text
stringlengths 66
279k
| meta
dict |
---|---|
### condition | curiosity | interest | security interest:
Collateral
* are branches of the meridians and run transversely and superficially from the meridians
- family and friends of people with alcohol, other drug, or gambling problems
- smaller branches of blood vessels
- the synaptic junctures between axons and dendrites
* covers margins for options over stocks and indices.
* is security interest
### condition | curiosity | interest | security interest | collateral:
Guaranty
* advocates the protection of childrens' identities and privacy online.
* is collateral<|endoftext|>### condition | curiosity | interest | security interest:
Mortgage
* Some mortgages carry penalties for paying off the loan ahead of time
- have an interest rate that is fixed for the entire term of the loan
* are a creation or example of substantive equity
- commodities today
- independent mortgage advisers
- packaged bonds and traded in a huge mortgage backed securities market
- secured loans
- the most common and traditional means of financing the purchase of real estate
* can take on many shapes and forms.
* loan that is used specifically to purchase a house.
+ Loan, Types of loan, Mortgage: Money
* Mortgage is a loan that is used specifically to purchase a house. Usually, a mortgage is given to you by a mortgage company or any financial institution, after evaluation of your potential to pay back the loan in full. A mortgage is a secured loan, therefore, providing collateral is necessary.<|endoftext|>### condition | curiosity | interest | security interest | mortgage:
Mortgage insurance
* Mortgage Insurance Insures the lender against non-payment of a government or conventional loan.
* credit guarantee for lenders that allows low down payment loans.
* insures the lender against default and foreclosure.
* makes it possible to buy a home with a low down payment.
* premium amount which is added to the monthly mortgage payment.
* protects the lender against a portion of a loss in the event of a defaulted loan.
* protects the lender against default on low down payment mortgages
- low-downpayment mortgages
- the risk of nonpayment by the buyer
- in the event that the buyer defaults on the mortgage<|endoftext|>### condition | curiosity | interest | security interest | mortgage:
Reverse mortgage
* allow older homeowners to live better and more independently
- people to borrow the equity they have in their home
* are a type of home equity loan
- different from home equity loans or lines of credit which require repayment
- essentially the opposite of typical mortgages
- home equity loans with a big difference
- like home equity loans with one major difference
- quite a bit different from other types of debt
* can provide an answer to financial difficulties
- significantly improve the life of an elderly person
* charge interest at an adjustable rate.
* operate like traditional mortgages, only in reverse.
* provide funds in a variety of ways.
* take into account factors such as marital status, gender and age.
* work much like traditional mortgages, only in reverse.
Pledge
* are drinks
- members
* is security interest | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Cyst
* Most cysts cause effects
- mass effects
- pain
- respiratory problems
- shoulder pain
- contain fluid
- destroy bones
* Most cysts develop over month periods
- go away on their own after a few menstrual cycles
* Most cysts have cell walls
- distinct cell walls
- resistant walls
- thin walls
- probably remain dormant for the life of the host
* Some cysts are tiny, but others can be as large as an egg.
* Some cysts cause focal seizures
- infection
- kidney damage
- reaction
- serious kidney damage
- contain blood
- depend on locations
* Some cysts form during development of the embryo but the majority form later in life
- in the lung
- induce infection
- interfere with absorption
* Some cysts occur in moose
- muscles
- ovaries
- persist for years
- produce spores
- tend to adhere to the posterior surface of the cornea
* allow some pathogens to survive outside their host.
* also develop within the ovary.
* also squeeze blood vessels, forcing increased blood pressure
- on blood vessels, forcing the pressure to rise
- wash up on the shore
* apparently form from single vegatative cells.
* are abnormal lumps or swellings that are filled with fluid or semisolid material
- almost never due to cancer
- also more likely to become infected in smokers
* are barely visible to the naked eye
- with the naked eye
- benign and malignant transformation is exceedingly rare
- carried away on the wind or on the feet of animals
- different than polyps
- diseases
- distinguished by a retracted cytoplasm
- due to entrapment of epithelial cells during fusion of the labial scrotal folds
* are fluid filled pockets that form in the tissues of the breast, causing a mass
- structures
- fluid-filled cavities
* are fluid-filled sacs, and fibrosis refers to connective tissue or scar tissue formation
- to the forming of connective tissue or scar tissue
- forme'd
- formed as the nematodes continue to develop into egg-producing adults
- formed, at least in the free-living species
- found in the feces of infected animals
- frequently coalescent, and filled with straw colored fluid
- generally spherical and have thick walls with or without extensive surface ornamentation
- hardy little tablets that exit an infected animal's body along with feces
- how protozoans survive in the environment outside the host's body
- inactivated by most quaternary ammonium compounds, steam, and boiling water
- just collections of fluid
- large, inflamed lesions that are filled with pus
- larger than bacteria and can be excluded by most filters
- mobile with palpation and transilluminate
- noncancerous round sacs containing water-like fluid
- oval, have four nuclei, and have clearly visible axostyles
- passed in a host's feces, remaining viable in a moist environment for months
- pathology
- protozoa that produce a special protective shell
- quite common among women
- rare in cecal material but com- mon in culture
* are resistant forms and are responsible for transmission of giardiasis
- to chemical and physical agents
- round nodules under the skin that are filled with cheesy contents or fluid
* are sacs filled with fluid or semisolid material
- or pockets filled with fluid or semi-solid material
- small vesicles filled with a clear fluid and usually cause no complaints at all
- stages with a protective membrane or thickened wall
- swellings in the lining of the membrane, filled with fluid or semi-fluid material
* are the 'eggs' made by parasites
- environmental survival form and infective stage of the organism
- other extreme of fibrocystic changes
- parasite stage responsible for transmission of balantidiasis
- size of a pin-head or the point of a pen
- used to survive the bad times in an environment
* are usually distinguishable from solid tumors by ultrasound
- small, appear in limited numbers, and cause no serious problems
* are very common and usually benign
- for many women
- on the epididymis
- virtually never cancerous
* arising in the first branchial cleft appear beneath the posterior half of the mandible.
* begin as a blisterlike structure on the kidney.
* can also confuse the veterinarian when checking for pregnancy by ultrasound
- form in other organs such as the liver
* can be inside the kidney as well as on the outside
- painful and leave scars
- up near the syrface of the skin and look more superficial, like whiteheads on the face
- very painful, and scarring is often the end result
- cause other, less daunting symptoms
- exist outside of the body for months without losing their ability to infect new hosts
- extend into the underlying bones and cause other types of problems
- feel either soft or hard
- form almost anywhere in the body, but they are especially common in the kidneys
- last in the environment for several weeks
- occur in association with tumors or infections or can be congenital
- reappear at a later date, in which case they are simply drained again
- remain viable in cold water for two months
* can survive cold climates
- outside the body for several weeks under favourable conditions
- travel to other ponds on the wind or on the feet, feathers or fur of large animals
* cause bone destruction, jaw expansion and displacement or damage to nearby teeth
* contain clear fluid or hemorrhagic material
- thin fluid
* contaminate the water supply.
* develop in the kidneys and grow, destroying normal tissue.
* form in the bones and can make nearby joints swollen and tender
- lower intestines and are then passed in the feces
- ovary every month after puberty
* form, as far as is known, from single trophic cells.
* frequently disappear after aspiration and the removal of fluid.
* grow and develop over a period of years.
- thicker walls than swimming cells
* is pathology
* normally develop during the menstrual cycle.
* occur deeper within the pores in the form of swollen red or white pustules
- in live, lung or occasionally brain and other tissues
- more frequently when an animal is under stress
* often go away without treatment.
* remains infectious for prolonged periods in the environment.
* represent the resting stage that enables the parasite to survive outside the body.
* resolve by themselves, but fibroadenomas continue to grow.
* tend to appear during adulthood, grow slowly, and persist indefinitely
- suddenly and grow quickly
- be slightly more purple
- stay constant, slowly enlarge or regress whereas solid tumors grow slowly
* turn dark brown with age.
* turns into trophozoite, the feeding stage, which divides by binary fission into more cysts.
* usually appear as rounded densities on a mammogram
- aren t cancerous | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | cyst:
Adrenal cyst
* are usually asymptomatic and many are discovered at autospy.
* occurs in all age groups but are relatively rare in children.
Benign cyst
* fill with fluid, causing pain and soreness in one or both breasts.
* have a different appearance on ultra-sound than cancerous growths.
Bleb
* also appear on the cell surface.
* are visible as spheres next to most inner hair cells near the bottom of the image.<|endoftext|>### condition | cyst | bleb:
Pustule
* are generally less common except with infections of the palms and soles
- larger and more raised on grapefruit than on round oranges and tangerines
- most common on the lower leaf surface and on stems
- pimples with a central collection of white pus at their top
- pus-filled inflammations caused by an attack of white cells on the follicle's contents
* are small and circular, with a pinhead appearance
- round lesions that contain visible pus
* are small, blister-like formations
- like papules, but are clearly inflammatory
- white-headed, inflamed bumps
- subcorneal or intraepidermal and are found associated with the pilosebaceous orifice
- superficial and elevated lesions containing pus
- usually present on the muzzle, inside the pinnae, and on the mucocutaneous junctions
- very common and are most often seen on the face, shoulders, back and breastbone
- yellow-white and surrounded by narrow red rings
* become brownish-black as they mature.
* can be painful and rupture leaving scars in the case of deep acne.
* contain bright orange masses of fungus spores.
* containing yellowish spores develop on the upper leaf surface.
* discharge a blood-stained pus made from dead cells.
* form beside the anus, with itching and soreness
- upon the skin with red areola
* is blisters
* occur when the neutrophil collections become clinically visible.
* turn black late in the season.
### condition | cyst | bleb | pustule:
Small pustule
* appear on the underside of leaves.
* can also develop.<|endoftext|>### condition | cyst:
Chalazion
* Most chalazions are further from the eyelid edge than styes
- disappear without treatment after a few months
* are diseases
- more resistant to home treatment than hordeolum
- sebaceous cysts
* grain size tumor like enlargement on the eye-lid.
* is one such condition that finds a simple, non-surgical treatment with homeopathy.
* look like sties but are caused by clogged glands on the eyelid.
* palpable nodule on the eyelid.
* small bump that develops on the upper or lower eyelid.
* vary in size.
Dermoid cyst
* are cysts.
* is the most common type of germ cell tumor.
* loose term given to cysts are various sites lined by squamous epithelium.
* nonmalignant cyst formed from surface skin cells.
Epididymal cyst
* are non-cancerous growths that feel like small lumps.
* are very common, benign, increase in frequency with age, and are often painless
- particularly in men over the age of forty
Follicular cyst
* Most follicular cysts resolve after six to eight weeks.
* are always benign
- blister-like structures, flaccid to the touch
* occur as single or multiple cysts on one or both ovaries.
* result from failure of ovulation and luteinization.
Functional cyst
* are the most common type of ovarian cyst
- usually smaller than abnormal cysts
* develop as a part of the normal functions of an ovary.
* respond very well to acupuncture and Chinese herbs.
Kidney cyst
* are a feature of certain other disorders.
* block the flow of urine through the kidneys.
Large cyst
* Most large cysts cause respiratory problems.
* can form due to degenerating blood.
* cause problems
* have the potential to rupture causing abdominal pain. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | cyst:
Liposome
* are a relatively new development in skincare formulations
- able to travel to the tumour site, where they release the drug
- artifacts
- artificial membranes that can be formed in a test tube
- but one way of putting DNA into living cells
- lipid bilayers entrapping a fraction of aqueous fluid
- lipid-bilayer bounded vesicles
* are microscopic fat bubbles that can be used to encase a drug
- capsules
- spheres that have an outer skin much like that of human cells
* are spherical supramolecular structures made of lipid bilayers
- vesicles formed by mixing lipids with water or water solutions
- synthetic pellets that are supposedly able to carrier oils into the skin
- very small, submicroscopic globules of oil
* can also act as adjuvants.
* have a long history in the study of biological membranes
- three main advantages over plain dry capsule or tablet delivery methods
* interact with wall-less cells.
* models for studying bilayer structure.
* modulate human immunodeficiency virus infectivity.
* resemble in some ways the walls of certain biological cells.
* s as carriers for vaccines.
### condition | cyst | liposome:
Cationic liposome
* can condense DNA and increase transfection yields several orders of magnitude.
* provide a promising vector for use in gene therapy.
* target angiogenic endothelial cells in tumors and chronic inflammation in mice
- endothelial cells in tumors and chronic infalmmation in mice
Mature cyst
* Most mature cysts are spherical, with a prominent stalk.
* are ingested via contaminated water or food.
* have four nuclei while the immature have two.
Numerous cyst
* Most numerous cysts cause respiratory problems.
* cause problems<|endoftext|>### condition | cyst:
Ovarian cyst
* All ovarian cysts contain fluid to some degree.
* Many ovarian cysts disappear without treatment
- go away without treatment
* Most ovarian cysts are benign
- noncancerous
- part of the normal functioning of the ovary
- do decrease with pregnancy
- go away on their own in one to three months without causing any problems
* Ovarian Cysts can grow up to the size of a golf ball and still cause the animal no discomfort.
* See tumors.
* Some ovarian cysts form at the time of ovulation, when the ovary releases an egg cell
- produce no symptoms
* are a common side effect of tamoxifen treatment.
* are also a common finding
- problem in many women
- an extremely common gynecological problem
- common in young women
- diseases
- examples of other growths that can occur on the ovaries
* are fluid-filled sacs in or on an ovary
- or pockets within or on the surface of an ovary
* are fluid-filled sacs that form on the surface of an ovary
- result from ovulation cycles
- generally harmless
- growths that form on the ovaries
- more common among mini pill users
- noncancerous sacs filled with fluid or semi-solid material
* are sometimes difficult to diagnose
- hard to diagnose
- very common in women during their reproductive years
* can affect females of all ages
- cause a smooth, rounded, rubbery mass above the pelvis in the lower abdomen
- often bring on lower abdominal pain during intercourse
* fluid-filled structure in the ovary.
* reduce reproductive efficiency in most dairy herds.
Protozoan cyst
* Most protozoan cysts have resistant walls
* are often present in surface waters.
Simple cyst
* Many simple cysts are harmless, while other types can seriously damage the kidneys.
* are often compressible and feel relatively soft
- typically round or oval and have smooth edges
* can also cause high blood pressure.
Small cyst
* appear on the tubules of the kidney.
* are usually asymptomatic and are discovered only incidentally.
Damp condition
* encourage growth.
* following a flood or leak are perfect for mold spores to bloom.
* lower the resistance of bees and encourages chalk brood. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Dampness
* infuses downward to affect the lower body manifesting as swelling and edema.
* is located in cellars.
* slows drying and can lead to mold.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Danger
* Expresses a relative exposure to a hazard.
* Many dangers surround the lives of children and teenagers.
* affects health
- human health
* buoys mark areas that are hazardous to vessel operation.
* can come in many forms and from many directions including accidents and disease
- increase as children become more mobile
* causes a desire to lies
- fear in a peaceful heart and mind
* exists for individuals under chronic stress who are at high risk for cardiovascular disease.
* fact of life understood by seasoned fishermen.
* has aspects.
* involves activities.
