Sectional

Dissection is a term used in medicine to refer to the process of dividing the body into separate parts or organs. The term is mainly used to describe the procedure of dissecting a corpse or performing a surgical operation.

Sectional is performed in a special room called a sectional. This room contains all the necessary equipment and tools for performing a dissection, including a dissecting table, tools for cutting the body, lighting, etc.

Before starting the section, the doctor examines the body and determines which organs and tissues need to be removed for examination. The body is then cut into several pieces, which can be studied separately. The doctor can then conduct examinations and analyzes of organs and tissues to determine the cause of death and make a diagnosis.

The sectional procedure is very important for medical research and disease diagnosis. It allows doctors to obtain more accurate information about a patient's health status and make more informed treatment decisions.



Sectional (sectional) theory is a branch of mathematics that studies the properties of linear and two-dimensional spaces over finite fields of discrete type. The theory of sectional vector spaces was developed by A.F. Leontyev and N.M. Boltyansky. It is one of the fundamental theories of the theory of bilinear forms (theory of tensor products, conjugate vectors, etc.). However, this theory is not strictly self-consistent and leads to the appearance of well-founded dead ends in its proof. In addition, sectional theory is weakly related to the theory of complex numbers, which makes it of little use for the study of geometry and physics.