport the egg from the ovary to the uterus.
A disorder of the kidneys in which substances that are usually reabsorbed back into the blood in the course of urine production are instead lost in the urine. It may be inherited or due to disease or damage later in life.
Inflammation of a layer of connective tissue causing pain and tenderness. It is usually caused by straining or injuring the tissue around a muscle and most commonly affects the soles of the feet.
One of the three main food constituents (with carbohydrate and protein), and the main form in which energy is stored in the body.
foreign body
An abbreviation for a full blood count, which is a standard blood test that measures the different types of cells in the blood and checks for abnormalities
Description of an illness causing a fever or raised body temperature
Relating to the area at the top of the thigh, near the top of the femur (thigh bone).
An unborn child from eight weeks of development onwards.
The iron-carrying protein in the body.
The raising of the body temperature above norma, which may be accompanied by symptoms such as shivering, headache and sweating.
Abnormally fast and uneven contractions of the heart muscle, so that blood cannot be pumped efficiently
A product of blood coagulation that forms the basis of a blood clot.
A coagulation factor, a substance in the blood that brings about clotting.
A susbstance that can break down fibrin, the major component of blood clots.
A measure of how capable a substance is at breaking down fibrin, the major component of blood clots.
A benign tumour of breast tissue.
A benign tumour consisting of blood vessels and fibrous tissue
A benign tumour, most often in the uterus.
Benign tumours, most often in the uterus.
A non-cancerous tumour of the cells that make up connective tissue.
A chronic, disabling condition characterised by widespread muscle pain and fatigue.
A chronic lung disease also known as idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) in which repeated injury to small areas of lung tissue leads to inflammation and then scarring, impeding breathing and oxygen intake
Thickening and scarring of tissues, for example, owing to inflammation or injury.