* is areas
- especially high in the winter, when a vehicle gets stuck in snow
* is located in roadblock
- war
- nature's way of eliminating stupid people
* is the most highly toxic and is sometimes also labeled as poison
- signal word for highly hazardous pesticides
* occurs when an unacceptable change is forced on an individual who has no hope to escape.
* only comes into play when children forget to be careful.
* requires actions
- emergency actions
- immediate actions
* threatens survival.
### condition | danger:
Fire danger
* based on the condition of fuels is rated by a number of indices.
* increases as the dense leaves of fountain grass die back and dry out during the summer.
* is high in a forest. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Deficiency
* Deficiencies affect ability
- bone growth
- development
- fetal development
- functions
- immune responses
- life
- skeletal development
- weight
* Deficiencies are caused by diets
- inability
- lack
- shortages
- common in lactating pets
- more common among women with regular menstrual periods
- most common in low-income and teenage pregnant women
- pale leaf color of youn g leaves followed by yellowing of leaves and large veins
- rare and usually occur in association with lack of thiamine and nicotinic acid
- rare, but can lead to uncontrolled bleeding
- shortages in street capacity, which prevent efficient traffic flow
- very rare, as vitamin E is abundant in foods
- can cause poor growth, condition, and egg binding
* Deficiencies can have different symptoms
* Deficiencies can lead to blindness and poor reproduction
- congenital malformations and possible mental retardation in babies
- impaired vision, poor memory and learning difficulties
- low sperm count, reduced libido and impotency
* Deficiencies can occur if the diet is inadequate as in the elderly
- in countries where the soil is depleted
- reduce yields, cause yellowing of the leaves and stunt growth
- can, with time, cause serious disease, especially in cats
* Deficiencies cause birth defects
- death
- deficiencies
- die back of the shoot tips, and terminal leaves develop brown spots
- diseases
- easily bruising skin, pyorrhoea, spongy bleeding gums, conditions like scurvy
- fatigue
- health problems
- membrane defects seen as poor skin and feather condition
- neurological problems
* Deficiencies cause premature death
- leaf death
- reductions
* Deficiencies cause serious health problems
- similar symptoms
- the baby's growth to slow and can lead to miscarriage or birth defects
- thyroid problems
* Deficiencies create disease and infection
* Deficiencies decrease arsenic excretion
* Deficiencies decrease urinary arsenic excretion
- disrupt biological functions
* Deficiencies disrupt essential biological functions
- exhibit slow growing, weak and stunted plants with light green to yellow older leaves
* Deficiencies have certain specific symptoms
- considerable trouble
- distinct effects
- dramatic effects
* Deficiencies impair ability
- involve energy and proteins, as well as vitamins and minerals
* Deficiencies lead to abnormalities
- bleeding problems of various types
- considerable damage
- degeneration
- disorder
- irreversible damage
- metabolic abnormalities
- muscle diseases
- neurological disorder
- permanent damage
- white muscle diseases
- occur at ages
* Deficiencies occur in infants
- premature infants
- often occur with alcoholism, but are otherwise rare
- primarily causes venous thrombosis
- produce symptoms
* Deficiencies require care
- treatments
- result directly in apple fruit disorders, but also reduce calcium uptake
* Deficiencies result in health problems
- immunity
- impairment
- nerve problems
- reproductive problems
* Deficiencies result in serious health problems
- skin disorders and muscle pains
- visual impairment
- take places
- trigger imbalances
- typically develop in the elderly, alcoholics, cancer patients, and some food faddists
* Most deficiencies affect bone growth
* Most deficiencies cause birth defects
* Most deficiencies decrease urinary arsenic excretion
* Most deficiencies lead to diseases
* Most deficiencies occur in infants
* Some deficiencies affect children
- geckos
- young lambs
* Some deficiencies cause anemia
- embryo mortality
- tongue inflammation
- contribute to osteoporosises
* Some deficiencies decrease intestinal absorption
- calcium absorption
* Some deficiencies lead to deficiency anemia
- lung inflammation
* Some deficiencies limit fat metabolism
- manifest in mental disease
- result in diseases
* affects hearing and vision.
* aggravates malabsorption.
* can be the cause of numerous problems, including mental and physical exhaustion.
* causes cracks in the mouth and outer lip, skin, mouth, and eye troubles
- hair loss and loss of appetite and depression
* causes inflammation of the lining of the mouth and skin
- skin, vagina, rectum and mouth, as well as mental slowing
- irritability of the nervous system
* causes reduced growth rates and lesions of the skin on the lower extremities
- growth, size and quality of all plants
- scurvy in humans, and somewhat similar symptoms in other animals
- stunting of new growth in stems, flowers and roots
* leads to beriberi in humans and to polyneuritis in birds
- beriberi, a disease of the heart and nervous system
- cirrhosis of the liver
- cretinism
- megaloblastic anaemia
- pernicious anaemia
- poor vision in dim light and eventually to blindness
* occurs as a result of poor dietary intake or inadequate absorption
- in the form of iron deficiency anemia
- with malnutrition and in areas where the soil has very low selenium levels
* shows up as emaciated and anemic animals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | deficiency:
Absence
* alters growth patterns
* is time intervals.
* leads to deficiencies
- protein deficiencies
* mays have effects.
* results in conservation
Biotin deficiency
* Biotin deficiencies are rare but can result in anorexia, nausea and depression.
* causes dermatitis and hair loss.
* induces changes in subpopulations of spleen lymphocytes in mice.<|endoftext|>### condition | deficiency:
Boron deficiency
* accentuates vitamin D deficiency.
* affects early infection events in the pea- Rhizobium symbiotic interaction.
* can cause a grayish discoloration of the central portion of the roots
- have an effect on growth and fruiting
- lead to terminal dieback and a necrotic bark condition
- occur in sandy media and humid areas or alkaline soils
* causes cracking of fruits
- distorted and dead growing tips, hollow stems and deformed fruit
- top dieback which can have a large negative impact on stem value
* combined with magnesium deficiency is especially damaging to the bones and teeth.
* is found in soil that is either too alkaline or too acidic.
* resembles calcium deficiency.
* shows up as blackened hollow stems in broccoli
- twisted, distorted growth and often the terminal bud dies<|endoftext|>### condition | deficiency:
Calcium deficiency
* Calcium deficiencies affect ability.
* Calcium deficiencies are also common in cats that are only fed meat
- another frequent problem in the United States
- common among tortoises in captivity
- can cause bones to weaken
* Most calcium deficiencies affect ability.
* Some calcium deficiencies lead to death.
* can also cause egg binding in laying birds
- cause muscle cramps
- lead to brittle bones, gum disease, and muscle cramps
- occur if all milk products are eliminated from the diet
* causes poorly developed roots with weak tips.
* increases the absorption of manganese.
* inhibits the formation of bones and teeth in children.
* is another risk for non-dairy teenage vegans whose bones are still growing
- associated with water balance in the plants
- caused by loss of the mineral from the skeleton
- certainly a risk factor for osteoporosis in later life
- critical in providing a resorbable coating
- known to hinder successful hatching of a variety of bird species
- rare among agronomic crops under Pennsylvania conditions
* is the most common medical problem seen in captive iguanas
- nutritional problem in cage birds
- universal property of all cancer cells
* known cause of thin eggshells.
* serious dietary problem among young and old alike.
* shows up as a light green band on the margins of younger leaves.
Chromium deficiency
* Chromium deficiencies impair ability.
* Some chromium deficiencies lead to health conditions
- many health conditions
* causes glucose intolerance
- high circulating insulin levels
* is most likely to occur in the elderly, pregnant women and athletes
- very common
* leads to many health conditions.
Color deficiency
* Color deficiencies can also result from optic nerve and retinal diseases, breakdown, or injury.
* comes as a result of a lack of one or more of the types of color receptors. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | deficiency:
Copper deficiency
* Copper deficiencies affect lamb growth.
* Copper deficiencies are likely to occur when cattle consume forages grown in Missouri
- rare in dogs and cats
- lead to anemia, nerve degeneration, skeletal defects and reproductive failure
* Most copper deficiencies affect lamb growth.
* Some copper deficiencies affect lambs
- young lambs
* Some copper deficiencies result in anemia
* alters the microsomal mixed function oxidase system in rat intestine
- response and cytoskeletal organization of thrombin-activated platelets
* can also cause flowers to remain opener longer letting more spores enter
- lead to anemia, leukopenia and neutropenia
- result in structural weakness in cardiovascular structures
* causes in vivo oxidative modification of erythrocyte membrane proteins in rats
- significant economic losses where it occurs
* does occur on organic soils and is best diagnosed by plant analysis.
* has severe consequences and excess is highly toxic.
* increases hepatic apolipoprotein b secretion and mrna editing in rats
- microvascular dilation to endotoxin
* induces apoptosis in the heart of rats.
* interferes with enzymes related to nitric oxide-mediated signal transduction.
* is also dangerous, since there are many copper-dependent enzymes
- an increasing concern in Georgia and other Southeastern states
- associated with joint stiffness and enlargement, and weak or short bones
- characterized by depigmentation of fiber with a wiry or steely texture
* is rare, but when it happens, it impairs growth and metabolism
- however
- widespread and appears in many forms
* prevents the healthy cross-linking of elastin to collagen.
* varies but sometimes includes wilting of terminal leaves.<|endoftext|>### condition | deficiency:
Dietary deficiency
* Dietary deficiencies are malnutrition
- can be devastating
* Dietary deficiencies decrease arsenic excretion
* Dietary deficiencies decrease urinary arsenic excretion
* Dietary deficiencies result in irritability, fatigue and lack of pep
- lack of pep, irritability, and fatigue
* Most dietary deficiencies decrease arsenic excretion.
* Most dietary deficiencies decrease urinary arsenic excretion
* Some dietary deficiencies require amino acid intake.
* is difficult to achieve, unless a person is eating a strict vegan diet
- rare except in cases of starvation or dramatically lowered protein intake
Enzyme deficiency
* Enzyme deficiencies can be a major factor in how drugs are metabolized.
* Some enzyme deficiencies persist for weeks.
* can lead to a host of diseases and ailments.
* occurs in celiac disease, tropical sprue, and infections of the intestine.
Estrogen deficiency
* Some estrogen deficiencies affect stiffness.
* causes the calcium to leak out or be absorbed from the bones.
* common feature of osteoporosis in women.
* is one of the main causes of osteoporosis
- the most common risk factor for osteoporosis in women
* key factor in the development of osteoporosis.
Folate deficiency
* affects DNA synthesis in all mitotic tissues.
* can result in depression, apathy, fatigue, poor sleep, and poor concentration.
* is associated with an impairment in the number and lifetime of white blood cells
- characterized by megaloblastic anemia and low serum folate levels
- very common in vegetarians
Immune deficiency
* following thermal trauma is associated with apoptotic cell death.
* is one etiologic factor that is being increasingly recognized.
* leads to a series of infections. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | deficiency:
Iodine deficiency
* Iodine deficiencies affect functions
- life
* Iodine deficiencies can develop when amphibians are fed deficient or goitrogenic diets
- lead to decreased metabolism, fatigue, and in some cases cancer
* Iodine deficiencies cause death
- problems
- thyroid problems
* Iodine deficiencies have dramatic effects
* Iodine deficiencies lead to damage
- irreversible damage
* Most iodine deficiencies affect functions
* Most iodine deficiencies cause death
- have effects
- lead to irreversible damage
* affects intelligence and the ability to learn.
* can also be a sigificant problem in animal populations.
* can cause a number of negative health consequences, especially during infancy
- low thyroid function , goiter , and cretinism
- mental retardation and delayed development
- result in lowered metabolism , abortions, anemia, retarded growth etc
* causes diseases of the oral and salivary glands
- such as goiter and cretinism
- enlargement of the thyroid, a condition known as goiter
- goiter, or enlargement of the thyroid gland
- goitre and significantly lowers the I.Q. of children
* impairs intellectual and neuromotor development in apparently normal person.
* increases the risk of thyroid cancer.
* is an ever-present threat to the development of children.
* is an important health problem throughout much of the world
- human health problem throughout much of the world
- apparent in dull lusterless hair coat and poor hoof condition
- especially serious in the developing fetus and young child
- most common in mountainous regions and areas prone to frequent flooding
- rare in the United States due to the widespread addition of iodine to salt
- recognized as the most common cause of preventable brain damage in the world
* is the leading preventable cause of intellectual impairment in the world
- major cause of endemic goitre
* is the most common cause of preventable mental impairment worldwide
- form of preventable brain damage in the world today
* is the most common preventable cause of brain damage worldwide
- important cause of preventable mental retardation in the world
* leads to enlargement of the thyroid gland known as goiter and hypothyroidism
- mental impairment, even at mild levels
* major preventable cause of mental retardation.
* metabolic illness and used to be very common in pet budgerigars at one time.
* problem in other areas of the world.
* reduces fertility.
* stunts physical growth and ability. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | deficiency:
Iron deficiency
* Apply iron to soil or foliage.
* Iron deficiencies affect growth
* Iron deficiencies are apparent in lawns when the soil has a high pH or when lawns are overwatered
- common on most of the alkaline soils in Central, South and West Texas
- worse in cool, damp springs
- can cause anemia and general fatigue
- cause fatigue
- lead to fatigue
- occur readily in the winter months
- produce a yellowing of leaves with veins remaining green
- result in immunity
* Most iron deficiencies affect growth
- are in women, but a few occur in young children
- occur in women and children
* Some iron deficiencies cause anemia
- inflammation
- tongue inflammation
* Some iron deficiencies lead to anemia
- behavioral problems
- deficiency anemia
* Take red grapes with seeds.
* affects mostly women and children.
* associated with consumption of cow's milk is well known.
* can affect milk production.
* can also affect other tissues, including the tongue and fingernails
- the metabolism of muscle tissue
* can also cause a delay in spring recovery in bermudagrass
- poor fruit color
* can also reduce the benefit of altitude exposure, particularly in female athletes
* can be a problem, particularly for girls who experience very heavy periods
- common in alkaline soils, resulting in chlorosis, the yellowing of leaves
- common, especially in vegetarians
* can cause anaemia
- spoon-shaped nails
* can occur due to a lack of iron in the diet
- with vigorous exercise
* can reduce immune function and cause a loss of apetite
- a loss of appetite
* can result from decreased acid secretion
- over liming or from lime leached from cement or brick
* causes anemia and it weakens the immune system
- in pregnant women and young children
* causes interveinal chlorosis of new leaves
- to general chlorosis of newest leaves
- leaf yellowing while leaf veins stay green
- the most common form of anaemia
- yellowing of the newest foliage in a definite pattern
* common cause of anemia
- constraint to plant growth on atolls
- nutritional problem, especially for women
- problem among child-bearing women
* creates shortage of hemoglobin in blood.
* decreased total iron body content.
* develops gradually.
* has an adversely affect on the heart, causing irregular heart beat and function
- various symptoms
* impairs a number of immune mechanism.
* increases maternal morbidity and mortality.
* inhibits growth and development.
* is absolute when hematologic indicators of iron stores are low.
