Medical Terms by Body System: A Complete Reference

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The Complete Reference

Medical Terms by Body System: A Complete Reference

Medical terminology is organised by body system in most education programs because each system has its own family of Greek and Latin roots. Cardio- (heart), neuro- (nerve), gastro- (stomach), and so on. Mastering body-system roots gives you a framework for understanding hundreds of medical terms by parts. Once you can name the system, you can usually decode the rest of the word.

This reference walks through eleven body systems used in Australian healthcare education. For each system you get a short description, a table of the most common combining forms (the root with its joining vowel), what each one means, an example term and what the example term means in plain English. Skim by system, then return as a lookup tool whenever an unfamiliar word turns up in a record.

How body-system word roots work

A body-system root is a combining form that names an organ or system. Add a prefix or a suffix and you have a working medical term. Cardi- (heart) plus -ology (study of) gives cardiology. Nephro- (kidney) plus -itis (inflammation) gives nephritis. Gastro- (stomach) plus enter- (intestine) plus -itis gives gastroenteritis.

Three rules to keep in mind as you read the tables below:

  • Roots come from Greek and Latin, often both for the same organ. The kidney is nephro- (Greek) in clinical pathology and reno- (Latin) in anatomy. The heart is cardi- (Greek) in clinical work and cor- (Latin) in some anatomical names. Both are correct; you simply meet them in different contexts.
  • The combining vowel glues the parts together. The letter o usually joins a root to the next component (cardi-o-logy, gastr-o-enteritis). It is dropped when the next part starts with a vowel (cardi + itis = carditis, not cardioitis).
  • Once you know the root, every term that uses it becomes readable. Cardi- gives cardiology, cardiomegaly, tachycardia, bradycardia, carditis, cardiomyopathy and dozens more. Learning the root is high leverage.

For a deeper walk-through of how prefixes and suffixes attach to roots, see the companion reference on common medical prefixes and suffixes. The pillar at medical terminology covers the broader framework.

Cardiovascular system

The cardiovascular system covers the heart, blood vessels and circulation. Cardi- and its variants are the most common roots, but vasculo-, angio-, atrio-, ventriculo- and the haemato- family also appear constantly in clinical documentation, pathology results and procedure reports.

Cardiovascular roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
cardi-, cardio- heart cardiology study of the heart and its diseases
angi-, angio- vessel (blood or lymph) angiography imaging of the blood vessels
vas-, vasculo- vessel, duct vasculitis inflammation of a blood vessel
arteri-, arterio- artery arteriosclerosis hardening of the arteries
phleb-, phlebo- vein phlebitis inflammation of a vein
ven-, veno- vein venous relating to the veins
atri-, atrio- atrium (upper heart chamber) atrioventricular relating to the atria and ventricles
ventricul-, ventriculo- ventricle (lower heart chamber) ventriculography imaging of a heart ventricle
aort-, aorto- aorta aortic stenosis narrowing of the aortic valve
haemat-, haemato- blood haematology study of the blood and its disorders
thromb-, thrombo- clot thrombosis formation of a blood clot in a vessel
isch-, ischo- holding back, restriction ischaemia insufficient blood supply to tissue

Respiratory system

The respiratory system covers the airways, lungs and the act of breathing. Pulmono- and pneumo- both mean lung; broncho-, tracheo-, laryngo- and rhino- name the airway structures from the nose down. Pnoea suffixes describe the breathing pattern itself.

Respiratory roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
pulmon-, pulmono- lung (Latin) pulmonologist specialist in lung disease
pneum-, pneumo-, pneumon- lung, air (Greek) pneumonia inflammation of the lungs
bronch-, broncho- bronchus (airway) bronchitis inflammation of the bronchi
trache-, tracheo- trachea (windpipe) tracheostomy surgical opening into the trachea
laryng-, laryngo- larynx (voice box) laryngitis inflammation of the larynx
pharyng-, pharyngo- pharynx (throat) pharyngitis sore throat with inflammation
rhin-, rhino- nose rhinitis inflammation of the nasal lining
sinus- sinus sinusitis inflammation of the sinuses
pleur-, pleuro- pleura (lung lining) pleurisy inflammation of the pleura
thorac-, thoraco- chest, thorax thoracotomy surgical incision into the chest wall
spiro-, -pnoea breathing dyspnoea difficult or laboured breathing
ox-, oxy- oxygen hypoxia low oxygen levels in tissue

Digestive (gastrointestinal) system

The gastrointestinal system covers the mouth, oesophagus, stomach, small and large intestine, liver, gallbladder and pancreas. Roots like gastro-, entero-, hepato-, cholecysto- and colo- combine constantly with -itis, -ectomy, -scopy and -graphy in admission, operation and pathology reports.

