Medical terminology refers to a special vocabulary used by medical professionals. Far from being used to bewilder those not trained in healthcare, it is an essential aid in consistent communication between medical professionals. Medical terminology is used consistently in medicolegal reporting. This week we are going to look at how medical words are formed, to enable you to analyse and understand some of the lingo used in Independent Medical Reports.
Medical words are derived from Greek and Latin. This allows for consistency internationally.
Medical words are made up of several component parts – Prefix, Suffix and Root or Stem words – these words generally maintain the same meaning whenever they appear.
The Prefix
The prefix is the beginning part of the word that precedes the word root and changes its meaning. It is a directional term.
Prefix | Meaning | Example |
A- | Without, absence of | Asymptomatic = Without symptoms |
An- | Against, opposite | Antacid = Against acid |
Brady- | Slow | Bradycardia = Slow heart rate |
Tachy- | Fast or rapid | Tachycardia = Fast heart rate |
Hypo- | Low, less than normal | Hypoglycaemia = Low blood sugar |
Hyper- | High, more than normal | Hypertension = High blood pressure |
Epi- | Above | Epigastric = Upper region of the abdomen |
Peri- | Around | Periotomy = Incision around the cornea |
The Root Word
The root word is the basic central construction of a medical word and in the absence of a prefix it will be found at the beginning of, or more commonly, in the middle of a word.
A root word may be accompanied by combining a vowel with a suffix. It often denotes a body part, for example, “ceph” means brain and “glyc” means sugar.
Mostly derived from Greek and Latin they tell you the ‘where’ and ‘what it is we are talking about’ of the word. Almost every medical word can be broken down into some combination of prefixes, roots, and suffixes. Because they are the core meaning of the word, there are many root words.
Meaning | Root Word | Example |
Muscle | Myo- | Myocardium = Heart muscle |
Skull | Crani-, Capit- | Craniotomy = Removal of part of the cranium |
Brain | Enceph- | Encephalitis = Inflammation of the brain |
Eyes | Ocul, Ophthalm | Oculoplastics = Plastic surgery around the eyes |
Chest | Thorac- | Thoracotomy = Surgical opening of the chest |
Rib | Pleur-, Cost- | Intercostal Muscle = Muscle between the ribs |
The Suffix
The suffix is found at the end of the word. It adds to or modifies the meaning of the root word. It usually specifies the procedure, condition or disease. Specifically it tells you ‘what’s going on’.
Suffix | Meaning | Example |
-Algia | Pain | Neuralgia = Pain following the course of a nerve |
-cide | Kill, destroy | Spermicide = Kills sperm |
-Cyte | Cell | Leucocyte = White blood cell |
-Gram | Written, recorded | Electrocardiogram = tracing of electrical activity of heart |
-itis | Inflammation | Tonsillitis = Inflammation of the tonsils |
-malacia | Soft | Osteomalacia = Softening of bone |
-ology | Study/science of | Cytology = Study of cells |
-pathy | Disease | Neuropathy = Disease of the nerves |
The Combining Vowel
Combining vowels are added to root words to aid pronunciation and connect root words to suffixes.
Encephal + o + pathy = Encephalopathy – it would sound a bit strange without the ‘O’.
There are many exceptions to the rules of medical terminology, however, this basic theory of breaking down long medical words into easier to understand segments should assist in the comprehension of some, although definitely not all, of the words, terms and phrases that one may stumble across when reading an Independent Medical Report.