* is also a major concern for children between the ages of two and three
- the leading nutritional disorder in people worldwide
- arguably the most common nutritional deficiency in the world
- by far the most common cause of anemia
- common if it is watered more often
* is common in pregnant women
- premenopausal women
- ulcerative colitis and Crohn's colitis
- corrected by small applications of chelated iron
* is especially common in pregnant and nursing women, infants, and adolescents
- prevalent in alkaline or calcareous soils
- expressed as yellowing in between veins on younger leaves
- mainly prevalent among infants, pregnant women, and women of child-bearing age
- more common with women than men
* is more likely on a dairy rich diet
- dairy-rich diet since cow's milk products are so low in iron
* is much less common in males or older adults
- more common in women than men
* is one possibility that can be evaluated by a simple blood test
- possible cause of anemia
- preventable through appropriate feeding choices
- regrettably a common mineral deficiency of early childhood
* is the biggest problem for otherwise healthy babies in a western culture
- main cause of anemia
* is the most common cause of anemia in children and adolescents
- human nutritional disorder in the world today
- micronutrient disorder
* is the most common nutritional deficiency in the United States
- fault in American females
* is the most prevalent among women
- nutritional problem in the world today
* is the most prevalent single deficiency state on a worldwide basis
- nutrient deficiency in the United States
- single most common nutrient deficiency in the world today
- world's most prevalent nutrient deficiency
- uncommon in breastfed babies during the first six months of life
- very common in women
* leads to anaemia
- anemia, a disorder that can hinder proper growth and function
- behavior and learning problems, the scientists say
- diseases like anaemia, in which the blood contains too little haemoglobin
- hypochromic and microcytic anemia and reduced growth
- reduced performance
* limits phytoplanton growth in Antarctic waters.
* major cause of anemia in pregnancy
- poor mental performance
* occurs frequently in patients with pernicious anemia
- if the amount of iron absorbed is too little to meet the body's demands
* occurs in the form of iron deficiency anemia
- three stages
- most commonly in menstruating women iron deficiency anemia, anemea
- when there is insufficient iron absorbed to meet the body s needs
* paralyzes the immune response.
* problem for some preschoolers.
* remains a common affliction.
* seems to be a core mineral deficiency in overtraining
- popularly presented as a rather minor or harmless condition
* shows up mostly on the newest leaves on the plant
- quickly in some plants | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | deficiency:
Magnesium deficiency
* Magnesium deficiencies are common
- more common than calcium
- rare in the Midwest
* Magnesium deficiencies can cause older leaves to prematurely yellow
- result in muscle weakness and irritability
* appears as a yellowing of the tip of the leaf.
* can affect most species of palms
- also be present in Australian natives in many California soils
* can lead to premature fruit drop at harvest
- swollen ankles
* causes yellowing, but differs from that of nitrogen.
* common problem and it affects the size of roots and fruits.
* enhances resistance to paraquad toxicity in bean leaves.
* induces osteoporosis in the rat.
* is also quite common in Florida palms, but especially in Phoenix species.
* is characterized by interveinal chlorosis with marginal yellowing of leaves
- white stripes between the leaf veins
- described with cardiac arrhythmias
- especially common in patients receiving furosemide diuretics
- particularly common in years of heavy crops
- rare in dogs and cats
- related to muscle spasms, tremors, and convulsions
- very often present and quite severe
* occurs frequently in potted citrus.
* plays a major role in controlling fluid balance and cravings.
* produces neuromuscular disorders.
Manganese deficiency
- occur in alkaline soils
* cause slow hair growth.
* causes decreased ability to remove excess sugar from the blood.
* is also evident in some soybean fields
- extremely rare
- rare and unlikely to be a problem in grazing cattle in Georgia
* occurs in all citrus growing areas of New Zealand
- tagasaste in similar areas to manganese deficiency in white lupins
- mainly in slightly acidic to neutral soils
Methionine deficiency
* Methionine deficiencies decrease arsenic excretion
* Methionine deficiencies decrease urinary arsenic excretion
* Most methionine deficiencies decrease arsenic excretion.
* Most methionine deficiencies decrease urinary arsenic excretion
Mild deficiency
* Some mild deficiencies cause infertility.
* is common especially in the elderly and in women premenstrually.
Niacin deficiency
* Niacin deficiencies can cause neurological and skin problems.
* causes pellagra in humans.
* is common in people who experience acute heart attacks.<|endoftext|>### condition | deficiency:
Nitrogen deficiency
* Nitrogen deficiencies affect the oldest, lowest leaves first.
* can cause increases in some fungus diseases.
* causes leaves to yellow and older leaves to drop
- reduced growth and pale yellowish green leaves
* causes the lower leaves to turn yellow
- older leaves of a plant to turn yellow
* increases plant stress
- the stress on the plants
* is characterized by reduced plant growth and a pale green or yellow color
- the most common and widespread nutrient deficiency in small grains
* shows up as a general yellowing of the entire plant.<|endoftext|>### condition | deficiency:
Nutrient deficiency
* Most nutrient deficiencies affect health
- show up as foliar symptoms on the plant leaves
* Nutrient deficiencies are likely to be present under water stress situations
- very difficult to diagnose
* Nutrient deficiencies can cause discolored or stunted foliage
- imbalances in the brain chemistry that governs moods
- have a profound influence on the brain and mood
- occur and appear as light or pale green foliage
* Nutrient deficiencies cause imbalances in metabolism
- specific symptoms
- show up as leaf or needle discoloration and abnormal growth patterns
- weaken the immune system and decrease one's ability to tolerate therapies
* Some nutrient deficiencies cause specific discoloration in the foliage.
* is the most common cause of low immune function. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | deficiency:
Nutritional deficiency
* Nutritional deficiencies are almost never a cause of hair loss.
* Nutritional deficiencies are common due to malabsorption
- in rosacea
- problems among reptile pets
- rare, even if the problem of iron is still important
- widespread among nursing home residents
* Nutritional deficiencies can adversely affect the brain and the emotions
- also cause immune compromise
- cause seizures
- have severe and permanent effects on brain function
- severely affect memory, especially minerals
* Nutritional deficiencies cause disease
- hardening of the arteries
- create imbalances in body chemistry
- develop as a result of the complications of the disease
- increase the likelihood of animals to exhibit nitrate toxicity
- weaken eliminative organs
* can alter tear composition and be improved following supplementation
- lower resistance and increase the risk of certain types of cancers
* has long-term negative health effects and it is well hidden.
* is believed to be a leading cause of disease, both physical and mental.
Oxygen deficiency
* can be a serious hazard in enclosed or confined spaces
- cause a lot of disorders and health problems
- result in everything from low energy to life-threatening disease
* causes subnormal or ill health.<|endoftext|>### condition | deficiency:
Potassium deficiency
* Most potassium deficiencies cause death.
* Most potassium deficiencies cause premature death
- leaf death
* Potassium deficiencies are more common on very sandy soils or where root systems are restricted
- rare in turf in Indiana soils
* Potassium deficiencies can encourage kidney problems
- show up on greens, especially in late fall
- weaken stalks
* becomes first evident in older leaves.
* can lead to cardiac dysfunction and muscular weakness
- irregular heart beat and fatigue
* causes stunted growth with leaves close together
- urinary ammonium wasting
- yellowing of the leaves, starting at the outer edges
* is common in most species of palms in Florida
- perhaps the most widespread and serious of all disorders in Florida palms
* is rare in horses
- when a balanced diet is kept
- uncommon in the United States
* reduces tree growth, yields and fruit quality.
Progesterone deficiency
* can also be a cause of depression , irritability, mood swings, and insomnia.
* is also a concern in men, because of xenoestrogens.
Protein deficiency
* Most protein deficiencies cause health problems
- serious health problems
* Protein deficiencies are common in many parts of the world.
* Protein deficiencies cause serious health problems
* has severe consequences for the body.
* is also an important consequence of long-term or high volume infection
- extremely unlikely on a diet drawn from a variety of plant foods
- one of the last great American myths
Salt deficiency
* causes heat cramps, nausea and vomiting.
* very serious problem that can occur during the breeding season.<|endoftext|>### condition | deficiency:
Selenium deficiency
* Selenium deficiencies result in sudden death, liver necrosis, mulberry heart and pale muscles.
* alters the lipoxygenase pathway and mitogenic response in bovine lymphocytes.
* can greatly increase the risk of asthma.
* enhances the pathogenicity of influenza virus infection.
* increases the pathology of an influenza virus infection.
* is associated with cardiomyopathy, muscular dystrophy and cystic fibrosis
- rare in otherwise healthy, well-nourished individuals
* mitigates hypothyroxinemia in iodine-deficient subjects.
* problem in areas of the world where the soil contains little selenium.
* seems quite common in the tropics.
* significant problem in Alberta.
+ Selenium, Uses, In the human body: Chemical elements :: Nonmetals
* Selenium deficiency is rare. Although selenium has some helpful effects on the human body, it also has some harmful effects and only a very little should be eaten. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | deficiency:
Severe deficiency
* Severe deficiencies are rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults
- can lead to permanent nerve damage and a condition known as pernicious anemia
- causing blindness are extremely rare in Western societies
* Severe deficiencies result in impairment
- visual impairment
* can also cause irreversible corneal damage, leading to partial or total blindness
- lead to high blood cholesterol levels and heart problems
Sodium deficiency
* Most sodium deficiencies affect weight.
- are rare in our day and time, but they can occur
* Some sodium deficiencies cause blood pressure.
* Some sodium deficiencies cause low blood pressure
* can trigger hypertension, as mentioned previously.
* causes skin to become sticky and makes it wrinkle faster.
* leads to signs of dehydration and hypovolemia.
Taurine deficiency
* can result in blindness and even death.
* is common among diabetics, which is associated with severe retinal damage.
Thiamin deficiency
* can occur in trout and salmon that feed extensively on landlocked ale-wives.
* is associated with cardiovascular and mental disorders.
Thiamine deficiency
* can therefore lead to weakness, irritability, and depression.
* condition that produces nerve damage through oxidative damage.
* is also a side effect of some kinds of chemotherapy.
* produces a gross neuropathy.<|endoftext|>### condition | deficiency:
Vitamin deficiency
* Most vitamin deficiencies are rare among infants and children in industrialized countries.
* Most vitamin deficiencies cause death
- health problems
* Some vitamin deficiencies lead to health problems
- various health problems
* Vitamin deficiencies are common
- perhaps the easiest cause of anemia to treat
* Vitamin deficiencies can adversely affect the course of the disease
- also develop in chronic infection
- cause depression as well
- change over time
- even cause symptoms of dementia
- result in lowered estrogen levels and thus poor lubrication
- increase the severity of illness
* can be a problem with sugar gliders.
* is common in children with learning difficulties
- on low calorie diets so a daily multivitamin is also recommended
- one of the reasons for hair loss
- rare unless a person's diet is limited and lacks variety
Vitamin e deficiency
* Vitamin e deficiencies lead to diseases
- muscle diseases
- white muscle diseases
* Vitamin e deficiencies result in problems
- reproductive problems<|endoftext|>### condition:
Deformity
* Deformities are afflictions
- also widespread, caused by pollutants such as pesticides and other factors
- caused by conditions
- common, particularly among Iraqi children
- arise and occur in nature in all species and forms of life
* Deformities can also result from physical injury
- be terrible, but some types of criminal behavior are even worse
- result from shortening of muscles and tendons
* Deformities occur during embryo development, while malpositions occur the last week of incubation
- within all plants and animals
- result from positioning during pregnancy, sleeping position, or from neck tightness
* Deformities result in defects
- such defects
* Most deformities are caused by conditions
* Some deformities associate with ash deposition
- result in death
- deformity occurs before weight bearing from strong dorsal muscle pull
* is an appearance
* results from the natural resting postures of a swollen joint.
### condition | deformity:
Joint deformity
* Joint deformities are common.
* is often a late symptom of osteoarthritis. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Depression
* Any depression is an illness that can be treated.
* Can appear at any age and is one of the most common and treatable illnesses.
* Consists basically in a decrease of the vital energy.
* Feeling down or depressed is common for people with heart failure.
* IS a reaction to what has happened.
* Many depressions respond to psychotherapy alone, sometimes quickly, sometimes more slowly.
* Most depression is situational and of brief duration
- treated in an outpatient setting
- reaction to an unhappy event
* Most depressions affect activities
- are mild, but they can also be serious, recurrent illnesses
- lead to illnesses
- start more quickly than dementia, which slower and more gradual process
* Much depression is related to dysregulation of the neurotransmitter serotonin.
* Some depression is caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain
- inherited, but only in a small percentage of cases
- normal and part of almost every person s life
- results from sustained, untreated anxiety
- depressions are at least partly inherited
* Some depressions become storms
- tropical storms
- can be so severe that they can cause some break with reality
- help depressions
- lead to thoughts
- produced by wind deflation reach down to water bearing rocks
* Some depressions result in injuries
- serious injuries
* There strong link between depression and sleep disturbances.
* actually causes a decrease in the metabolic activity of the brain.
* adds to the intensity, suffering, and disability experienced with a chronic pain problem.
* adversely affects a person's social and occupational functioning.
* affects a person's moods, thoughts, body, and behavior
- significant number of women
* affects all aspects of life
- relationships and always affects performance in school or at work
- at least all of the people some of the time
* affects both mind and body
- sexes, with a higher incidence in women
- children and adolescents in a number of areas of functioning
* affects employees at all levels of the corporate ladder
- productivity, judgment and ability to work with others
- every aspect of a person
* affects millions of people world wide and can be both overwhelming and dibilitating
- people, and many have been helped by depression medications
- mood, thought, physical functions, and behavior
- nearly twice as many women as men
- olfaction
- olfactory recognition
* affects our bodies
- thinking, our emotions, our behavior and our physical health
- people differently
* affects people in different ways at different times
- of all ages but is less common for teenagers than for adults
* affects people of all ages, but the adolescent years carry special risks
- races, ethnic groups and social and economic classes
- persons of all ages, genders, and races
* affects the body as well as the mind
- person's health, interpersonal relations, work, and ability to enjoy life
- whole person
- thinking and memory
- twenty percent of the population, but it's much more commonly diagnosed in women
* affects twice as many women as men because women have less a. emotional stability
- worker productivity
* alone is the fourth leading cause of the global disease burden.
* also affects children
- the immune system adversely
- afflicts many poor single working mothers of young children
- appears to take a greater toll on men
* also can affect their nutritional status
- occur after a person suffers a loss or after a long period of stress
- suppress the ability to easily have orgasm
- correlates with a higher incidence of illness
- effects cognitive function
* also interferes with normal sleeping patterns
- the ability to make decisions
* also is known to occur more often in headache sufferers than non-headache sufferers
- linked to poor compliance with diabetes treatment
- manifests itself by a lack of positives
- offer great benefits to capitalism
- reduces the desire for lovemaking
- results from hypothyroidism
- seems to run in families
- tends to decrease energy, disturb sleep, and influence appetite and eating habits
* also tends to run in families with a history of mental illness or suicide
* always indicates substance abuse problems in the person or in the family
- seems like being detached, uncaring, unmoved by anything, without highs or lows
* apparently depresses the immune system.
* appears at least twice as often in American women as in American men.
