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Doctors have always used a tribal vocabulary to communicate between themselves, but now their secret lingo is been enriched by the electronic media and urban slang, the British Medical Journal reported on Friday.
Paul Keeley, a consultant in the department of palliative medicine at Glasgow Royal Infirmary in Scotland wrote to the weekly BMJ to report a sample of new words that British doctors use among themselves. They include:
Other slang used by doctors, according to past letters to the BMJ, include UBI (for 'Unexplained Beer Injury'), Pafo ('Pissed And Fell Over') and Code Brown, or a faecal incontinence emergency.
CTD means 'Circling The Drain', GPO signifies 'Good for Parts Only' and 'Rule of Five' means that if more than five of the patient's orifices are obscured by tubing, he has no chance.
A patient who is 'giving the O-sign' is very sick, lying with his mouth open. This is followed by the 'Q-sign' — when the tongue hangs out of the mouth — when the patient becomes terminal.
As for genetic quirks or inbreeding, FLK means 'Funny Looking Kid' and NFN signifies 'Normal For Norfolk', a rural English county.
General practitioners may use LOBNH ('Lights On But Nobody Home') or the impressively bogus Oligoneuronal to mean someone who is thick.
But they also have a somewhat poetic option: 'Pumpkin positive', referring to the idea that the person's brain is so tiny that a penlight shone into his mouth will make his empty head gleam like a Halloween pumpkin.
AFP