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Medical Terminology

Medical Terminology Basics for Coders — Prefixes, Suffixes & Word Roots

📅 March 2026 📖 4 min read ✍️ Clear CPC Team
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Medical terminology can feel overwhelming at first glance. Words like “thromboembolism,” “nephrolithiasis,” and “cholecystectomy” seem impossibly complex. But here’s the secret: these terms are actually built from smaller building blocks. Once you understand prefixes, suffixes, and word roots, you can break down almost any medical term and understand what it means. This skill is essential for accurate coding and will save you countless hours of looking up terms on the CPC exam.

The Three Building Blocks of Medical Terms

Every medical term is constructed from three types of word components:

1. Word Roots (The Core Meaning)

The word root is the foundation of the medical term. It typically describes the body part, condition, or structure being discussed. Word roots usually come from Latin or Greek.

Word Root Meaning Example
Cardi/o Heart Cardiology (study of heart)
Nephr/o Kidney Nephritis (kidney inflammation)
Hepat/o Liver Hepatitis (liver inflammation)
Gastro/o Stomach Gastric ulcer (stomach ulcer)
Pulmon/o Lung Pneumonia (lung infection)
Derm/a Skin Dermatitis (skin inflammation)
Oste/o Bone Osteoporosis (bone weakness)
Arthr/o Joint Arthritis (joint inflammation)

2. Prefixes (What Comes Before)

Prefixes are attached to the beginning of a word root and modify its meaning. They often describe location, quantity, or condition.

Prefix Meaning Example
Hyper- Above normal, excessive Hypertension (high blood pressure)
Hypo- Below normal, deficient Hypoglycemia (low blood sugar)
Tachy- Fast, rapid Tachycardia (rapid heartbeat)
Brady- Slow Bradycardia (slow heartbeat)
Poly- Many, excessive Polyuria (excessive urination)
Oligo- Few, scanty Oliguria (scanty urination)
Peri- Around, surrounding Pericarditis (inflammation around heart)
Intra- Within, inside Intracranial (within the skull)
Leuko- White, white blood cells Leukocytes (white blood cells)
Erythro- Red, red blood cells Erythrocytes (red blood cells)

3. Suffixes (What Comes After)

Suffixes are attached to the end of a word root and typically describe a condition, procedure, or abnormality.

Suffix Meaning Example
-itis Inflammation Nephritis (kidney inflammation)
-osis Condition, disease Osteoporosis (bone disease)
-ectomy Surgical removal Appendectomy (removal of appendix)
-plasty Surgical repair/reconstruction Rhinoplasty (nose reconstruction)
-scopy Visual examination Colonoscopy (exam of colon)
-ology Study of Cardiology (study of heart)
-pathy Disease, condition Cardiomyopathy (heart muscle disease)
-phobia Fear of Photophobia (light sensitivity)
-algia Pain Arthralgia (joint pain)
-emia Condition of blood Anemia (low blood count)

How to Decode Medical Terms

Now that you understand the building blocks, let’s break down some complex medical terms:

Example 1: Thromboembolism

Break it down: Thrombo (blood clot) + e (vowel connector) + bol (moving) + ism (condition)

Meaning: A blood clot that moves through the bloodstream and lodges in a blood vessel, blocking blood flow.

Example 2: Nephrolithiasis

Break it down: Nephr (kidney) + o (vowel connector) + lith (stone) + iasis (condition)

Meaning: The formation of kidney stones.

Example 3: Hypertensive Nephropathy

Break it down: Hyper (excessive) + tens (pressure) + ive (adjective) + nephr (kidney) + opathy (disease)

Meaning: Kidney disease caused by high blood pressure.

Common Medical Term Patterns in Coding

⭐ The “-itis” Pattern: When you see a term ending in “-itis,” you’re looking at inflammation of a body part. Nephritis = kidney inflammation, hepatitis = liver inflammation, myocarditis = heart muscle inflammation. This is one of the most commonly tested patterns on the CPC exam.
💡 The “-ectomy” Pattern: Surgical removal procedures always use “-ectomy.” Appendectomy, cholecystectomy, hysterectomy, mastectomy — you’ll see these constantly in CPT coding.
💡 The “-scopy” Pattern: Diagnostic procedures involving visual examination use “-scopy.” Endoscopy, colonoscopy, laparoscopy — these appear in both CPT and ICD-10-CM.

Vowel Connectors and Medical Terms

You might notice that medical terms have extra vowels (usually ‘o’) that connect different components. These are called “combining vowels” and they make pronunciation easier. For example:

  • Gastro + enterology = Gastroenterology (study of stomach and small intestine)
  • Cardio + vascular = Cardiovascular (relating to heart and blood vessels)
  • Nephro + logy = Nephrology (study of kidneys)

The ‘o’ is dropped if the next component starts with a vowel. For example: nephr + itis becomes “nephritis,” not “nephroitis.”

Building Your Medical Terminology Foundation

🎯 Study Strategy: Rather than memorizing long lists of terms, focus on learning the most common roots, prefixes, and suffixes. Knowing 50 common components will help you understand hundreds of medical terms. The CPC exam tests your ability to recognize patterns, not memorize every term in existence.

The most frequently tested medical terminology components on the CPC exam include:

  • Roots: Cardi (heart), nephr (kidney), hepat (liver), gastro (stomach), pulmon (lung), arthr (joint), oste (bone), derm (skin)
  • Prefixes: Hyper, hypo, tachy, brady, poly, oligo, peri, intra, leuko, erythro, dys, para, syn
  • Suffixes: -itis, -osis, -ectomy, -plasty, -scopy, -algia, -emia, -pathy

Why This Matters for Coding

Understanding medical terminology helps you:

  • Quickly understand new medical terms without looking them up
  • Identify the correct ICD-10-CM or CPT code more efficiently
  • Spot errors in medical records and reports
  • Communicate more effectively with healthcare providers
  • Pass the CPC exam with greater confidence

A coder who understands medical terminology can read a complex clinical note and immediately grasp what conditions are being described and what procedures were performed. This skill elevates your coding accuracy and speed significantly.

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