* appears to increase the risk for stroke in both women and women
- stem from biological, psychological and social factors
* are actually recovery processes during which maladjustments are purged from the economy
- among the most common mental disorders - and the most treatable
- crisises
- economic conditions
- hell
- mental illnesses
- more dominant in winter than in summer
- objectionable visible voids or shallow areas that are lightly covered by breading
- pushs
- sadness
- usually mild to moderate, but they can be severe
* becomes a medical problem when it is out of proportion to the stress producing it
- problem when it interferes with normal activities
- the norm as our people struggle to find meaning for existence
* begins to heal when the hidden pain is named and honored.
* belief in one's own helplessness....
* biochemical disorder.
* biological brain disorder that can affect anyone
- illness that effects behavior, thoughts and feelings
* biologically based disorder that can be treated.
* black hole.
* brain disease, it is treated by changing brain chemistry
* broad term that describes several depressive illnesses.
* by-product of occupation with self, with life, with problems.
* can adversely affect everything from work to friendships.
* can affect a person at any age
- all areas of life
- an elder's ability to cope with pain
- anyone at any age
- anyone, irrespective of sex, race, or age
- as many as one in five people of all ages
- memory, as well as the ability to think
- one's ability to enjoy anything
- people at any age or of any race, ethnic, or economic group
* can affect people of any age, ethnic, or economic group
- race ethnic, or economic group
- aggravate some effects of transplant, including pain and fatigue
* can also be a life-threatening illness when there risk of suicide
- side effect of certain medications
- sign of a medical problem
- part of the postictal phase several days following seizures
- the result of some physical ailment
* can also cause anxiety and agitation
- dementia if left untreated
- symptoms of dementia in older people
* can also come from an imbalance of the chemicals that control a person s mood
- in response to many outside factors
- contribute to the likelihood of asthma attacks by hampering the immune system
- develop after a major stroke
- exacerbate perception of pain
- feel like a chronic physical problem
- have an impact on a person's recovery from heart disease
- hide other physical problems, such as illness or disease
* can also occur as a result of a biochemical disturbance in the brain
- when a person is attempting to deal with unpleasant childhood memories
- present itself as dysthymia, a less intense and more chronic form of depression
- recur throughout a person's lifetime
- result from an underlying physical problem, such as thyroid disease
* can amplify chronic pain, making the symptoms worse and even more intolerable
* can appear in individuals at any age, from childhood through the geriatric age group
- many ways
* can be a barrier to rehabilitation and recovery
- cause of decreased appetite
- chemical inbalance occuring in the brain
- condition where one's life is blocked
- deadly disease
- devastating illness
- disabling medical illness
- factor in chronic low back pain
- family characteristic
- fatal illness
- life threatening illness
- part of many disorders as well, such as post-traumatic stress disorder
- problem for some patients during recovery
* can be a result of physical, genetic and psychological causes
- genetic or psychological causes
- serious illness
- side effect of a physical illness or of a medication to treat an illness
- symptom of thyroid disease
- an occupational hazard for PWs
- common in certain families
* can be difficult to diagnose or to recognize in oneself
- environmental
- fatal as it is the primary cause of suicide
- hereditary or even learned in an environment
- mild or severe
- mild, moderate, or severe
- overwhelming and pervasive, affecting many areas of one's life
- particularly hard on patients with diabetes
- progressive and early treatment can reduce needless suffering
- terminal for individuals, families, marriages, businesses and vocations
- the result of various factors ranging from hormones to hard times
- become a life-threatening illness
- begin suddenly for no apparent reason
* can cause a reduced interest in sex
- big changes in appetite, digestion and nutritional status
- decreases or increases in sleep patterns
- fatigue that can be managed with counseling and medications
- insomnia or excessive sleep
* can cause many kinds of upsetting feelings
- persistent changes in a person's feelings and behavior
- memory loss in older people
- people to lose pleasure from daily life
- certainly lower a person's interest in sex
* can come from problems in the liver or bowel
- on slowly over time, so that it is hard to recognize
- create a severe strain on a marriage, particularly if it becomes chronic
- depress the immune system
- develop in anyone at any age
* can disrupt sleep, appetite, and cognitive functioning
- drastically impair their speech
- even cause confusion and withdrawal
- frequently come after fear
* can happen at any age, but often begins in adulthood
- the same time as other chronic diseases
- gradually or it can be triggered by specific events
- to anyone
- have any number of singular causes, but causes are more often combined
* can have many causes, and many effective treatments are available
- physical symptoms, as well
- profound effects on health, functioning and quality of life
- imitate dementia and both depression and dementia can have depressive symptoms
- increase the rate of heartbeat resulting in palpitations and even strokes
- influence mood, behavior, sleep habits and bodily functions in many ways
- kill
* can last for months or even years if left untreated
- weeks or months
- weeks, months, or even years
- from a few days to years
* can lead to excessive behavior, such as gambling, and exorbitant lifestyles
- impulsivity and risk-taking
- loss of motivation, drive and ambition
- school failure, alcohol or other drug use, and even suicide
- wild mood swings and left untreated can lead to death
* can make a person feel fatigued, worthless, helpless and hopeless
- all activity, especially sex, difficult
- diagnosing narcolepsy difficult
- people exaggerate bad feelings about themselves
- manifest as willfullness, lack of interest in school, rage
* can manifest itself in many ways
- various ways
* can occur at any age and can affect anyone
- age, though the average onset is during the second decade of life
- due to a multitude of causes
- following a heart attack
- for many reasons
- in all age groups, even in children
- once, or it can occur again and again throughout life
- to anyone, at any age, and to people of any race or ethnic group
- persists for weeks, months, or years, and can affect every aspect of our daily lives
- play a part in anger or vice versa
- potentially cause sufferers to commit a violent act either upon themselves or other
- present a confusing picture in children and adolescents
- produce certain physical symptoms such as a disruption in appetite and sleep
- puzzle parents
* can range from a minor problem to a major, life-threatening illness
- feeling a little blue to obsessing about death and suicide
* can range from mild to moderate to severe
- really intensify during withdrawal
* can result from any chronic, debilitating illness
- chronic sleep deprivation
- in a serious disturbance of work, social, academic, and bodily functioning
- rob a person of their willingness to work towards recovery
- ruin a person's life
* can run in families, or it can be situational and transient
- sap the parent of the energy necessary to play with an active child
- seem the same as a neurological or hormone problem
- seriously impair a person's ability to function in everyday situations
- serve as a catalyst for more productive and creative functioning
* can set in as the drugs start to work on the cancer
- with any chronic condition
- in, and spouses can become disconnected from one another
- shorten men s lives in other ways as well
- show up in a number of other ways as well
- shut down the survival instinct or temporarily suppress it
- sometimes be a chronic condition that requires ongoing treatment
* can stem from a lack of light
- many different biological, chemical and situational factors
* can strike a person at any age
* can strike anyone, even children and babies who have been abused and neglected
- babies who have been abused or neglected
* can strike at any age, but it's often associated with the elderly
- including in childhood
- time in an individuals life
- take several different forms, from mild to severe
- wreak havoc on the immune system, leading to a variety of ailments
* carries a stigma in our culture.
* cause inactivity
* caused by grief can increase the odds of getting cancer and other diseases.
* causes a huge amount of suffering
- lot of dysfunction in families
- precipitous decline in job performance at the onset of an episode
- all kinds of problems
- changes in thinking, feeling, behavior, and physical well-being
- decreased energy and social isolation
- intense personal suffering
- people to feel sad, helpless and hopeless
- persistent sadness that lasts day after day
- poor diabetic control
* change in a person's mood that lasts for an extended period of time.
* clearly affects women more than men
- is an important entity in the differential diagnosis of dementia
* clinical diagnosis
- disorder that can be controlled with help and correct medication
- state that frequently takes a professional to diagnose
- syndrome that affects older adults in a variety of ways
* coincides with high pain scores in people with rheumatoid arthritis.
* combination of negative thought with a lack of action.
* come, and, usually within months, they go.
* comes as part of the recognition of limits.
* comes from life
- the brain, but scientists are still trying to find out exactly why it happens
- in all shapes and fishnet sizes
* comes in many forms
- kinds and degrees
- shapes and sizes
* common after-effect of cardiac surgery
- and serious illness, which frequently manifests itself in adolescence
- antecedent to suicide
- but serious mood disorder
- cause of orgasmic difficulty as well as decreased desire and arousal
- characteristic of girls and women who have the full fragile X mutation
- companion in such children
- disorder that affects all different types of people
- experience that can affect any person at any age
- highly treatable, but often unrecognized, condition
* common illness that can be debilitating if left untreated
- occurs in about ten percent of people the world over
- often goes undiagnosed and untreated
- with a variety of highly effective treatments
- long-term effect
* common mental health problem among older adults
- illness that can affect people of all ages
- post-high effect
- problem and can strike at any age
* common problem in adolescents with or without acne
- chronic pain patients
- the United States
- problem, usually treatable with counseling and, if necessary, medication
* common psychiatric complication of temporal lobe seizures
- disorder of the aged
* common response to loss
- significant life change
- result of the women being over worked
- side effect of interferon therapy
* common symptom of menopause
- poor thyroid function
* common, serious illness.
* commonly occurs because of arthritis
- in the late twenties, and is twice as common in women as in men
* complex disorder
- problem with no simple solutions
* complicated illness
- problem, which is often hidden behind physical illness
* compromises quality of life.
* concern among both the elderly and their adult caregivers, according to experts.
* condition that requires professional medical diagnosis and treatment.
* constitutes a major health concern for the elderly.
* contributes to disability, medical illness, and health care costs.
* conversely increases disease.
* coupled with anxiety attacks are relatively common among women in poverty.
* crippling and often misunderstood disorder in today's society.
* curable illness.
* cuts across all class, race and social lines.
* dampens our awareness of feelings.
* dangerous and serious disorder because it can lead to suicide attempts by sufferers.
* decreases memory and concentration, both of which are vital to learning
- the very processes that are required for learning and memory
* deep intense feeling that never lifts
- sadness at the loss often accompanied by hopelessness of the occasion
* depressive disorder that involves a person's body, mood, and thoughts.
* destroys relationships and the soul.
* develop when warm air from the sub-tropics meets cold air from the polar regions.
* directly affects a person's self-esteem, reducing the sense of self worth.
* disabling medical illness involving disruptions in brain functions.
* disease and nothing to be ashamed of.
* disease of the body and mind
- ego
* disease that affects every aspect of an older person's life
- responds very well to treatment
* disease, but like heart disease or diabetes, self-care is essential to recovery.
* disorder of the body, mind and spirit
* disorder that affects chemicals in the brain called neurotransmitters
- our lives in many different ways
- is defined by certain behaviors and thought patterns
* does affect one's mental state, and disease of the central nervous system
- that to the most loving and gentle of people
* dysfunction of the brain.
* entails a desire to withdraw, a lack of energy, and the diminished capacity for pleasure.
* especially is associated with a particularly high risk.
* exemplifies a hidden disability marked by alterations in mood
- mental disorder largely marked by alterations in mood
* exhibits many of the same symptoms as grief and often goes hand in hand with grief.
* experienced by substance abusers usually clears with abstinence.
* fatal disease if left untreated.
* feeds addiction and self-destruction
- on isolation
* feeling of deep sadness that continues for at least fourteen days
- sadness or disappointment
* flattens all positive emotions, including the libido.
* following a heart attack significant risk factor for subsequent death
- retirement from work is an example of adjustment disorder
- significant loss normal, healing part of the grieving process
* follows or is caused by many medications or serious medical problems.
* form of aggression
- idolatry
* frequent and serious complication of heart attack, stroke, diabetes, and cancer
- concommon disease even though well before the diagnosis is apparent
* frequently goes undiagnosed and untreated among the marginalized
- plays a role in cigarette smoking
* fundamental state of mind.
* gives no regard to age, race, religion or wealth.
* goes with chronic illness.
* greatly diminishes a person s quality of life, personal joy and productivity
- increases the risk of developing heart disease
* growing problem among teenagers as well.
* hallmark of hormonal disorders, especially hypothyrodism.
* happens because of several different factors
- most often, lasts longer and is more disabling, triggering higher suicide rates
* has a broad range of symptoms
- lot of ADD symptoms, inability to concentrate, reduced memory, some anxiety
- number of symptoms, both physical and mental, that occur at the same time
- profound effect on daily function
* has a variety of causes, of both physiological and organic origin
- symptoms, but the most common deep feeling of sadness
- and is an integral part of self-discovery
- both biological and environmental causes
- far-reaching consequences for the person suffering from it
* has many causes and impacts people in unique ways
- faces, changing the way it appears from one person to the next
- more to do with feelings of helplessness, powerlessness, and an inability to act
* has multiple causes and it affects different individuals differently
- plays a major role in fatigue
- negative influences on others
- nothing to do with weakness or personal defect
- specific symptoms and it, too, can kill if left untreated
- the virtue of being the most treatable mental illness
* health condition.
* heaviness, too close, like blankets in summer.
* highly individual disease
- treatable disorder
* hits women at more than twice the rate as men.
* horrible disease that inflicts so many people.
* horribly misunderstood condition.
* huge mental-health issue.
* hurts a person's quality of life.
* includes a variety of physical and psychological symptoms
- feelings of being down, flat, hopelessness, and being tired a lot of the time
* increases a person's chances of getting a heart attack
- both morbidity and mortality in the elderly
- chance of repeat heart attack
* increases the risk of having a heart attack
- suicide ten-fold, and one third of suicides involve alcoholism
* interferes with a person's ability or wish to get help.
* invites a negative emotion and expectation in response to almost everything that happens.
* involves behavior and cognition, a well as emotion.
