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Formula
Formula An alternative to breast milk, baby formula is usually milk-based but is also made from soy products. RELATED TERMS-------------------------------------- Breast The breast refers to the front of the chest or, more specifically, to the mammary gland. The mammary gland is a milk producing gland. It is composed largely of fat. Within the mammary gland is a complex network of branching ducts. These ducts exit from sac-like structures called lobules, which can produce milk in females. The ducts exit the breast at the nipple. Formula An alternative to breast milk, baby formula is usually milk-based but is also made from soy products. SIMILAR TERMS-------------------------------------- Formal thought disorder An inexact term referring to a disturbance in the form of thinking rather than to abnormality of content. See blocking; loosening of associations; poverty of speech. Formaldehyde A pungent gas, with the chemical formula HCHO, used as an antiseptic, disinfectant, and especially today as a fixative for histology (the study of tissues under the microscope). Formalin is a 37% aqueous (water) solution of formaldehyde. Formalin A 37% aqueous solution of formaldehyde. Formication The tactile hallucination or illusion that insects are crawling on the body or under the skin. Formicophilia A specialized variety of zoophilia in which sexuoerotic arousal and facilitation or attainment of orgasm are responsive to and contingent on the sensations produced by small creatures like snails, frogs, ants, or other insects creeping, crawling, or nibbling the genitalia and perianal area, and the nipples. Formula feeding Feeding an infant or toddler prepared formula rather than breast-feeding, or in addition to breast-feeding. Formula feeding is indicated when the mother has an illness that could be passed on to the baby through breast milk or through the close physical proximity required for breast-feeding. Otherwise, experts in infant nutrition agree that breast-feeding is best. Formula, infant A substitute for breast milk for feeding infants. Pediatricians generally advise exclusively breastfeeding (that is, breastfeeding with no formula) for all full term, healthy infants for the first 6 months of life. However, many infants are formula-fed today, at least in part. For infants to achieve normal growth and maintain normal health, infant formulas must include proper amounts of water, carbohydrate, protein, fat, vitamins, and minerals. Formulary 1. A collection of formulas, recipes, or prescriptions. 2. In medicine, a listing of prescription drugs approved for use. PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS-------------------------------------- Follicle stimulating hormone A hormone produced by the pituitary gland that stimulates the growth of eggs in the ovaries. Follicles Each month several of these small egg-containing cavities develop on the ovary of an ovulating woman. Each cavity contains a single immature egg; ovulation occurs when a follicle (or sometimes more than one) ruptures and releases an egg. Fontanel The soft spots on a baby's head that, during birth, enable the soft bony plates of the skull to flex, allowing the head to pass through the birth canal. Fontanels are completely hardened by a child's second birthday. Forceps delivery A delivery in which a hinged, tonglike device (called a forceps) is used to pull out a baby's head. Foreskin The flap of skin that normally covers the head of the penis; it is removed when a baby is circumcised. Formula Fraternal twins Born at the same time but resulting from the fertilization of two different eggs, fraternal twins are no more genetically similar than siblings; identical twins result from the division of one fertilized egg and are genetically identical. Full-term A baby born between 38 and 42 weeks' gestation. Fundal height The distance between the top of a pregnant woman's uterus (called thefundus) to her pubic bone. Measured to determine fetal age. Feature binding The binding of features processed by different systems (audio, visual) or of different subsystems (motion, depth, color) to create a unified conscious percept. Feature matching In Binocular Vision and Stereopsis, disparity can be extracted from an image if features in the two corresponding binocular images are matchable e.g. lines to lines, dots to dots. We thank you for using the Medical Glossary to search for Formula. If you have a better definition for Formula than the one presented here, please let us know by making use of the suggest a term option. This definition of Formula may be disputed by other professionals. Our attempt is to provide easy definitions on Formula and any other medical topic for the public at large.
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