different between plasminogen vs reteplase
plasminogen
English
Etymology
plasmin +? -o- +? -gen
Noun
plasminogen (countable and uncountable, plural plasminogens)
- (biochemistry) The inactive precursor to plasmin; profibrinolysin
plasminogen From the web:
- what plasminogen activator
- what does plasminogen do
- what is plasminogen activator inhibitor
- what does plasminogen activator inhibitor do
- what does plasminogen activator do
- what is plasminogen deficiency
- what does plasminogen activator mean
- what does plasminogen
reteplase
English
Etymology
Probably from re(combinant) +? -teplase (“tissue-type plasminogen activator”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /??i?.t?p.le?z/
- (General American) IPA(key): /??i.t??ple?s/
Noun
reteplase (uncountable)
- (pharmacology) A modified form of human tissue plasminogen activator, used as a thrombolytic drug.
Anagrams
- repealest
reteplase From the web:
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- plasminogen vs reteplase
- plasminogen vs staphylokinase
- phospholipid vs plasminogen
- profibrinolysin vs plasminogen
- plasmin vs plasminogen
- precursor vs plasminogen
- explosive vs explosion
- heparins vs heparans
- separase vs seprase
- separate vs separase
- glycosaminoglycan vs acetylgalactosamine
- glycosaminoglycan vs glucosaminoglycan
- proteoglycan vs glycosaminoglycan
- carbohydrate vs glycosaminoglycan
- polysaccharide vs glycosaminoglycan
- glycosaminoglycan vs heparin
- sailboard vs sailboarding
- sailboard vs sailboarder
- windsurf vs sailboard
- mast vs sailboard