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rom
(redirected from Rupture of membranes)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.

Rom

 or Gypsy plural Roma

Any member of a people originating in northern India but now living worldwide, principally in Europe. Most speak Romany in addition to the local language. It is thought that Roma groups left India in successive migrations, reaching western Europe by the 15th century. In the 20th century they spread to North and South America and Australia. Because of their often nomadic and marginalized lives, population figures are largely guesswork; estimates in the early 21st century range from two to three million. They have often been persecuted and harassed; the Nazis killed about 400,000 Roma in extermination camps. How many Roma retain a nomadic lifestyle is unclear, but those that migrate do so at least seasonally along patterned routes that ignore national boundaries. They pursue occupations compatible with a nomadic life. In the past they were often livestock traders, tinkers, fortune-tellers, and entertainers; today they are often car mechanics, auto-body repairmen, and workers in traveling circuses and amusement parks. Confederations of 10–100 families elect chieftains for life, but their title is not heritable. Women are organized as a group within the confederation and represented by a senior woman. Modern Roma culture faces erosion from urban influences; integrated housing, economic independence, and intermarriage with non-Roma have weakened Roma law.


ROM

 in full read-only memory

Form of computer memory that does not lose its contents when the power supply is cut off and that is not rewritable once it is manufactured or written. It is generally employed for programs designed for repeated use without modification, such as the start-up procedures of a personal computer; the ROM is used for storing the program used in the control unit of the computer. See also CD-ROM, compact disc.


ROM

(Read Only Memory) A memory chip that permanently stores instructions and data. Also known as "mask ROM," its content is created in the last masking stage of the chip manufacturing process, and it cannot be changed. Stand-alone ROM chips and ROM banks in microcontroller chips are used to hold control routines for a myriad of applications. ROMs were also widely used to hold the BIOS in early PCs as well as plug-in cartridges for video games.

Although EPROMs, EEPROMs, and particularly flash memory, are the kinds of non-volatile storage one hears about more often, ROM technology is mature, inexpensive and easy to integrate into any CMOS chip. See memory types, RAM, EEPROM and flash memory.

ROMs Are Everywhere
Cartridges that contain nothing more than a ROM chip are widely used to hold games and educational programs. The yellow ROM cartridge in this image (bottom right) contains a program for the LeapPad Learning System for preschoolers.


ROM Computing
read only memory: a storage device that holds data permanently and cannot in normal circumstances be altered by the programmer

rom [räm]
(electricity)
A unit of electrical conductivity, equal to the conductivity of a material in which an electric field of 1 volt per meter gives rise to a current density of 1 ampere per square meter. Derived from reciprocal ohm meter.

ROM [räm]
(computer science)

ROM - Read-Only Memory


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Other findings, while not achieving statistical significance, suggest additional relationships: The likelihood that women and their infants received the complete recommended treatment appears to be elevated among women with the lowest CD4 counts, residents of rural areas, women who experienced premature rupture of membranes more than four hours before delivery, those who had had adequate prenatal care, those lacking private insurance and those who delivered by cesarean.
Paul, "Induction of Labor with Misoprostol for Premature Rupture of Membranes beyond Thirty-six weeks' Gestation," Am J Obstet Gynecol 179 (1998): 94-99.
In cases of early-onset disease, the following data were abstracted from the medical records: prenatal GBS screening, intrapartum fever >38[degrees]C, prolonged rupture of membranes [greater than or equal to] 18 h before delivery, preterm delivery at <37 weeks of gestation, receipt of intrapartum antibiotics, and outcome of illness.
 
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