Medical Terminology Simplified

(Grace) #1
6–70 Hemat/orefers to blood.A patient with acute gastr/itis or a peptic ulcer
may vomit blood.
Build a word that means vomiting blood.
____________________ / ____________________

6–71 Bleeding in the stomach may be due to a gastr/ic ulcer and may cause
vomiting of blood. A Dx of vomiting blood is entered in the medical record as
____________________ / ____________________.

6–72 A common symptom of gastr/ic disease is pain. When pain occurs in the
region above the stomach, it is called epi/gastr/ic pain.
Form a word that means pertaining to above or on the stomach.
__________ / ____________________ / __________

6–73 Dys/pepsia literally means painful or difficult digestionand is a form of gas-
tric indigestion. It is not a disease in itself but may be a symptom of disease.
Determine word elements in this frame that mean
digestion:____________________
bad, painful, difficult:__________

6–74 Over-the-counter antacids (agents that neutralize acidity) usually provide
prompt relief of pain from __________ / ____________________.

6–75 The suffix -phagiameans swallowing, eating.Use dys-and -phagiato form a
word that means difficult or painful swallowing.
__________ / ____________________
Analyze dys/phagia by defining its elements:
dys-: __________, ____________________, ____________________
-phagia:____________________, ____________________

6–76 Swallowing air, usually followed by belching and gastric distention, is a
condition known as aer/o/phagia. The CF for airis __________ / _____.

6–77 Infants have a tendency to swallow air as they suck milk from a bottle, a
condition charted as __________ / _____ / ____________________.

Frame 6–62to Frame 6–77

Upper GI Tract • CHAPTER 6 231231

hemat/emesis


hĕm-ăt-ĔM-ĕ-sĭs


hemat/emesis


hĕm-ăt-ĔM-ĕ-sĭs


epi/gastr/ic


ĕp-ĭ-GĂS-trĭk


-pepsia


dys-


dys/phagia


dĭs-FĀ-jē-ă


bad, painful, difficult


swallowing, eating


dys/pepsia


dĭs-PĔP-sē-ă


aer/o


aer/o/phagia


ĕr-ō-FĀ-jē-ă

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