* is about the absence of an emotional response capacity
- loss of hope
- actually more treatable than most physical illnesses
- adaptation to loss
- akin to the beginning of a mental ice age
- alarmingly widespread in the general Canadian population
- almost twice as prevalent among women as men
* is also a common cause of dementia-like symptoms
- companion to illnesses that often occur in older people
- disease treated with medication
- key factor in suicides
- national problem
- side effect of many drugs that are commonly prescribed for the elderly
- very common illness among teenagers
* is also an early warning sign of many other illnesses, including cancer
- emotional mood state
- opening to many other problems such as self mutilation and anorexia
* is also common among obese older people
- pregnant teens
- and often manifests itself as excessive sleepiness and fatigue
- following a stroke for many of the same reasons
- with bulimia
- costly to society
- has a different pattern of symptoms in older people compared to the young
- more common in women than in men and is often undiagnosed
- one of the greatest predictors of school dropout rates
- part of the range of emotions experienced after the death of a loved animal
- the word which health professionals use to describe some kinds of mental illness
- always painful, even when transitory
- among the leading causes of disability worldwide
* is among the most important risk factors for cardiac outcomes
- treatable forms of mental illness
* is an affective or mood disorder
- agent of entropy, and can lead to personal, social, and financial ruin
- all-encompassing gloom that envelops every aspect of a person s existence
- common crippling but treatable illness
- emotional state that afflicts a significant proportion of our population
- enevitible part of loss
- epidemic an epidemic on the rise
- expectable response to major loss
- extraordinarily common disorder in contemporary America
- illness - a recognized serious illness
* is an illness and anyone can get it
- can be treated effectively
- like other illnesses has a cluster of symptoms associated with it
- requires medical care
- as real and serious as any other
- characterised by a low mood and a reduced ability to enjoy life
- in the same way that diabetes or heart disease are illnesses
- just like diabetes or any other other
- like chicken pox, flu or diabetes
* is an illness of the body
- entire body
* is an illness that affects both men and women
- many older people
- millions, but is still widely misunderstood
* is an illness that can afflict anyone, regardless of age, race, class, or gender
- be successfully conquered, especially in older people
- change the very core of our being
- limit a person's enjoyment of life
- comes and goes
* is an illness that involves physical, mental and emotional symptoms
- understanding and support
- is treatable and curable in most cases
- robs one of the meaning of life
- when it persists
* is an illness when the depressive condition persists
- sadness has gone too far
- which is usually caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain
- with specific symptoms and specific treatments
* is an illness, and a quite common one at that on college campuses and elsewhere
- it distorts judgment
* is an illness, just as a cold is
- diabetes and arthritis are illneses
- like heart disease is an illness, the common cold is an illness
- illnesses and needs to be properly diagnosed and treated
- imbalance that affects body, mind, and spirit
- important but confusing issue for parents of teenagers
- indication that something is amiss
- invisible illness
- issue that many women from non-English speaking backgrounds endure
- occasional side effect of epilepsy medicines
* is anger that has been suppressed
- turned inward
- another cause of psychogenic impotence
* is another common cause of fatigue
- condition that is associated with global aphasia
- disease that has been politicized by feminists
- disorder that is strongly associated with erectile dysfunction
- example of a common problem among older persons
- very common reason for sleep problems
- approximately twice as common in women as it is in men
* is as common among adolescents as it is among adults
- complicated as it is common to the human experience
- physical as diabetes
* is associated with an imbalance of chemicals in the brain
- changes in basic biological processes
- decreased noradrenaline levels
- disturbances in the hypothalamus
- increased death rates for heart patients
* is associated with low levels of serotonin, norepinephrine or both
- lowered metabolism, shortening of the body and gradual disintegration
- slowed-speech, longer pause times, and prolonged duration of vowels
- basically a loss of hope
* is believed to be caused by a combination of factors
- occur when there shortage of certain chemicals in the brain
- both a physical and a psychological disorder
* is caused by a number of factors, from chemical imbalances to environmental influences
- an imbalance of one or more chemicals in the brain
- changes in the brain and in other parts of the body that produce hormones
- conflict among the three divisions of the mind
- imbalances in the level of chemicals within the nerves of the brain
- one's attitude toward circumstances of life
- self-pity
- the chronic pain state
* is characterized by either a depressed mood or lack of pleasure
- feelings of helplessness and hopelessness
- persistent symptoms lasting for over two weeks
* is common after a brain attack
- stroke, but it is treatable
- amputation
* is common among acutely ill elderly medical inpatients
- individuals recovering from a heart attack
* is common among people who have too much or too little thyroid hormone
- with brain tumors
* is common and often severe
- produces a lot of misery and disability
- both in developing and non developing world
- during menopause, again when the sex hormones are unbalanced
* is common in anorexia, as is withdrawal from family and friends
- elderly individuals including nursing facility residents
- individuals with addictive behaviors
- late-stage PD, as is anxiety and sleep disturbance
- older adults, but it also natural response to abuse or neglect
- teens and younger children
* is common in the elderly
- face of chronic disease
* is common with eating disorders
- excessive use of alcohol or drugs
* is common, as is suicidal ideation
- particularly in people used to an active life
- troublesome, painful and dangerous
- complex, and no one substance helps every person
- considered as much a disorder of childhood as of adulthood
* is considered to be a highly common cause of suicide
- short-term, treatable illness
- dangerous because it bankrupts a person's self-esteem
- demonstrated through acting out
* is different from just feeling sad or having a bad day once in a while
- recurring feelings of stress, anxiety, or inadequacy
- than the periods of sadness that are part of the normal human experience
- difficult to recognize in children
* is easy to fall into, especially during a time of year so focused on holidays
- recognize in an older person who is physically ill
- energy that has turned against itself
* is episodic, and ranges on a continuum from mild to severe
- in that it can come and go, sometimes in an instant
- especially common among alcoholics, particularly women
* is even more common during adolescence
- debilitating for people suffering from other chronic medical diseases
- explained as sadness
* is extremely common, occurring in up to two-thirds of cases
- difficult to diagnose and manifests itself in a wide variety of ways
* is far more common among men than most people think
- women than men
- five times more common in working class women than in men
- found to be the key to most suicides
- frequent in midlife and later
* is frequently a complication of long illnesses
- genetic and associated with biochemical abnormalities in the body
- hereditary, or heart disease
* is highly treatable when an individual receives competent care
- with medications alone or in conjunction with psychotherapy
- variable from person to person, and it ranges from very mild to very severe
* is in epidemic proportions
- fact a part of our everyday lives
- intense and attacks the mind and body at the same time
- just as treatable as other health problems for both adults and children
- kept under control by antidepressants
* is known to affect the physical body, such as reducing the amount of growth hormone
- be associated with changes in brain chemicals
- lower our resistance to physical ailments
- less common in the elderly than in younger adults
- life in a hole
* is like all illnesses, self-limiting
- wearing doom-colored glasses
- linked to liver toxicity and chemical imbalance
* is more common in chronic back pain patients than in the general population
- girls than in boys, possibly for hormonal reasons
- institutionalized elderly
- older people, but it can also affect young people
- people with a family history of the disorder
* is more common than high blood pressure
- previously believed among adolescents
- like heart disease - it develops gradually over time
- likely to be diagnosed in women and more educated patients
* is more prevalent among women than men
- in women than men and is especially common among adolescents
* is more than a day of feeling low
- side effect of treatment, or even a response to a serious disease
* is more than an individual problem
- occasional feeling of sadness or a natural, grieving response to loss
- having a bad day or mood changes
* is more than just a bad day or the result of a little anxiety
- day, the result of a bad grade or anxiety about the future
* is more than just being moody, and it can affect people at any age, including teenagers
- feeling sad or blue
* is more than just the blues or normal everyday ups and downs
- occasional bad mood
- sadness - it's a mood disorder
- the grieving that occurs after the death of a loved one
* is most likely due to an inherited predisposition to a chemical imbalance in the brain
- often the result of stroke deficit
- much more than a disease caused by faulty brain chemistry
* is never a normal part of growing older
- normal and always produces needless suffering
* is no longer a state or mood but is now an illness called major depression
- respecter of persons and manifests itself in many forms
* is now one of the most common mental health problems experienced by young people
- common mental health problems young people experience
- rapidly and successfully treatable of all serious illnesses
* is now the leading cause of disability in the world
- most common illness in Australia s young women
* is often a cause of memory loss
- contributing problem to the well-being of oneself
- major component of stress
- manifestation of physical imbalances from foods and substances
- side effect of chronic pain which can further increase a feeling of isolation
- symptom of chronic iron deficiency
- an accompanying illness and furthers the mental illness
- anger, and a host of other emotions that have turned inward and become frozen
- common in young people who come from a dysfunctional background
- difficult to diagnose because it can manifest in so many different ways
- extremely difficult to diagnose
- genetically and biologically determined and occurs without situational stress
- misunderstood as a sign of personal weakness, or instability
- part of grief
- reversible with prompt and appropriate treatment
- self-bullying
- the result of trauma, loss or adjustment
- under-diagnosed in older people
- underidentified in children
- untreated in people with heart disease
- on of the most common reasons why inmates often kill themselves
* is one of the first signs, along with anxiety and irritability
- main reasons why kids who are bullied commit suicide
- major impediments to full physical and mental recovery from stroke
* is one of the more common disorders, especially among women
- of the mood disorders
- symptoms in the early stage of the disease
- persistent and defeating withdrawal symptoms
- treatable diseases
* is one of the most common and most serious mental health problems facing people today
- and treatable of all mental illnesses
- but most treatable of mental disorders
- disorders seen in primary care
- medical illnesses
- mental illnesses in America today
- mental-health problems
- psychiatric disorders among the elderly
- psychological consequences of chronic pain
- reversible causes of weight loss in the elderly
- commonly misdiagnosed problems
* is one of the most frequent mental disorders in the elderly
- of all medical illnesses
- frequently undiagnosed problems in the United States
- readily treatable medical illnesses
* is one of the most treatable medical problem and getting treatment can save lives
- of mental illnesses
- three leading causes of disability worldwide
- our inability to deal with anger and pain
* is part of aging
- the human condition
- particularly common in women of child bearing age
- perhaps the most misunderstood of diseases
- pervasive and deep-rooted
- present in the majority of people who commit suicide
- prevalent for the elderly
- qualitatively different in older adults than in younger adults
* is quite common in adolescence and adulthood
- people on the high functioning end of the spectrum
- rampant in our society
- recognized as a medical condition and there is no substitute for therapy
- relatively common among older people, and it can lead to severe weight loss
- schizoaffective disorder, the antidepressants certainly do play a role
- second only to heart disease in causing lost work days in America
- seen as unmanly and shameful
* is serious and can last a lifetime
- and, if left untreated, can worsen to the point of becoming life-threatening
* is so common that it is second only to heart disease in causing lost workdays
- very common when dealing with a chronic illness
- something that can become worse over time
- sometimes a side effect of a drug
- suppressed anger, grief and desperation
- the cause of some compulsive shopping
* is the common cold of mental health
- feeling that all is being lost and the thought of no hope
* is the fourth leading cause of loss of health in Australia
- stage of grief
* is the leading cause of alcoholism, drug abuse, and other addictions
- drug abuse, and other similar addictions
* is the leading cause of suicide in the United States
- teen suicide
* is the leading mental health issue faced by transgender persons
- problem known today
* is the main aftermath of a miscarriage, particularly if it is the first pregnancy
- cause of emotional problems in pHD's and can easily be treated
- mental equivalent of pain
- most common and the most treatable of all mental illnesses
* is the most common cause for a person who enters a psychiatrical hospital
- of persistent lethargy
- emotional effect of stroke
- form of psychiatric disorder
- mental disorder, but also the most treatable
- of all emotional disorders
- precurson of suicide
* is the most common serious psychiatric disorder
- such problem affecting the elderly
- symptom of a folic acid deficiency
* is the most common, most misdiagnosed illness in America
- then anxiety disorders and small proportion bipolar disorder
- crucial risk factor related to both murder and suicide
* is the most prevalent disorder known to date
- mental disorder of late life
- successfully treated of all the major mental illnesses
* is the most treatable of all mental illnesses
- varied of all psychological disturbances
* is the number one cause of suicide
- mental health problem in our country
- number-one cause of suicide
- opposite of happiness
- period of true grief, characterized by sadness and crying
- reason for multitudes of medical visits and tests that bear no diagnostic results
- result of an alteration in the brain chemistry
* is the second leading cause of medical impact and morbidity
- morbidity due to illness and illness impact
- most common mental illness after anxiety disorders
* is the single largest cause of absenteeism
- most common cause for substance abuse
- thief of life
- third most common illness in the world
* is thought of as a wimp disorder
- to arise from abnormal levels of nonadrenaline and serotonin in the brain
* is thought to result from a dysfunction in the noradrenergic or serotonergic systems
- abnormal neurotransmitter activities
- three times the norm for persons in their age group
- tied to low serotonin levels
- treatable, no matter what the person's age
- treated based on the type and severity of the disorder
* is treated with antidepressants that affect norepinephrine and serotonin in the brain
- medication and psychotherapy, which is counseling
- triggered by a loss of self-esteem
- twice as rampant in nursing homes as elsewhere
* is two times more common in women as in men
- to three times more common in women than in men
- typically longer-lasting than an episode of grieving
- underdiagnosed and undertreated in the nursing facility population
- universal and it attacks people of all ages and gender
* is usually a result of unattained expectations
- just anger turned inward
- large enough to hold a drop of liquid
- very common after childbirth
* is very common among adolescents
- people who have diabetes
- at all ages
* is very common in caregivers
- our society for a variety of reasons
- women who are trying to become pregnant
- common, especially early in the disease
- costly in terms of treatment and lost time at work or school
- prevalent in our society
- widespread among Indian women, with many turning to substance abuse as a way to cope
- within the normal range of responses to life stresses
* key factor in most suicides.
* knows no gender or age or status.
* lasts for weeks or months and sadness can be just a few days.
- suicidal thoughts and attempt
* leading cause of disability in Australia
- risk factor for suicide
* leads to disability.
* leaves people feeling empty, with a general apathy toward life.
* legitimate disorder that deserves to be treated.
* looks different in a child than it does in a teenager or adult.
* loss of control of thoughts, causes headaches directly.
* lowering of the spirit.
* major appetite depressant.
* major cause of illness and disability in Australia
- disorder that can begin at any age
* major factor in suicide
- that contributes to suicide
- mental health problem in childhood and adolescence
- problem in the aging population
- psychologic contributor to weight loss in older adults
- public health problem, as more and more people are affected by it
* makes a person feel hopeless about ever feeling better
- tired, worthless, helpless, and hopeless
- it harder to deal with pain and also harder to handle stress
- people more sedentary, so it aggravates their health problems
- the caregiver vulnerable to a variety of unhealthy ways of coping
* manifestation of anger turned inward.
* manifests itself in a myriad of ways
* means different things to different people.
* mediates the influence of social support on attachment style.
* medical condition caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain.
* medical condition that can be treated
- usually be treated
- requires medical treatment
- disease and it's treatable
* medical illness and effective treatments are available
- like diabetes or high blood pressure
- that often alters sleep, appetite and energy
* medical illness, just like cancer or diabetes
- heart disease, diabetes and cancer
* mental condition
- disorder marked by alterations in mood
- illness that frequently goes undetected
* mood disorder that affects most of the activities of daily living
- which leads a persistent feeling of loss of interestand sadness
- with biological, sociological and psychological aspects
- filled with sadness, guilt and feelings of hopelessness
- state or syndromal disorder associated with vegetative symptoms
* most uncomfortable state no one chooses to be in.
* natural consequence of certain physiological or psychological circumstances
- reaction to the death of a loved one
* nearly universal response to divorce.
* necessary response to certain life situations.
* neurobiological disease.
* neurochemical disorder involving a brain chemical known as serotonin.
* normal human experience and it is an unavoidable part of everyday life.
* normal part of aging
- any major loss
- living a while and paying attention
- response to progressive loss of muscle function and impaired mobility
* occasionally takes the form of extreme irritability and outbursts of inappropriate anger.
* occur when warm air meets cold air.
* occurs frequently with aging.
* occurs in conjunction with a whole host of diseases
- fifteen to twenty-five percent of brain injury survivors
- ordinary people
- persons of all genders, ages, and backgrounds
- up to half of people who've had heart attacks
- most often in women and the elderly
- only in adults
- when feelings of sadness or despair last for at least two weeks or longer
* often accompanies epilepsy
- feelings of anxiety
- affects women immediately following the birth of their babies
* often begins as grief
- early in life, and reoccurrences throughout life are the rule
- coexists with anxiety
- comes after some great moment in life
- develops in of patients with chronic insomnia
- improve in a day or two
- involves biological as well as social factors
- makes people tired and irritable
- masquerades as anxiety
- occur with people suffering from a chronic disease and they mostly cause fatigue
* often occurs at the same time as other physical illnesses
- early in the course of the illness
- in a diabetic after the loss of a loved one
- result of abusive relationships
* often runs in families and is more common in women
- the family via genetics
- seems to occur with elderly persons who are experiencing cognitive difficulties
* only occurs in weak people.