Digestive roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
or-, oro-, stomat- mouth stomatitis inflammation of the mouth
gloss-, glosso-, lingu- tongue glossitis inflammation of the tongue
oesophag-, oesophago- oesophagus oesophagitis inflammation of the oesophagus
gastr-, gastro- stomach gastritis inflammation of the stomach lining
enter-, entero- intestine (usually small) gastroenteritis inflammation of the stomach and intestine
duoden-, duodeno- duodenum duodenal ulcer ulcer in the first part of the small intestine
jejun-, jejuno- jejunum jejunostomy surgical opening into the jejunum
ile-, ileo- ileum ileostomy surgical opening from the ileum to the abdominal wall
col-, colo- colon (large intestine) colonoscopy visual examination of the colon
rect-, recto-, proct-, procto- rectum proctitis inflammation of the rectum
append- appendix appendicectomy surgical removal of the appendix
hepat-, hepato- liver hepatitis inflammation of the liver
cholecyst-, cholecysto- gallbladder cholecystectomy surgical removal of the gallbladder
chol-, chole- bile cholelithiasis presence of gallstones
pancreat-, pancreato- pancreas pancreatitis inflammation of the pancreas
peritone- peritoneum (abdominal lining) peritonitis inflammation of the peritoneum

Nervous system

The nervous system covers the brain, spinal cord and peripheral nerves. Neuro- is the workhorse root for nerves; cerebro- and encephalo- name the brain; myelo- can mean spinal cord or bone marrow depending on context.

Nervous system roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
neur-, neuro- nerve, nervous system neurology study of the nervous system
cerebr-, cerebro- cerebrum, brain cerebrovascular accident stroke
encephal-, encephalo- brain encephalitis inflammation of the brain
mening-, meningo- meninges (brain and cord membranes) meningitis inflammation of the meninges
myel-, myelo- spinal cord, bone marrow myelitis inflammation of the spinal cord
cephal-, cephalo- head cephalalgia headache
psych-, psycho- mind psychiatry medical treatment of mental illness
cerebell- cerebellum cerebellar ataxia poor coordination from cerebellar dysfunction
thalam- thalamus thalamic stroke stroke affecting the thalamus
radicul- nerve root radiculopathy disease affecting a spinal nerve root
esthesi-, -aesthesia sensation, feeling anaesthesia loss of sensation
-plegia, -paresis paralysis, weakness hemiplegia paralysis of one side of the body

Musculoskeletal system

The musculoskeletal system covers bones, joints, muscles, tendons, ligaments and cartilage. Osteo-, arthro- and myo- are the high-frequency roots; chondro- (cartilage), tendo- and ligamento- show up routinely in orthopaedic, physiotherapy and rheumatology documentation.

Musculoskeletal roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
oste-, osteo- bone osteoporosis loss of bone density
arthr-, arthro- joint arthritis inflammation of a joint
my-, myo-, muscul- muscle myalgia muscle pain
tend-, tendo-, teno- tendon tendinitis inflammation of a tendon
ligament- ligament ligamentous injury injury to a ligament
chondr-, chondro- cartilage chondromalacia softening of cartilage
cost-, costo- rib intercostal between the ribs
crani-, cranio- skull craniotomy surgical opening in the skull
spondyl-, spondylo-, vertebro- vertebra, spinal column spondylosis degenerative change in the spine
scoli- curved (sideways) scoliosis sideways curvature of the spine
kyph- hump (forward curve) kyphosis excessive forward curvature of the upper spine
fasci-, fascio- fascia (connective sheet) fasciitis inflammation of the fascia
burs- bursa (fluid sac at a joint) bursitis inflammation of a bursa
synov- synovium (joint lining) synovitis inflammation of the joint lining

Urinary system

The urinary system covers the kidneys, ureters, bladder and urethra. Nephro- (Greek) and reno- (Latin) both mean kidney. The other roots follow the urine pathway from the kidneys downward.

