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A review of anatomical terminology for the hip bone

Anatomical Science International, 2023
Anatomists have been attempting to standardize anatomical terminology of the human body and in doing so created the Terminologia Anatomica as a standard language of anatomy. Despite developments such as the Terminologia Anatomica, a lack of consistency of anatomical terminology is still seen across and within disciplines.
Nicholas V Passalacqua
exaly   +3 more sources

History of Czech anatomical terminology

Anatomical Science International
Latin anatomical terminology has been codified since 1895. However, the situation is different for national anatomical terminologies. There are countries that have standardized anatomical terminology in their language, e.g., Poland, Slovenia, Japan, Spain, Hungary, others, such as the Czech Republic or Slovakia, are still lacking their own standardized
Vladimir Musil, Musil Vladimir
exaly   +3 more sources

Terminologia Anatomica: Revised Anatomical Terminology

Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy, 2004
The purposes of this editorial are to acquaint the physical therapy profession and readers of JOSPT with an abridged and focused summary of the new anatomical terminology currently being used in health education, scholarly publication, research, and practice, and to provide a rationale for the implemented changes. The current anatomical terms are being
John S Halle, Arthur F Dalley
exaly   +3 more sources

Anatomical Terminology, Then and Now

Cells Tissues Organs, 1989
Anatomical terminology, which had become chaotic by the nineteenth century, was codified in the BNA of 1895, when some 5,000 terms were carefully selected from among approximately 50,000 names. The BNA and its three major revisions (BR, INA, PNA) are here reviewed and placed in historical perspective.
openaire   +2 more sources

Anatomical terminology/clinical terminology

Clinical Anatomy, 1988
AbstractNearly 100 years ago, the first formal attempt was made to standardize anatomical nomenclature. As Latin was the only language that many countries had in common, it formed the basis of anatomical terminology. It is common and accepted practice to translate the Latin terms into the language of the country concerned.
openaire   +1 more source

The pudendum and the perversion of anatomical terminology

Clinical Anatomy, 2021
AbstractThe definition of pudendum is external genitalia. The term pudendum is used to describe external genitalia regardless of sex. The labia majora, labia minora, clitoris, penis, scrotum, testes, and so on are all parts of the human pudenda. The female pudendum is also called the vulva. Also, nonhuman species have pudenda.
openaire   +2 more sources

Nomina Anatomica. Anatomic Terminology and the Old French Terminology

Reumatología Clínica, 2012
A surprising finding in our seminars in Latin America and Spain was that approximately half of the participants continued to use the old French anatomical nomenclature. The substance of this paper is a table in which we compare the anatomical names for the items reviewed in our seminar, in a Spanish version of the old French nomenclature and in the ...
Karla, Chiapas-Gasca   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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