* painful closing down of the senses.
* part of life and can be resolved through prayer without medical treatment
- that can be worked through without seeking treatment
* particularly cruel disorder.
* pervasive mood disorder affecting large numbers of the general population.
* point beyond sadness.
* presents with poor sleeping, eating, and feelings.
* prevalent mental health problem and it is treatable.
* prevalent, serious, and potentially disabling disorder.
* problem for many older people.
* psychological disorder that is found frequently among college-aged students.
* ranges from normal feelings of 'the blues' through dysthymia to major depression
- blues' to major depression
- the blues through dysthymia to major depression
- in severity from being relatively mild to incapcitating
* ranks among the top three workplace problems following only family crisis and stress.
* reaction against something that has already occurred
* real illness and can affect people of any age, race, ethnic or economic group
- that is beyond our ability to control by willpower or any other means
* real illness that requires careful evaluation and treatment
- professional help
- with real causes
- illness, just like heart disease or diabetes
* real medical condition
- illness and it's treatable
* real, but uncommon side effect of tamoxifen.
* recurrent condition.
* recurring illness.
* reduces health status when it occurs in late life
- one's ability to learn and concentrate when it is present
* reduces the intensity of brain activity
* relies on isolation.
* represents just a small part in a generalized or overall disinhibition disorder.
* represents the major cause of suicides
- spread of the fall to the entire world
* responds better to treatment than many other forms of mental illness
- to fluoxetine, tricyclic agents, lithium, and electroconvulsive therapy
* response to loss that is expressed as profound sadness or deep suffering
* result of the pain.
* results from changes in the levels of brain chemicals that regulate mood
- in more days in bed than ulcers , diabetes , high blood pressure , or arthritis
- when a person has two or more negative thoughts for each two positive ones
* returns when they stop drinking, so they tend to drink daily or often.
* risk factor for a first heart attack
- cardiovascular disease
* runs in families to some extent
- families, it is passed down genetically
* sad, low and lethargic state in which life seems black and overwhelming.
* seems to be caused by a combination of environmental as well as chemical factors
- linked with chemical changes in the part of brain that controls mood
- the most common co-morbid condition
- involve a change in brain chemistry, including times of psychological trauma
* sense of sadness or a loss of hope.
* serious and common mental illness
* serious disease but it is very treatable
- that affects people of all ages, even teenagers
- disorder that is different from normal periods of sadness
* serious health condition affecting millions of people each year
- problem that effects the whole person
* serious illness and can be treated
* serious illness that can become worse
- have organic sources
- take a terrible toll on individuals and families
- needs to be identified and treated
* serious medical condition
- illness which can be treated
* serious problem for many addicts
- that even appears as a physical illness
- with a biochemical basis
* serious, often life-threatening disease.
* side effect of many medications.
* significant risk factor for suicide among men and women, young and old
* sometimes causes disturbances of appetite and sleep patterns
- follows an injury, particularly to the head
- stems from a teen's extreme negative view of the world
* somewhat mysterious illness which can affect both the body and the mind.
* speeds decline of old age, study finds.
* stage of grief that comes and goes.
* state of feeling bad most of or all the time
- mind or emotion marked by deep sadness or a sense of hopelessness
- sadness and despair
- that can paralyze
* statistically is higher in women though it is on the rise in men.
* stems from as wide a range of causes as there are individuals.
* strikes all ages, races, and income brackets
- backgrounds, ages, possible causes people of all nationalities, and lifestyles
- people of all ages, backgrounds, lifestyles and nationalities
* successfully treated illness.
* symptom of suppressed emotions
- that many women experience during their menstruating years
* takes a high toll in personal productivity
- tremendous toll on children - physically, mentally and socially
* takes many different forms, each of which varies from person to person
* temporary condition that is usually resolved without intervention
* tend to be long lasting, e.g., from months to years
- last longer than manic episodes
- move with the wind around large, well-established anticyclones
* tends to affect people who have low self-esteem and a pessimistic outlook on life
- be more global and last longer
- foster unremitting thoughts of sadness, guilt, and lack of a desire to live
- make pain worse by lowering the threshold to pain
- occur in families
* touches all types of people.
* traumatic experience but it is never hopeless.
* treat able illness.
* treatable and often curable illness
- reversible condition
- biological disease characterized by changes in brain chemistry
- condition, in many cases people recover without recurrence
- disorder and can usually be helped
* treatable illness, no one has to suffer
- requiring professional care
* treatable, biologically based illness caused by chemical imbalances in the brain
- recoverable disorder
* type of mood disorder.
* usually becomes more severe as the condition progresses
- begins in adolescence or early adulthood
- causes younger adults to become tearful, withdrawn, and noticeably unhappy
- develops over a period of weeks or months
- follows a detoxification crisis
- is treated with medicine, counseling, or medicine combined with counseling
- persists longer in an elderly patient than in a younger patient
- strikes adults, mostly women
* very common consequence of chronic pain
- disease that is accompanied by both mental and physical symptoms
- emotional illness
- illness, even among teenagers
- reaction to sexual assault
- confusing word and can mean different things at different times
* very isolating illness accompanied by feelings of worthlessness and low self esteem
- real and common illness
- serious condition
- troubling, yet highly treatable mental disorder
- uncomfortable energy state to exist in
* way of constructing the world, and it is only one way in a world of rich potentials.
* well-known risk factor for smoking and increases the danger of starting young.
* whole body health problem.
* wide spread ailment among the working or poor.
* world without sunshine.
* worldwide illness that affects millions.
+ Depression (mental illness), Causes of depression: Mental illnesses | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | depression:
Bipolar depression
* includes periods of high or mania.
* is one that recurs in some sort of a pattern.
* is the more serious of the two types
- technical term for people who suffer from manic depression
* occurs when depressed states alternate with manic states.
Childhood depression
* can lead to school failure, alcohol or other drug use, and even suicide.
* disturbingly common phenomenon.
* is real, common and just as treatable in young people as it is in adults.
Chronic depression
* are often without known cause.
* debilitating and often life-threatening disorder.
* frequent companion to anxiety disorders.
* is an episode of major depression that persists more than two years
- another symptom of soul loss
- common, leading to functional physical symptoms
- never normal
- widespread, and people are under severe emotional strain
* local chemical condition.
* results from faulty thinking and false beliefs about oneself.
Double depression
* can cause a lot more disability and lifelong problems for the sufferer.
* is major depression with dysthymic disorder.
Dysphoria
* can often look a lot like a panic attack.
* is an element within a larger emotional reactive pattern
- another type of mania
* major predictor of poor outcomes in older patients with diabetes.
### condition | depression | dysphoria:
Gender dysphoria
* is socially and emotionally complex and generates conflict with the external world
- when a person is unhappy with their own masculinity or femininity
* person with a persistent discomfort with gender role or identity.<|endoftext|>### condition | depression:
Dysthymia
* affects women twice as often than men.
* are depressive disorder
- diseases
* can begin in childhood or in adulthood.
* chronic low-grade depression.
* form of mild depression.
* is different
- less severe than depression
- like major depression except it endures for years at a time with only short remissions
- long term or chronic depressive symptoms
- perhaps the most common type of chronic low-grade depression
- slightly more prevalent among women than men
* low level depression that lasts at least two years in adults.
* mild form of depression that is extremely common.
* milder but longer-lasting type
- form of depression that lasts two years or more
* often precedes major depressive disorder.
* usually considered less severe type of depression than a major depression.
Economic depression
* begins after failure of cotton brokerages in New Orleans.
* is the logical culmination of decades of dependence, humiliation, and violence.
* triggers unemployment on a global scale.
Endogenous depression
- more likely to be alleviated than are other depressive states
* is by contrast chemical in origin.
* is more likely to be alleviated than are other depressive states
- than other depressive states
- thought to be related to neurotransmitter deficiency
- usually the result of a chemical imbalance in the brain
* refers to depression that is caused by genetic factors.
* tends to occur in mid-life and is more common in women.
Extreme depression
* cause a desire to dies.
* is likely to be a medical condition which requires medication
- something with which survivors also battle
Lowland
* cover much of the terrain in the country.
* have numerous thaw lakes, but lakes are rare in the highlands.
* lie along the coast, and jungle covers most of the interior.
* line both the Caribbean and Pacific coasts, and there are numerous offshore islands.
* occupy more than half of the country.
* receive very little rain fall, and develop thorn forests.
* tend to be discharge areas where groundwater is discharged to surface waters. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | depression:
Major depression
* Major Depression Is a major mental illness of mood or affect.
* affects approximately twice as many women as men.
* can be a debilitating illness
- occur at any age
- range from mild to severe depending on the extent of the symptoms
- take the form of despair, a bleak outlook that colors everything
* causes people to feel hopeless, exhausted and useless.
* clinical depression and usually requires treatment with antidepressants
- disease that affects mood, body, and behavior
* constellation of symptoms that varies from person to person.
* dangerous disease and medical personnel are trained to deal with it.
* has a higher prevalence in females
- an array of symptoms that can vary in severity over time
* includes a combination of symptoms that interfere with a person's functioning.
* is also a mood disorder
- by far the leading mental illness and the leading cause of disability worldwide
- characterized by sadness, withdrawal, despair, and suicidal thoughts
- episodic with normal function between episodes
- highly likely to respond to antidepressants or psychological treatment
- marked by more severe or exaggerated symptoms
- much more than a feeling of sadness
- notoriously resistant to successful treatment of any kind
- particularly common in persons diagnosed with cancer, stroke, and diabetes
- recognized more and more in young people
* is the leading cause of disability in the U.S. and worldwide
- psychiatric diagnosis most commonly associated with suicide
- twice as common among people living alone as among others
* makes it almost impossible to carry on usual activities, sleep, eat or enjoy life.
* occurs in all groups of people
- at least one third of patients after stroke
* refers to reactive or endogenous depression.
* responds to antidepressant medications.
* seems to occur generation after generation in some families.
* serious medical problem
- mental health problem
* strikes one in four women, and one in ten men during their lifetime.
* very common and serious medical illness
- disabling disorder
Mild depression
* affects about one in three women and one in six men.
* are usually a reaction to a loss of change that is experienced as stressful.
* can act as a ballast.
* comes and goes and is characterized by downheartedness, sadness, and dejection.
* healthy reaction to many life situationssuch as losses in the short-term.
Minor depression
* can be episodic but tends to be more chronic.
* has the same causes and treatment as major depression.
* occurs in episodes with fewer symptoms and less impairment than major depression
- later in life and is often linked with medical illness
Psychotic depression
* can be episodic or chronic.
* is more prevalent in late life than in midlife.
Reactive depression
* can last for months.
* is characterized as the everyday normal stress and mild sadness of life
- more common among older people
- temporary and related to some recent or current loss
* response to loss.
Scleral depression
* fails to collapse the inner retinal layer.
* is necessary to identify the location of a retinal tear or hole.
Serious depression
* can damage or destroy family life as well as the life of the affected person.
* can destroy family life as well as the life of the depressed person
- as the life of the ill person
- lead to suicide
* is accompanied by severe loss of hope and energy
- an important public health problem
- more likely to occur in women who had a mental illness before pregnancy
* major public health problem.
Small depression
* begin to form in the ice and the more dense saline water flows down.
* filled with flood water provide an excellent breeding ground for bacteria. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | depression:
Symptom of depression
* Some symptoms of depression are Persistent sad or empty mood.
* Symptoms of depression affect thoughts, feelings, body, and behaviors
- body,and behaviors
* Symptoms of depression can begin at any age and for no apparent reason
- include weight loss, sleep disturbances, and low energy
- range from feeling down to feeling suicidal
Tropical depression
* Some tropical depressions become storms
- tropical storms
* exhibit tropical transition.
* is the next stage of a developing hurricane.<|endoftext|>### condition | depression:
Untreated depression
* can also be devastating in terms of associated mortality
- exacerbate physical disabilities
- increase a person's risk of suicide
- and often leads to suicide
- be deadly
- disrupt work, family relations and social life
- last for years
* can lead to substance abuse problems and suicide attempts
- suicide and other disease
- persist for years
- worsen or complicate a coexisting medical problem
* interferes with the ability to cope with stressors, including pain.
* is associated with suicide
- dangerous and can even lead to suicide
- one of the major causes of suicidal thoughts and feelings
* is the leading cause of suicide
- number one cause of suicide
- number-one cause of suicide
* leads to absenteeism, work-related injuries and lost productivity
- needless suffering and, in extreme cases, death
Winter depression
* is most dramatic around the polar regions, where nights can last for months.
* problem for many people.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Despair
* can happen in all kinds of ways.
* is actually a defense against anxiety.
* is an Internet brand that means something to people and that s making money
- expression of the total personality, doubt only of thought
- anxiety in the face of the eternal
- belief just in case
* is located in casinos
- jails
- misery
- signified by a fear of death
- something any person inside a penitentiary can just taste in the air
- sorrow arising from a like cause
* is the death of the soul because it denies the possibility of transformation
- devil's doorway which ignorance unlocks
- greatest evil
- infantile disorder of the revolutionaries of everyday life
- loss of hope
- only emotion completely banned from modern life
* kind of addiction.
* leads to hopelessness and hopelessness to tunnel vision.
* means life lived without significance or meaning
- utter futility, being utterly lost
* wall around past disappointments.
Desperation
* appears in tragedy and loss.
* breeds contempt in others, but loneliness nurtures contempt for the self.
* is books.
* is the radioactive waste of the dating world
- soil for desperate acts
* sometimes drives folks to use herbicides.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Deterioration
* Most deterioration is caused by ages
- human activities
* Some deterioration is caused by oxidation
- leads to blindness
- occurs in cats
* can occur from direct contact with some materials or from the fumes they exude.
* includes decreases in the average strength or increased variability.
* increases as cracks are opened further.
* is at a critical point in Mediterranean countries.
* is caused by activities
- decay
- declines
- due mainly to evaporation
- exacerbated by lack
- in steps rather than in a steady progression
- slowed when seeds are stored under cool, dry conditions
* much slower process in the West, where aspen often is replaced by conifers.
* proceeds rapidly at high temperatures.
* usually begins low in the cord and affects the lower extremities first. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | deterioration:
Corrosion
* Most corrosion leads to lower water pressure
* Some corrosion affects integrity
- structural integrity
- is caused by moisture.
* ' is the breakdown of materials due to reactions within its area. It is the loss of water and air molecules. Corrosion also occurs when an acidic or basic material touches another material. When a material corrodes, it changes it and becomes weaker. Materials that corrode include iron, copper, plastic, skin cells and wood. Also ,corrosion form of erosion
* also can be the result of microbiological organisms such as bacteria, fungus, and algae
- cause depressions in the floor, or tiny pinholes
- plagues American industry
- releases dissolved metal into the bloodstream, which is undesirable
* always increases with additional heat
- an increase in product or face temperature
- increasing temperature
* begins in microscopic proportions.