Urinary roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
nephr-, nephro- kidney (Greek) nephritis inflammation of a kidney
ren-, reno- kidney (Latin) renal failure failure of kidney function
pyel-, pyelo- renal pelvis pyelonephritis infection of the kidney and renal pelvis
ureter-, uretero- ureter (kidney to bladder) ureterolithiasis stone in the ureter
cyst-, cysto-, vesic- bladder, sac cystitis bladder inflammation, often urinary tract infection
urethr-, urethro- urethra (bladder to outside) urethritis inflammation of the urethra
ur-, uro-, -uria urine, urinary tract urology study of the urinary tract
glomerul- glomerulus (filtering unit) glomerulonephritis inflammation of the kidney’s filtering units
lith-, -lithiasis stone nephrolithiasis kidney stones
dialys- separation, filtering haemodialysis filtering blood through a machine when kidneys fail

Reproductive system

The reproductive system has separate root families for the female and male anatomy plus shared roots for pregnancy, birth and breast. Gyneco-, hystero-, oophoro- and salpingo- name the female structures; orchido-, prostato- and vaso- name the male structures. Mammo- and obstetric roots cover breast and pregnancy.

Reproductive roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
gynec-, gyneco-, gynaec- woman, female gynaecology medical care of the female reproductive system
hyster-, hystero-, metr-, metro- uterus hysterectomy surgical removal of the uterus
oophor-, oophoro-, ovari- ovary oophorectomy surgical removal of an ovary
salping-, salpingo- fallopian tube salpingitis inflammation of a fallopian tube
colp-, colpo-, vagin- vagina colposcopy visual examination of the cervix and vagina
cervic- cervix, neck cervicitis inflammation of the cervix
mamm-, mammo-, mast-, masto- breast mammography imaging of the breast
orchid-, orchido-, orch- testis orchidectomy surgical removal of a testis
prostat-, prostato- prostate prostatectomy surgical removal of the prostate
vas-, vaso- (deferens) vas deferens vasectomy surgical cutting of the vas deferens for sterilisation
obstetric-, toco- childbirth, labour obstetrician doctor specialising in pregnancy and childbirth
nat-, nato-, -para birth, having given birth nulliparous never having given birth
amni-, amnio- amnion (sac around fetus) amniocentesis sampling of fluid from the amniotic sac

Endocrine system

The endocrine system covers the hormone-producing glands: thyroid, parathyroid, adrenal, pancreas (islets), pituitary, ovaries and testes. Each gland has its own root, and many endocrine terms also use suffixes for excess (-osis, hyper-) or deficiency (hypo-).

Endocrine roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
endocrin- secreting internally (hormone) endocrinology study of the endocrine system
thyr-, thyroid-, thyroido- thyroid gland hypothyroidism underactive thyroid hormone production
parathyroid- parathyroid gland hyperparathyroidism overactive parathyroid gland
adren-, adreno- adrenal gland adrenalectomy surgical removal of an adrenal gland
pancreat-, pancreato- pancreas (islets) pancreatic insufficiency reduced hormone or enzyme output from the pancreas
pituitar-, hypophys- pituitary gland hypopituitarism underactive pituitary gland
glyc-, glyco-, gluco- sugar, glucose hyperglycaemia high blood sugar
insulin- insulin insulinoma insulin-producing tumour of the pancreas
cortic- cortex (outer layer) corticosteroid steroid hormone from the adrenal cortex
kal-, kalemia potassium hyperkalaemia high blood potassium
natr-, natremia sodium hyponatraemia low blood sodium
calc-, calci- calcium hypocalcaemia low blood calcium

Integumentary (skin) system

The integumentary system covers the skin, hair, nails and associated glands. Dermato- and cutan- both mean skin; trich- names hair, onycho- names nails.

Integumentary roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
derm-, derma-, dermat-, dermato- skin (Greek) dermatitis inflammation of the skin
cutane-, cutaneo- skin (Latin) subcutaneous under the skin
epi- + dermis upon the skin epidermis outer layer of skin
kerat-, kerato- horny tissue, cornea keratosis thickening of the outer skin layer
melan-, melano- black, dark (pigment) melanoma tumour of pigment-producing cells
seb-, sebo- sebum (oil) seborrhoea excessive sebum production
hidr-, sudor- sweat hyperhidrosis excessive sweating
trich-, tricho-, pil- hair trichology study of the hair and scalp
onych-, onycho- nail onychomycosis fungal infection of a nail
squam- scale squamous cell carcinoma cancer arising from flat, scale-like cells
pyr-, pyro-, py-, pyo- fire, heat / pus pyoderma pus-producing skin infection

Sensory organs (eyes and ears)

The sensory organs cluster covers the eyes and the ears. Ophthalmo- and oculo- both mean eye, with ophthalmo- the more common in clinical and surgical contexts. Oto- and aud- name the ear and hearing.

