Jump to ContentJump to Main Navigation

AMA Manual of Style Committee

Contents

Abbreviations

Chapter:
Medical Indexes
Author(s):

Bruce McGregor,

Harriet S. Meyer

13.1.5 Abbreviations

Include only abbreviations used in the text being indexed (ie, if a text uses only an expanded form, eg, National Institutes of Health, but never the abbreviation, do not include “NIH” in the index).

Abbreviations are listed alphabetically among other entries (examples from Thomas9,10).

catheterization

CAT scan. See computed tomography

cat-scratch disease

CEA (carcinoembryonic antigen)

cecum

ectopic ACTH syndrome, 106, 107, 109

ectopic kidney, 2226

ectopic pregnancy, 1947, 2055–2056

Identical abbreviations are sorted by case; be consistent throughout the index, eg,

HeV, 232

HEV, 330–331

PaO2, 464

PAO2, 251

Use cross-references and expansions with abbreviations, as in these examples (first set from Thomas9).

CAT scan. See computed tomography

computed tomography (CT, CAT scan), 2715–2716

CT. See computed tomography

mitral stenosis (MS), 497

MS. See mitral stenosis; multiple sclerosis

multiple sclerosis (MS), 497

The following example illustrates (1) a cross-reference with an abbreviated organism name and (2) use of roman cross-reference term (See) when entry terms are in italics.

E coli infection. See Escherichia coli infection

When an abbreviation is more familiar than the expansion, index under the abbreviation1,2; include the expansion in parentheses, use a cross-reference to the abbreviation from the expanded term, or both.4 Terms in this manual for which it is specified that the abbreviation may be used without expansion (see chapter 14.0, Abbreviations, and chapter 15.0, Nomenclature) should probably be indexed under the abbreviation. However, terms expanded at first mention, as recommended in this manual, may nevertheless be more familiar in their abbreviated form. Usage in the text being indexed is a guide to which form is more familiar.

deoxyribonucleic acid. See DNA

DNA, 112, 334, 556–560