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  • Strength

    The concentration of the drug substance (for example, weight/weight, weight/volume, or unit dose/volume basis), and/or the potency, that is, the therapeutic activity of the drug product as indicated by appropriate laboratory tests or by adequately developed and controlled clinical data (expressed, for example, in terms of units by reference to a standard).
  • Stress

    Stress
  • Stress Testing

    (IEEE) Testing conducted to evaluate a system or component at or beyond the limits of its specified requirements. Synonymous: Boundary Value Testing.
  • Stress Testing (drug product)

    (ICH Q1A (R2)) Studies undertaken to assess the effect of severe conditions on the drug product. Such studies include photostability testing (see ICH Q1B) and specific testing on certain products, (e.g., metered dose inhalers, creams, emulsions, refrigerated aqueous liquid products).
  • Stress Testing (drug substance)

    (ICH Q1A (R2)) Studies undertaken to elucidate the intrinsic stability of the drug substance. Such testing is part of the development strategy and is normally carried out under more severe conditions than those used for accelerated testing.
  • Stress-Corrosion Cracking (SCC)

    Failure by cracking under the combined action of corrosion and stress, either external (applied) or internal (residual). Cracking may be either intergranular or transgranular, depending on the metal and the corrosive medium.
  • Stress-Corrosion Cracking (SCC)

    A type of corrosion that occurs due to sudden failure of normally ductile metals subjected to a constant tensile stress in a corrosive environment, particularly at elevated temperatures. This type of corrosion progresses rapidly. Certain austenitic stainless steels alloys crack in the presence of chlorides, which limit their usefulness for being in contact with solutions (including water) with higher, that a few ppm content of chlorides at temperature above 50°C. This form of corrosion is only applicable to the austenitic group of steels and is related to the nickel content; Ferritic grades do not generally suffer from this problem at all.
  • String

    (IEEE) A sequence of characters.
  • String

    A linear sequence of entities such as characters or physical elements.
  • Stringency

    Reaction conditions – notably temperature, salt concentration(s) and pH – that dictate the annealing of singlestranded DNA/DNA, DNA/RNA and RNA/RNA hybrids. At high stringency, duplexes form only between strands with perfect one-to-one complementarity; lower stringency allows annealing between strands with some degree of mismatch between bases.
  • Strongly Suspected Human Carcinogen

    (ICH Q3C (R4)) A substance for which there is no epidemiological evidence of carcinogenesis but there are positive genotoxicity data and clear evidence of carcinogenesis in rodents.
  • Structural Gene

    A DNA sequence that forms the blueprint for the synthesis of a polypeptide.
  • Structural Genomics

    The effort to determine the 3D structures of large numbers of proteins using both experimental techniques and computer simulation.
  • Structural Testing

    (Bluhm, Meyers, Hetzel) Examining the internal structure of the source code. Includes low-level and high-level code review, path analysis, auditing of programming procedures, and standards actually used, inspection for extraneous “dead code”, boundary analysis and other techniques. Requires specific computer science and programming expertise.
  • Structure Chart

    (IEEE) A diagram that identifies modules, activities, or other entities in a system or computer program and shows how larger or more general entities break down into smaller, more specific entries. Note: The result is not necessarily the same as that shown in a call graph. Synonymous: Hierarchy Chart, Program Structure Chart.
  • Structured Design

    (IEEE) Any disciplined approach to software design that adheres to specified rules based on principles such as modularity, top-down design, and stepwise refinement of data, system structure, and processing steps.
  • Structured Design Review

    A design review conducted by identification of the characteristics of a good design to ensure that all relevant and appropriate aspects are examined.
  • Structured Programming

    (IEEE) Any software development technique that includes structured design and results in the development of structured programs.
  • Structured Query Language (SQL)

    A language used to interrogate and process data in a relational database. Originally developed for IBM mainframes, there have been many implementations created for mini and micro computer database applications. SQL commands can be used to interactively work with a database or can be embedded with a programming language to interface with a database.
  • Struktureller Test (Bluhm, Meyers, Hetzel), (GAMP)

  • STS

    Sequence Tagged Site
  • STS (Sequence Tagged Site)

  • STTT

    Science and Technology Task Team (ISPE term)
  • Stub

    (NBS) Special code segments that when invoked by a code segment under test will simulate the behavior of designed and specified modules not yet constructed.
  • Stud

    A threaded fastener without a head, with threads on one end or both ends, or threaded full length.