Cabbage (CABG, or Coronary Artery Bypass Graft) (1985)

Bapopik at AOL.COM Bapopik at AOL.COM
Sun Sep 5 21:08:36 UTC 2004


CABBGE + CABG--1,960 Google hits, 42 Google Groups hits


Not in HDAS. Not in CDS. They don't pay me all this "cabbage" for nothing.

(GOOGLE NEWS_
Half a million Americans have heart bypass surgery annually
Sabin Russell, Chronicle Medical Writer         Saturday, September 4, 2004
San Francisco Chronicle

Former President Bill Clinton's impending coronary artery bypass graft
surgery is the most common heart operation performed in the United States, with more
than half a million Americans undergoing the procedure each year.
(...)

Because the replacement blood vessels are essentially grafted into place, the
formal name for the surgery is Coronary Artery Bypass Graft -- CABG. In the
slang of the medical office, it's called "Cabbage.'' It's a major source of
revenue for hospitals. A single Cabbage can cost $50,000.


(GOOGLE GROUPS)
Introduction: Managed Care: A Crime Against Humanity
... A major form of surgery that has been developed since the 1970s, is the
coronary-artery bypass graft, or CABG (pronounced ``cabbage''). ...
misc.handicap - Oct 29, 1996 by John Covici - View Thread (1 article)


Re: Why is acronyms/initialism in American English?
... YOU] enjoy hearing an American hospital house-staff officer saying that a
patient
had had a "cabbage", the common pronounciation of CABG, Coronary Artery ...
alt.usage.english - Sep 11, 1996 by nancy g. - View Thread (29 articles)

Time to stop writing about slang
... left inside. CABG n. (pronounced cabbage) a Coronary Artery Bypass
Graft, commonly called "coronary bypass." Rel. cabbage patch ...
sci.med.nursing - Jun 5, 1995 by John D. Raudoy - View Thread (2 articles)


(PROQUEST HISTORICAL NEWSPAPERS)
    1.  These Days .......; Stick to the Record
By George Sokolsky. The Washington Post and Times Herald (1954-1959).
Washington, D.C.: Jan 31, 1956. p. 27 (1 page)

    2.  Personalities
By Chuck Conconi. The Washington Post (1974-Current file). Washington, D.C.:
Jul 14, 1983. p. F3 (1 page)

    3.  Only Foolin'
BY WILLIAM SAFIRE. New York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: Dec 1,
1985. p. SM16 (2 pages)
Second page:
"In accordance with my profession's love of terse acronyms," writes Dr.
Dworkin, "the coronary artery bypass graft had become shortened to CABG, pronounced
'cabbage,'" The acronym can be used as a noun ("He had his cabbage last
Tuesday") or a verb ("He was cabbaged last week").

"Sometimes a CABG will fail," the docotr notes sadly, "becoming totally
occluded by blood clot. I have thought of referring to this as a 'stuffed cabbage,'
but lacked the moxie."



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