If you look up the word "change," then see all the variations under that, it lists: "ST segment change." But it does list "ST-T segment change" and "ST-T wave change," which is why I think a lot of people get confused about whether or not to hyphenate "ST segment change."
Is through and through hyphenated ever?
Ex: . . . through-and-through fracture
Ex: . . . the defect to be through and through.
Appreciate any and all help. ...
If a physician's last name is hyphenated, such as Alice Jones-Brown, how would one do the initial's stating who dictated? Would it be Dajb or Dab? Thanks! ...
I know most names are hyphenated because they're usually named after more than one person, but there are exceptions such a Denis Browne or Robert Jones (splint) when it's just one person's first and last names.
I am transcribing an op report in Ortho for a kid with a Salter-Harris fracture (That one I know - Salter-Harris isn't the question.), but the fragment is called a *Thurston Holland* or *Thurston-Holland* fragment. When I google it, I can find it both ways, also in re ...
I just took a practice test, and it asked this question of the following sentence, is the sentence below punctuated correctly?
Fine needle aspiration revealed no abnormalities. The answer on the test was false. Is any part of fine needle aspiration hyphenated? Help? ...