A volume study is an ultrasound that helps your healthcare provider plan your cancer treatment. Information from the ultrasound about the size and shape of your prostate is used to develop the cancer treatment plan.
In other words, is it widely understood? Is volumn included in dictionaries? I can't find it in any online dictionary, but perhaps it could be found in a historical, dialectal, technical, or print one? Is it defensible from an etymological perspective? Was it once more common? Does it just mean 'volume,' or does it have a separate meaning?
Traffic volume has been idiomatic for a very long time, going back to shipping in the 16th century. Volume made a bit more literal sense when talking about wine or timber, but has faithfully followed traffic as that term has expanded its scope over the centuries. I feel volume emphasizes the commodity nature of the data stream and the business of its transport, whereas amount serves better ...
Suflave is a combination, osmotic, prescription laxative that may be used to cleanse the bowel in preparation for colonoscopy in adults. Suflave contains polyethylene glycol 3350, sodium sulfate, potassium chloride, magnesium sulfate, and sodium chloride,