Medical term:

origin



origin

 [or´ĭ-jin]
the source or beginning of anything, especially the more fixed end or attachment of a muscle (as distinguished from its insertion), or the site of emergence of a peripheral nerve from the central nervous system.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

or·i·gin

(ōr'i-jin),
1. The less movable of the two points of attachment of a muscle, that which is attached to the more fixed part of the skeleton.
2. The starting point of a cranial or spinal nerve. The former have two origins: the ental origin, deep origin, or real origin, the cell group in the brain or medulla, from which the fibers of the nerve begin, and the ectal origin, superficial origin, or apparent origin, the point where the nerve emerges from the brain.
[L. origo, source, beginning, fr. orior, to rise]
Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

origin

(ôr′ə-jĭn, ŏr′-)
n.
1. The point at which something comes into existence or from which it derives or is derived.
2. Anatomy The point of attachment of a muscle that remains relatively fixed during contraction.
The American Heritage® Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2007, 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

origin

(1) The source of information collected in the course of a clinical study, which is distinguished from data collected at the point of patient contact and data which are derived or calculated.
(2) A metadata attribute defined for each dataset variable in the "Define" document of an SDTM submission, which refers to the source of a variable—e.g., case report form, derived, sponsor defined, peer-reviewed organisation (PRO), etc.
Segen's Medical Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.

origin

Vox populi Source. See Diarrhea of undetermined origin, Fever of unknown origin, Race/ethnic origin.
McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

or·i·gin

(ōr'i-jin)
1. The less movable of two sites of attachment of a muscle; that which is attached to the more fixed part of the skeleton.
2. The starting point of a cranial or spinal nerve. The former have two origins: the ental origin, deep origin, or real origin, the cell group in the brain or medulla whence the fibers of the nerve begin; and the ectal origin, superficial origin, or apparent origin, the point where the nerve emerges from the brain.
[L. origo, source, beginning, fr. orior, to rise]
Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012

origin

The point or area of attachment of a muscle that remains mainly fixed when the muscle contracts. Compare INSERTION.
Collins Dictionary of Medicine © Robert M. Youngson 2004, 2005

Patient discussion about origin

Q. At what age can alcoholism begin? My son is 13. He drinks too much. every day he drinks, sometimes more than one time each day. can it be alcoholism already, so young? what can I do to stop this?

A. I agree with all the answers that have been given to you, stop being a friend & start being a parent, thats a start, getting him in somewhere before it's too late is the second step, you don't it will only get worse, pretending the talk will do it, no way it won't, no matter what in the end he will thank you & always be your son & friend but you as the parent have to get him professional help now, I wouldn't wait. Donna

Q. where does the chinese medicine origin from?

A. from trial and error of 5000 years...because the chines people are a very dedicated people- they perfected it to an art. not all the arguments they bring to the success of a treatment make sense, but if it works it doesn't really matters no? but then again- it also doesn't mean you should go and be a chines medicine freak..

Q. Why do litlle kids' nose's begin to bleed?

A. A nose starts to bleed when one of the small veins in its lining bursts. This is usually caused by something completely harmless, such as the child picking their nose, blowing it too hard or having their nose knocked while playing. Another reason could be that the child has pushed something inside their nose. Some children have veins that are closer to the mucous membrane of their nose than other children. Because the veins are very close to the skin, they are more likely to burst when the child picks, blows or rubs their nose, or plays rough games.

More discussions about origin
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