Eye and ear roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
ophthalm-, ophthalmo- eye (Greek) ophthalmology medical and surgical care of the eye
ocul-, oculo- eye (Latin) intraocular within the eye
opt-, opto-, -opia vision, sight myopia short-sightedness
retin-, retino- retina retinopathy disease of the retina
kerat-, kerato- cornea (also horny tissue) keratitis inflammation of the cornea
blephar-, blepharo- eyelid blepharitis inflammation of the eyelid
conjunctiv- conjunctiva conjunctivitis inflammation of the conjunctiva
ot-, oto- ear otitis media middle ear inflammation, common in children
aud-, audio- hearing audiometry measurement of hearing
tympan-, myring- eardrum tympanoplasty surgical repair of the eardrum
cochle- cochlea (inner ear) cochlear implant device that stimulates the cochlear nerve
vestibul- vestibule (balance organ) vestibular neuritis inflammation affecting balance

Lymphatic and immune system

The lymphatic and immune system covers lymph vessels, lymph nodes, the spleen, thymus and the body’s immune defences. Lympho-, immuno-, splen- and thymo- are the core roots; the suffix -aemia carries blood-cell content into many of the haematological-immunological terms.

Lymphatic and immune roots

Root Meaning Example term Example meaning
lymph-, lympho- lymph, lymphatic system lymphoma cancer of lymphatic tissue
lymphaden- lymph node, lymph gland lymphadenopathy disease or enlargement of lymph nodes
lymphangi- lymph vessel lymphangitis inflammation of a lymph vessel
splen-, spleno- spleen splenomegaly enlargement of the spleen
thym-, thymo- thymus thymectomy surgical removal of the thymus
immun-, immuno- immune, immunity immunodeficiency weakened immune defence
tonsill- tonsil tonsillitis inflammation of the tonsils
aden-, adeno- gland adenopathy disease of a gland (often lymph node)
leuc-, leuk-, leuko- white (white cells) leukaemia cancer of white blood cells
granul- granule (granulocyte) granulocytosis increased granulocyte count
phag-, phago- eat, swallow (engulf) phagocyte cell that engulfs bacteria and debris

How to memorise body-system terms

You do not need to memorise every root in the tables above before you can use this vocabulary. Most healthcare admin and clinical staff build fluency by repeated exposure to clinical documentation, supported by a small amount of structured study.

  • Learn one body system at a time. Pick the system most relevant to the records you read or the work you are training for (cardiology if you sit in a cardiac unit, gastrointestinal if you transcribe endoscopy reports). Master 10 to 12 roots for that system before moving on.
  • Use active recall, not passive reading. Flashcards (paper or apps like Anki, Quizlet, Brainscape) outperform re-reading because they force you to retrieve the meaning rather than recognise it. Even five minutes a day is enough to build a working vocabulary in a few weeks.
  • Read clinical context, not just lists. Discharge summaries, operation reports and pathology results put the roots in their natural settings. Once you have seen cardiomegaly mentioned in a chest X-ray report a few times, the term sticks far better than a flashcard ever could.
  • Pair this with the prefix and suffix lists. The body-system roots above plus the prefixes and suffixes reference together unlock most clinical vocabulary. Cardio- + -megaly = enlarged heart; nephro- + -itis = kidney inflammation; gastro- + entero- + -itis = inflammation of the stomach and intestine.
  • Use a structured course if you want a credential. The BSBMED301 Interpret and Apply Medical Terminology Appropriately unit is the lowest-cost, lowest-risk option for a structured pathway with a nationally recognised statement of attainment at the end. It covers body-system roots, prefixes, suffixes and clinical context together.

Most learners reach a comfortable working level in around 4 to 6 weeks of light, regular study. Full fluency, where decoding feels automatic, comes with a few months of real exposure once you are working or studying in a healthcare role.

Where this fits into TalentMed courses

Body-system terminology is the spine of every healthcare admin role. The vocabulary plugs straight into clinical coding, transcription, practice management and quality auditing.

Other natural directions once terminology is fluent:

  • Medical transcription. The 11288NAT Diploma of Healthcare Documentation trains accurate transcribed reports across every body system. See the medical transcription hub.
  • Practice management. The HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management uses terminology fluency for Medicare/MBS literacy and RACGP-aware reporting. See practice management.
  • Quality auditing. The BSB50920 Diploma of Quality Auditing reads clinical documentation against NSQHS Standards across every system. See quality auditing.