* can also attack the integrity of the source pool itself
- be a direct result of acidic oxidation
* can cause failure of pipes, tanks, etc
- long term damage, and can help the water pump to fail
- occur between the metal of the crown and any underlying metal eg amalgam
* can occur during chip fabrication because of exposure to rinse solvents
- millisecond events in the waveform
- electrochemically, and can be enhanced microbiologically
- from water that is high in acidity and high in temperature
- in both low temperature and elevated temperature environments
* can occur in the fuse holder on bikes used in all weathers
- storage tank and on boiler fireside surfaces
- when water reacts with metal plumbing
- pit the metal bores of the master cylinder, slave cylinders and ABS components
- reduce the life-span of equipment by years, requiring expensive replacement
* causes weakening, and when a solder joint is affected can contribute to sagging.
* chemical reaction and therefore corrosion increases with temperature.
* common cause of instrument malfunction.
* complex phenomenon.
* constant problem for aluminum aircraft
- with all civil and military aircraft
* continues at slower rate on silver phase.
* contributes to corrosion.
* degrades metal alloys with chemical or electro-chemical reactions.
* general term that indicates the conversion of a metal into a soluble compound.
* increases with increasing temperatures
* is affected by the properties of both the metal or alloy and the environment
- always a concern with sewer pipes
- an electro chemical reaction that results in a loss of metal at the cathode
- another oxidation reaction, occurring when metal is in contact with oxygen
- caused by the introduction of moisture into the fork
- chemical processes
- inhibited between mating threads
- metal's prime enemy when it comes to longevity
- more prevalent in coastal areas, but it can be started by other processes
- one of the largest causes of latent or field defects
- reduced by adding oxygen scavenging chemicals to the boiler water
- simply oxidation
* is the dissolving of rock by carbonic acid in sea water
- enemy of the parking brake
- primary life-limiting plant degradation mechanism
* is the unwanted breakdown and weakening of a material due to chemical reactions
- oxidation of metals resulting in metal oxides
* leads to lower pressure
* major problem for all wheel systems
- specially when deicing has to be done
* natural process by which metals attempt to return to their original or state.
* occurs at the anodic areas
- in regions of low gold content
- slowly when soot and ash deposits are in contact with metal for some time
- when the aqueous phase is transported over the metal surface
- with the other metals in a cooling system, copper, iron, aluminum etc
* only occurs at the anodes where the current leaves and enter the soil.
* poses problems
- serious problems
* presents the biggest threat to a water's heat.
* problem during the rainy season
- in virtually all concrete structures
* refers to any process involving the deterioration or degradation of metal components
- the deterioration of metals
* requires oxygen and moisture.
* serious problem in air transport fleet which is rapidly aging.
* takes place through an electrochemical cell
- when the salt water of the sea dissolves the mineral in some forms of rock
- places
* tends to happen because the organic material in the sewage gives off hydrogen sulfide.
* usually is due to water solutions that have degraded, allowing the conductivity to rise
- occurs slowly | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | deterioration | corrosion:
Crevice corrosion
* heterogeneous electrochemical process in nature.
* is the same thing as galvanism, only it occurs under different circumstances.
* occurs around the joints and seams of metal fixtures where dirt accumulates.
Galvanic corrosion
* affects engineers in just about every field.
* can even occur when dissimilar metals are joined above the waterline.
* occurs on pipes buried in soil.
General corrosion
* affects the entire surface or at least the wetted surface.
* is corrosive attack dominated by uniform thinning
- the easiest type of corrosion to characterize
Pitting
* are corrosion.
* consequence of wind transportation.
* is associated with damage to cells near the epidermis which collapse over time
- characterized by clusters of collapsed oil glands
- evidence of corrosion
### condition | deterioration | corrosion | pitting:
Pitting edema
* appears in the dependent portions of the body.
* extends the entire length of the leg with a reddish- blue discoloration.
* is present when a hollow is formed in the skin by applying finger pressure.
* occurs when fluid collects in the tissue.
### condition | deterioration | desolation:
Ruin
* are books
- buildings
- destruction
- devastation
- the remains of a destroyed or decaying building or town
* is desolation
Physical deterioration
* can be either curable or incurable.
* occurs from use and exposure to atmosphere.
Devastate condition
* Most devastate conditions affect life.
* Some devastate conditions affect man women
Different condition
* Many different conditions can cause heart murmurs
- pain in the chest
- cause valve disease
* affect activities
- cardiac output on Earth and in space
* cause bleeding from different areas
- different types of clouds to form
* influence choices.
Diploidy
* is restored when opposite gametes combine at fertilization
- transient, haploidy is the norm
* refers to the condition in which individuals have two sets of genes, one from each parent. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Disability
* Disabilities Avoid disparaging terms such as crippled or insane
- affect individuals and families of all cultures at every economic level
- affects everyone
- also develop at the third stage of information processing, memory
* Disabilities are a fact of life and, now, law
- part of life
- contagious
- like personalities, each is unique
- often invisible
- part of the overall balance between the natural and the supernatural
- thought of as mysterious and dangerous
- treated as if they are contagious
* Disabilities can be physical or mental
- physical, mental, aural, visual, communicative, or developmental
- present at birth or as the result of a specific event, such as a car accident
- visual, aural, physical, communicative, or developmental
- effect a person's self-esteem
- occur at conception as a result of coincidental occurrences in the uterus
- range from amputation or arthritis to orthopedic, respiratory or circulatory
- take many forms and have varying degrees of severity
- cause many personal challenges
* Disabilities come in many forms
- shapes and forms, some more debilitating than others
- commonly seen in rehab unit are medical, orthopedic, neurological and amputees
- don t cause people to die
- experienced by people with brain injuries vary widely
- fall on a continuum in terms of severity
- have no limitations and can attack anyone in many forms
- mean a reduced chance for employment
- often make people easy targets for crime and abuse
- range from mild mental retardation to autism, cerebral palsy and spina bifida
- related to the mind truly frighten people
- stem from impairments that are congenital or the residual effects of disease or injury
* Many disabilities are invisible
- have nothing to do with disease
* More disabilities arise in the first half of pregnancy than at any other time in life.
* Most disability affects perceptions
- leads to health problems
* Pays monthly income if employee becomes disabled and is unable to work.
* Some disabilities are congenital
- invisible, such as brain injuries or arthritis
- more visible than others
- relatively easy to document, such as physical and sensory impairments
- visible, such as a person in a wheelchair
- can be self-certifying, such as blindness or use of a mobility aid or wheelchair
- cause loss of bladder control
- raise issues of physical access
- require consuming large quantities of fluids and urinating often
* Some disability is caused by injuries
- multiple sclerosis
* affects more than one in five adults
* also affects families.
* arises when an impairment makes any task difficult or impossible to perform.
* can be result of traumatic injury, birth defect or disease of the spinal cord
- bring interpersonal losses as relationships end or caregiving parents age and die
- happen to anyone at any time
* category that is age-defined.
* causes loss of control, helplessness, isolation.
* challenges all notions of perfection and beauty as defined by popular, dominant culture.
* changes a person's world.
* comes in many forms - some visible, some invisible.
* complicates the interaction of people and work.
* condition, and disablement is the state of a person with that condition.
* contextual variable, dynamic over time and circumstance.
* covers a broad range of physical, mental, sensory and emotional or learning difficulties.
* exists as a constellation of the experiences.
* feeds on poverty and poverty on disability.
* form of diversity, so that feeds into it.
* happens in every culture and every socioeconomic group.
* has teeth.
* includes mental and physical disability
- impairment and learning disabilities
- physical disability or illness
- the problems in activities of daily living that result from the impairments
* increases poverty and poverty increases disability
- rapidly with age and it is well known that the world's population is ageing
* is actually as great a threat to family security as either death or old age
- almost never total in that it affects a narrow range of activity
- an example of cultural diversity
* is associated with fewer economic resources, thereby increasing the risk of abuse
- malnutrition in institutionalized elderly people
- costly by both quality of life and economic measures
- estimated to be more prevalent in the developing countries
- everywhere and touches almost everyone's life
- experienced by all racial, social, economic, gender and age groups
- found at all social and economic positions, as well as at any age level
- in part a consequence of limitations in the external environment
- just part of that person's make-up
- medical conditions
* is more common than death
- prevalent in older age groups of the population
- no respecter of age, sex or race
- now one of nine identified categories against which it is illegal to discriminate
* is often apparent at birth
- the result of dangerous working conditions and poor safety standards
- only a state of mind
* is part of the human condition
- seen as a fate worse than death
- seven times more likely than death to occur during a career
- some difficulty in performing one or more activities of daily living
- something that happens to someone else
- synonymous with loss of earning power
* is the culprit when sexual activity decreases or stops
- effect impairment has on the injured worker's ability to work
- gap between the individual and the environment
- when that impairment makes any task difficult or impossible
* is, after all, a common condition of life.
- poverty and poverty leads to disability
* limitation within an individual caused by physical, mental or sensory impairment.
* means a loss of personal functions
- substantial disruption of one's ability to carry out normal life functions
- hardship, being different from a person with a full range
- totally and permanently disabled
* natural condition of the human experience.
* normal characteristic of the new human
- part of being human
- the human journey
* political word.
* prime cause and consequence of poverty, yet so often the causes are preventable.
* ranks as the nation's largest public health problem.
* refers to a limitation that affects an individual's ability to perform certain functions
- any and all disabilities
- decreased earning capacity
- short-term disability benefits
- the effect that the impairment has on the individual
* restriction of activities as a result of impairment.
* rights issue.
* substantial impairment that limits a major life activity.
* therefore refers to a diminished capacity to earn money rather than physical infirmity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disability:
Astigmatism
* is disability
* tends to run in families.<|endoftext|>### condition | disability:
Blindness
* Some blindness is caused by nematodes.
* can also result if infections develop.
* can be an isolated disability or part of a condition involving multiple disabilities
- hard, but so can many other things in life
- partial, with loss of only part of the vision
- eventuate
* can happen to anyone at anytime
* can occur due to retinal detachment from high blood pressure
- rapidly, without any pain , since there are no nerves in the retina of the eyes
- occur, but is extremely rare
* can result from atrophe of the optic nerve
- looking at the eclipse without protection
- prolonged retraction pressure on the globe and nerve
* can result if infections do develop
- the condition is left untreated
- result, especially without treatment
* comes in a variety of degrees.
* condition in which it is often easy to find alternative techniques.
* develops because high blood pressure in the eye causes the retina to detach.
* gives way to vision.
* has many causes, yet the incidence of true blindness in the United States remains low.
* includes putting everything in Braille.
* is also a disability and yet it is ignored
- risk, as it is with any type of eye surgery
- possible in horses
- books
- considered the most dreaded of all disabilities
- directly proportional to discipleship
- human tragedy on an enormous scale
- more prevalent than the other disabilities
* is no excuse to stop living one's life
- respecter of persons
- often a result of the disease, as is pneumonia
- one of the worst things that can happen to a person
- only one area that results in travel impairments, there are many others
- permanent but many times doesn t have to be if caught in time
- quite common
- simply one of their many traits
- still very common under the burning sun and among the blinding sands of the East
* is the most obvious complication of a retinal detachment
- number one complication of diabetes
- punishment of looking to long at the sun
- total loss of light perception
- viewed in almost the opposite light
- visual impairment
* leaves no aspect of a person's life untouched.
* limits the ability to begin or continue work and live independently.
* means is to render insensitive to light or colour.
* occurs essentially overnight.
* often occurs in the later stages of the disease
- results when the larvae reach the eyes
* results because of damage to the retina
- from scaring in the eye
* robs people of their ability to be productive, happy and independent.
* separates an individual from things, but deafness separates and individual fro people
- people from things, but deafness separates people from people
* seriously irreversible change.
* substantial and permanent lack of sight.
* usually goes away after a few weeks, once the thiamine treatment has been finished. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disability | blindness:
Color blindness
* Most color blindness is permanent , but some conditions can also lead to temporary color blindness
- permanent, but some conditions can also lead to temporary color blindness.
* Most colour blindness is heritable, usually as simple Mendelian inheritance. Most color blindness is permanent, but some conditions can also lead to temporary color blindness. During certain kinds of migraine, some people are unable to tell the difference between certain colors. As of 2009, there is no treatment or cure for permanent color blindness
- result of a lack of one or more of the types of color cones in the retina
* color perception problem whose most common ailment red-green deficiency.
* comes as a result of a lack of one or more of the types of color receptors.
* congenital abnormality
* divisive code.
* is X-linked recessive.
* is an X-linked, recessive trait
- absolute bar to employment
- inaccurate term for a lack of perceptual sensitivity to certain colors
- birth defects
* is caused by a defect in the color opsins on the X chromosome
- defective color gene carried by the mother
- determined genetically, is sex-linked, and occurs mostly in males
- diseases
* is due to a recessive gene
- the absence or impairment, of one or two cone systems
- essentially a defect
- fairly common, affecting about nine percent of all humans
- for red or green
- incurable
- monitored through regular eye exams and visits to the healthcare provider
- much more common in boys than in girls
- rooted in the chromosomal differences between males and females
- suppose to be extremely rare in girls
- the partial or total inability to distinguish colors
- usually self-diagnosed
- very sensitive to changes in material
* lifelong condition.
* male dominant trait, but is carried by the female.
* misnomer because only a small percentage of people are unable to see any color.
* occurs in some children.
* recessive, X-linked trait
- sex-linked trait in humans that is located on the X chromosome
+ Color blindness, Design changes: Diseases and disorders of the eye :: Genetic disorders
* Color blindness is very sensitive to changes in material. A red-green color blind person may be unable to see the difference between colors on a map printed on paper. The same map on a computer screen or television may appear normally. In addition, some color blind people find it easier to tell the difference between colors on artificial materials, such as plastic or in acrylic paints, than on natural materials, such as paper or wood.
Legal blindness
* is blindness
- defined in several ways
* manifests itself in a wide range of visual functioning.<|endoftext|>### condition | disability | blindness:
Night blindness
* can cause problems with driving in the evening or at night.
* is disability
- followed by tunnel vision
- malnutrition
- prevalent during pregnancy and lactation in rural Nepal
* is the first symptom that develops in many retinal diseases
- inability of the eyes to quickly adjust to changes in light intensity
- usually the first noticeable symptom, usually occurring during childhood
* makes vision difficult in dark or dimly lit places.
* serious problem on many atolls because of a lack of vitamin A in diets.
Permanent blindness
* can result from retinal detachment caused by scar tissue.
* is usually the result of even momentary eye contact with caustics.
River blindness
* Some river blindness is caused by nematodes.
* causes loss of sight, intense suffering, and premature death.
* is caused by parasitic worms that live just underneath the skin
- when the worm involved burrows up under the skin and reaches the eyes
- endemic in many parts of Africa and South America
- infestation
- spread by day-biting flies, and is the leading cause of blindness worldwide
* slow acting disease, which ends in complete blindness. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disability | blindness:
Snow blindness
* is actually sunburn of the eyes and is very painful indeed
- serious business, which involves the burning of the retina
* very painful experience.
Spiritual blindness
* can often be a recurring thing.
* causes hypocrisy.
