| 释义 | 
		Definition of Apgar score in English: Apgar scorenounˈapɡəˈapɡär ˌskôr Medicine A measure of the physical condition of a newborn infant. It is obtained by adding points (2, 1, or 0) for heart rate, respiratory effort, muscle tone, response to stimulation, and skin coloration; a score of ten represents the best possible condition.  Example sentencesExamples -  Many of the infants had low Apgar scores at birth, and overall 214 needed intubation and resuscitation.
 -  Although low Apgar scores at five minutes were rare, they were more common in the low dose group.
 -  Habitual snoring in the mother was also associated with growth retardation of the fetus and a low Apgar score for the infant.
 -  This baby was born by normal delivery with Apgar scores of 9 at 1 minute and 9 at 5 minutes.
 -  Some children born with low Apgar scores remain at risk of minor problems well into school age.
 
 
 Origin   1960s: named after Virginia Apgar (1909–74), the American anaesthesiologist who devised this method of assessment in 1953.    Definition of Apgar score in US English: Apgar scorenounˈapɡär ˌskôr Medicine A measure of the physical condition of a newborn infant. It is obtained by adding points (2, 1, or 0) for heart rate, respiratory effort, muscle tone, response to stimulation, and skin coloration; a score of ten represents the best possible condition.  Example sentencesExamples -  Some children born with low Apgar scores remain at risk of minor problems well into school age.
 -  Although low Apgar scores at five minutes were rare, they were more common in the low dose group.
 -  Habitual snoring in the mother was also associated with growth retardation of the fetus and a low Apgar score for the infant.
 -  Many of the infants had low Apgar scores at birth, and overall 214 needed intubation and resuscitation.
 -  This baby was born by normal delivery with Apgar scores of 9 at 1 minute and 9 at 5 minutes.
 
 
 Origin   1960s: named after Virginia Apgar (1909–74), the American anaesthesiologist who devised this method of assessment in 1953.     |