The BSBMED301 unit is the entry point if you want a structured pathway with a nationally recognised statement of attainment at the end. The diplomas above each take the vocabulary further into a particular career direction.

Frequently asked questions

The combining form cardio- (sometimes shortened to cardi-) means heart. It comes from the Greek kardia. Cardiology is the study of the heart, cardiomegaly is enlargement of the heart, tachycardia is fast heart rate, and bradycardia is slow heart rate. The o is dropped before a suffix that starts with a vowel, which is why carditis (inflammation of the heart) does not have an extra o.
The suffix -ology means study of. It comes from the Greek logos. Cardiology is the study of the heart, neurology is the study of the nervous system, dermatology is the study of the skin, gastroenterology is the study of the stomach and intestines. A practitioner is named with -ologist (cardiologist, neurologist, dermatologist).
Most Australian healthcare education programs teach 10 to 12 body systems. The eleven covered in this reference are: cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive (gastrointestinal), nervous, musculoskeletal, urinary, reproductive, endocrine, integumentary (skin), sensory organs (eyes and ears), and lymphatic/immune. Some textbooks also include the haematological system separately, while others fold it into cardiovascular or lymphatic.
Both. Modern medical terminology inherited two parallel languages, and many organs have one root from each. The kidney is nephro- (Greek) in clinical pathology and reno- (Latin) in anatomy. The heart is cardi- (Greek) in clinical work and cor- (Latin) in some anatomical names. The skin is dermato- (Greek) and cutaneo- (Latin). Most working healthcare staff recognise both without thinking about which language they came from.
The cardiovascular and digestive systems usually carry the largest vocabulary lists in introductory medical terminology programs because they include the most named structures (heart chambers, valves, vessels for cardiovascular; mouth, oesophagus, stomach, small and large intestine, liver, gallbladder, pancreas for digestive). The musculoskeletal system can also feel large because of the named bones and joints. In practice, you do not need to memorise every term; you learn the roots and decode the rest.
No. The goal is to learn the most common 10 to 12 roots per system well enough to recognise them on sight, then use this kind of reference list whenever an unfamiliar one comes up. Healthcare admin staff build vocabulary by repeated exposure to clinical documentation rather than by drilling lists. Roots you meet daily become automatic; rarer ones can always be looked up.
Both mean kidney. Nephro- is the Greek combining form and is used in most clinical and pathological terms (nephritis, nephrology, nephrectomy, glomerulonephritis). Reno- is the Latin form and is used more often in anatomical and physiological terms (renal artery, renal failure, renovascular disease). They name the same organ; you simply meet them in different contexts.
Both mean lung. Pneumo- (and pneumon-) is the Greek combining form, used in pneumonia, pneumonectomy, pneumothorax. Pulmono- is the Latin form, used in pulmonologist, pulmonary embolism, pulmonary function. The same parallel applies to many organs, with the Greek form often dominating clinical terminology and the Latin form dominating anatomical terminology.
Hyster- comes from the Greek hystera meaning womb (the same word that gave us the historical term hysteria). Hysterectomy is surgical removal of the uterus, hysteroscopy is visual examination of the uterus through a scope, and hysterosalpingography is imaging of the uterus and fallopian tubes. The Latin form for uterus is metr- or metro-, which appears in endometrium (the uterine lining) and metrorrhagia (uterine bleeding between periods).
The combining form gastro- (and gastr-) means stomach. It comes from the Greek gaster. Gastritis is inflammation of the stomach, gastroenteritis is inflammation of the stomach and intestine, gastroscopy is visual examination of the stomach with a scope, and gastroenterology is the medical specialty covering the stomach, intestines and related organs.
Body-system roots are taught in the BSBMED301 Interpret and Apply Medical Terminology Appropriately unit, which is TalentMed’s entry-level medical terminology unit. The same vocabulary is also drawn on heavily in the HLT50321 Diploma of Clinical Coding, the 11288NAT Diploma of Healthcare Documentation, the HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management, and the BSB50920 Diploma of Quality Auditing. Mastering the roots first makes every one of those courses easier.
Yes. Body-system roots are international medical terminology and apply identically in Australian, UK and other Commonwealth healthcare. The only spelling differences you will notice are in derived words that include vowel pairs: oedema (not edema), haemorrhage (not hemorrhage), paediatric (not pediatric), oesophagus (not esophagus), anaemia (not anemia), diarrhoea (not diarrhea). Australian clinical documentation uses these Commonwealth spellings consistently.

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