At this stage is just listen and take notes. After that if there is anything you didn't clear up with him, as about it here.I am seeing a cardiothoracic surgeon tomorrow to discuss my 50 mm aortic root aneurysm. I'm negative for connective tissue disorder, and I think my valve is patent. What questions would you ask? Thanks, TIm
I don't know what patent means
Common medical usage meaning “open”, or “unblocked”, as in “patent ductus arteriosus”.
Oddly, when I looked it up online, figuring I’d just post a link; the only definition I found was patent (the A sound as in apple) as in copyright.
I'm not officially a linguistics major, but I use it this way, that "a" has a hard and a soft sound; a as in back and a as in car. In Finnish at least this is written specifically as hard (bäck) and soft (car)The meaning intended here has the A sound as in “pay”. Do they still call them short and long vowels? Haven’t heard that mentioned since grade school.
It is interesting how a name might seem like a good name at the time, and then not so much in the future, as the world changes.funny how these names go into oblivion when text searching.
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