* is always the cause of spiritual deadness
- cured through humility
- universal
* leads to spiritual drunkenness
- illiteracy
- sleep
Total blindness
* is quite rare fortunately, and most people keep some level of useful vision.
* occurs in middle to late life.
Cognitive disability
* Cognitive disabilities can vary considerably and are most often difficult to see
- refer to any disability affecting mental processes
* is also both heritable and able to be produced through genetic mutation.
Communication disorder
* are the nations' leading handicap, affecting one-tenth of the population.
* can adversely affect a child's educational, social, or vocational success
- be congenital or acquired, and can affect individuals of any age
- result in a sense of non-participation
* is disability.
### condition | disability | communication disorder:
Hearing loss
* Most hearing loss begins with high pitched sounds.
* Most hearing loss is sensorineural
- the result of an accumulation of noise-induced wear and tear
- occurs in the adult population
* is communication disorder
- diseases<|endoftext|>### condition | disability:
Developmental disability
* Developmental disabilities affect a high proportion of children who are abused or neglected.
* Developmental disabilities are a life long in nature and typically require life long support
- permanent and begin at birth or during childhood
- very severe disabilities that typically are lifelong in duration
* Developmental disabilities can arise before birth, at birth, or during childhood
- look very different
- have a variety of causes, which can occur before, during or after birth
* Many developmental disabilities become apparent during the third and fourth years of life.
* Some developmental disabilities are a combination of both.
Disability insurance
* can help prevent a personal tragedy from becoming a financial tragedy.
* complex product and a large part of the insurance industry.
* form of casualty insurance.
* is an essential, but often overlooked, part of financial protection plans
- really income insurance
- social insurance
- used less often because it is more expensive
* provides benefits in the event of partial or complete disability
- income when employees are ill or disabled and unable to work
Dysphasia
* can affect the understanding of speech, reading, speaking, writing, gesture and signing.
* disorder of language.
* is the name of the cell changes caused by the virus
- sense of food sticking while eating
* language disorder brought on by a stroke or head injury.
* often develops in tandem with dysarthria.<|endoftext|>### condition | disability:
Hyperacusis
* can be devastating to the patient's career, relationships, and peace of mind
- come on slowly or suddenly
* collapsed loudness tolerance in hearing in adults and children
- tolerance to normal environmental sounds
* condition in which ordinary sounds seem unpleasantly loud or even painful
- unusually loud
* decreased tolerance of sound and can be a serious problem.
- painful sensitivity to sounds of average or soft volume
- sensitivity to sounds or minimal tolerance for common environmental sounds
- the scientific name for extreme sensitivity to sound
- very rare, and therefore, little is known about it | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disability:
Intellectual disability
* Intellectual disabilities are some of the most common comorbid disorders with ASDs.
* is different from dementia
- twice as common in males as in females
* occurs from birth whereas acquired brain injury is acquired later.
* The cause of such an illness usually lies in childhood, or in genetic disorders. Intellectual disability is different from dementia. In dementia, people forget things, and they lose skills they once had. People with an intellectual disability never learn those skills.<|endoftext|>### condition | disability:
Nearsightedness
* are medical conditions.
* can also worsen with age.
* common refractive problem.
* condition in which nearby objects appear clearer than distant objects.
* genetic condition and only gets worse.
* is caused by corneal steepness, or increased length of the eye
- known to be familial
- the common term for myopia
* is the inability to see clearly at a distance
- objects far away
- when one has the ability to see close but objects in the distance are blurry
* occurs if light rays from distant objects meet before they reach the retina
- when an eyeball is slightly longer than normal from front to back
* occurs when the cornea curves too steeply
- is too curved or the eye is too long
- eye is too long, or the cornea is too steep
* runs in families and usually appears in childhood.
* tends to run in families, and it happens because of a simple physical problem.
Permanent disability
* Permanent disabilities result from undiagnosed compartment syndromes.
* is possible if there is repeated exposure
- total disability due to ill health, either physical or mental<|endoftext|>### condition | disability:
Physical disability
* Many physical disabilities are fully preventable.
* Physical disabilities are epidemic in the elderly
- increasingly common among the elderly
- just that, and they don t extend to the brain
* Physical disabilities can lead directly to educational problems as well
- make holding a book or turning pages impossible
- prompt social and emotional difficulties
- encompass a wide-range of abilities
- occur widely
- serve as an isolating factor in life
- vary greatly
* Some physical disabilities can be accom-modated.
* is common among older persons living within the community
- no barrier to sailing
Presbyopia
* affecting eyesight impacts millions of boomers.
* are diseases
- hyperopia
* erodes visual acuity, depth perception, and color contrast.
* is disability
Prolapse
* Most prolapses reduce spontaneously.
* is disability
- illnesses
* occurs in people with rare inherited diseases of connective tissue
- when the intestines, bladder, rectum, or the uterus protrude into the vagina
* often recur in subsequent pregnancies.
* refers to the extrusion of a mass through the vagina.
### condition | disability | prolapse:
Mitral prolapse
* encompasses a very wide spectrum of disease.
* is present in almost one in four young women.
Rectal prolapse
* can block the anal opening causing constipation
- occur due to poor pelvic musculature
* is the protrusion of the rectal mucous membrane through the anus.
Uterine prolapse
* affects females only.
* can also develop as a result of the stretching of the uterine ligaments.
* condition that results from the loss of uterine support.
* descent or herniation of the uterus into or beyond the vagina.
* is diseases.
* occur around calving time.
* occurs when the uterus drops down into the vagina
- is pushed out of the body through the vagina
* refers specifically to the dropping of the uterus.
Psychiatric disability
* Psychiatric disabilities affect people of any age, gender, income group, and intellectual level
- are treatable
- represent the fastest growing cause of lost time
* has a devastating impact on the lives of people who experience it. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disability:
Ptosis
* affects both eyes, but often one eye appears worse than the other.
* can also occur following routine cataract surgery.
* can be congenital, meaning that a person was born with the condition
- the initial sign of a systemic disease or occur in conjunction with various syndromes
* condition where the upper eyelid droops over the eye.
* drooping of the eyelid.
- due to dysfunction of the muscles that elevate the eyelid
- the first feature, followed by progressive limitation of the range of eye movements
- when the muscles of the upper eyelids weaken and the eyelid droops because of it
* occurs when the eyelid droops more than is considered normal.
* predominant feature in patients with mtDNA deletions.
* refers to drooping eyelids.<|endoftext|>### condition | disability:
Retinal detachment
* are common
- diseases
- more common in people with lattice degenration
- most common in nearsighted individuals
- visual impairment
* can be rhegmatogenous, tractional, or exudative.
* can cause blindness
- severe vision loss
- lead to severe loss of vision
* can occur at any age, but it is more common among older people
- it is more common in mid-life and later
- it is more common in midlife and later
* common cause of sudden loss of vision.
* happens when the inner and outer layers of the retina become separated.
* is an ocular emergency, and prompt surgical intervention is necessary.
* is an uncommon but dangerous side effect in susceptible individuals
- serious post-operative complication
- disability
- frequent
- more common than in the normal population
- often an indication of underlying systemic disease
* is one of the most disabling causes of permanent vision loss
- serious causes of lost vision
* medical emergency.
* occurs in a small number of patients and is usually easily repairable.
* require surgical repair.
* requires immediate medical attention, as it can easily cause blindness
- surgical treatment to reattach the retina to the back of the eye
* separation between the inner and outer layers of the retina.
* serious problem that usually affects middle-aged or older people.
Temporary disability
* is only payable when the injured employee is within the healing period
- the period prior to when an individual is declared permanent and stationary
* leave often is used in combination with parental leave.
Ureterocele
* Some ureteroceles do reflux, allowing urine to move retrograde from the bladder up the ureter.
* are more frequent in females, and more common on the left side.
* is disability
Visual disability
* Most visual disability is acquired late in life.
* Visual disabilities vary in category including low vision, color blindness, and total blindness
- widely
* can affect a very broad range of activities and tasks
- effect a very broad range of activities and tasks
* varies widely in kind and degree.
### condition | discomfort:
Abdominal discomfort
* Most abdominal discomfort is related to the digestive system.
* can occur with nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.
* common symptom, due to hepatosplenomegaly.
Hangover
* are caused by the toxicity of the alcohol breaking down in the body
- discomfort
- films
- survival
- the result of alcohol's toxicity
- usually the next-day result after consuming large amounts of alcohol
* begin after blood alcohol levels start to fall.
* is discomfort
Inconvenience
* are discomfort
- situations
* is also a factor in low voter turnout
Physical discomfort
* interferes with sleep.
* leads to psychological and spiritual discomfort.
Disintegration
* Some disintegration causes tsunamis.
* becomes the theme of all major works of literature.
* can take two forms.
* is decay
- the way the tablet breaks down | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Disorder
* All disorders are the product of both nature and nurture.
* Learn about disorders related to hearing and how they can be treated.
* Many disorders can cause internal tissue browning or even the development of gas pockets
- produce neck masses including benign lymph nodes, congenital cysts, and cancers
* Most disorder affects bone growth.
* Most disorder affects female hormones
- sex hormones
- societies
- structures
* Most disorder causes degeneration
- metabolic disturbances
- pain
- impairs physical growth
* Most disorder is caused by absence
- defects
- deficiencies
- deposition
- factors
- toxins
* Most disorder is characterized by abnormalities
- collagen abnormalities
- weakness
* Most disorder leads to behavior
- violent behavior
* Most disorders affect the nigrostriatal dopaminergic projection
- tend to co-occur and to occur on a continuum of mild to moderate to severe
* Some disorder affects adults
- carbohydrate metabolism
- children
- connective tissue
- dogs
- infants
- lungs
- motor axons
- mucuses
- nerves
- respiration
* Some disorder causes abnormal bone growth
- death
- hair growth
- inflammation
- lymph node enlargements
- motor movement
- muscle weakness
- seizures
- contributes to death
* Some disorder has inheritance patterns
- recessive inheritance patterns
* Some disorder involves gigantisms
- hypersecretions
* Some disorder is caused by activities
- alcohol consumption
- diabetes
* Some disorder is caused by excessive alcohol consumption
- herbages
- mutation
- parasites
- point mutation
- recessive mutation
- young herbages
* Some disorder is characterized by deformities
- excretion
- considered a mortal sin of outright negligence
- occurs at cellular levels
* Some disorder occurs in birds
- late pregnancy
- livers
* Some disorder relates to nutrition
- poor nutrition
- water
* Some disorders affect more than one organ system
- only the central processing system
* Some disorders are acute and treatable, but many are chronic or progressive
- expressed on the undersides of the foliage
- genetic, and transmitted from parents to their children
- idiopathic, meaning there is no easily identifiable cause for the disease
- can affect a child very early in life - even within the first few days
- display similar or sometimes even the same symptom
* Some disorders have multiple interrelated causes, one of which is autoimmunity
- similar or even the same symptoms
- occur when healthy genes become damaged
- result when a mutation causes the product of a single gene to be altered or missing
* affects age male smokers
- cigarette smokers
- functions
- quality
* also causes premature graying of hair.
* are a symptom of being out of harmony with the natural order
- also related to age, sex and weather conditions
* arises from order, cowardice arises from courage, weakness arises from strength.
* associates with acid deficiencies
- liver diseases
* can include depression and substance abuse
- skin cancers, moles, contact dermatitis and hair loss
- vary in intensity and frequency among individuals for reasons unrelated to work
* cans have impact
- negative impact
* causes adverse effects
- extreme reaction
- sensation
* causes significant adverse effects
- startle reaction
- unusual reaction
* has big impact
- different outcomes
- similar symptoms
* impairs ability
- kidney functions
* includes defects
* increases over time.
* influences attitude.
* involves activities
- lack
- such activities
* involving basophils are very rare
- excessive thoracic kyphosis are also often related to faulty respiration
* is an electronic art project.
- characterised by a strong compulsion in attraction towards very young children
- defined by a summing of symptoms of the person
- measured with the amount of agreement with statements about one's neighborhood - i.e
- reckoned to be the opposite of order
- simply unrelated information viewed through some particular grid
- states
- theorized to cause fear
- disease and malfunction
- problems
* likewise shows itself in disordered behavior.
* normally result from underactivity or overactivity of the thyroid gland.
* occur more often in males than females.
* occurs after events.
* prevents absorption.
* related to sexual activity are also relatively common.
* requires comprehensive treatments
- different treatments
- term treatments
* results from inflammation.
* results in acute pain
- ailment
- gastrointestinal ailment
* varies in severity.
* vary in severity and chronicity and the degree to which they impair daily functioning.
* wastes time, energy and materials. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder:
Addictive disorder
* create enormous personal and social problems in Western countries and in Russia.
* take a different course in women than in men.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder:
Ailment
* Most ailment relates to ages
- health
- old ages
- ailments are preventable simply from taking proper care of the animal
* Some ailment affects black women
- guinea pigs
- life
- afflicts women
* Some ailment causes deformities
- disability
- skeletal deformities
* Some ailment is caused by bacteria
- diets
- infection
- numerous bacteria
- occurs in women
* Some ailment relates to excess heat
- organs
* affects performance.
* associates with consumption
- excess consumption
* causes lack.
* has causes.
* includes artery diseases
- arthritis
* includes coronary artery diseases
* involves inflammation.
* leads to death.
* result in the body giving off distinct odors.
* results from breakdowns.
### condition | disorder | ailment:
Car sickness
* can make family vacations miserable for both the sufferer and the rest of the family.
* is ailment
- fairly common in dogs
- nausea
Respiratory ailment
* Many respiratory ailments have an allergic basis.
* Some respiratory ailment is caused by bacteria
* are common afflictions for horses.
* vary both in severity and cause.
Allergic disorder
* Many allergic disorders are on the rise particularly among children.
* rank first among chronic childhood diseases.
Anergy
* is disorder
* is the inability to react to skin tests because of a weakened immune system
- skin tests because of immunosuppression
Articulation disorder
* Articulation Disorder is difficulties in the way sounds are formed.
* constitute the most numerous of all speech disorders.
* make a person difficult to understand.
Attachment disorder
* are a major challenge to child psychiatry as there are no known treatments.
* can be mild or severe.
* name for problems people have in forming affectionate bonds with others.
Autosomal disorder
* Most autosomal disorder is caused by defects.
* Some autosomal disorder is caused by metabolism.
Balance disorder
* affect a large proportion of the population, particularly the elderly
- people of all ages and from all walks of life
* are a common problem with potentially debilitating effects
- frequent cause of falls and broken bones
- almost always due to insufficient blood flow to the brain
* become increasingly frequent with age.
Bulimia
* begins in early childhood. is gender.
* encourages isolation.
* is hunger.
* presents with a chaotic eating pattern of bingeing with vomiting.
* tends to begin in the teen years and often continues into adulthood
- develop in late adolescence and early adulthood | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder:
Cardiovascular disease
* Many cardiovascular diseases are preventable.
* Most cardiovascular diseases afflict humans.
* Some cardiovascular diseases are caused by smoke
- associate with consumption
* are diseases of the heart and blood vessels
- one of the leading causes of death for both men and women
- the leading cause of all African-American deaths
* are the leading cause of death for the nation's senior population
- in the western world
- worldwide
- main cause of death in men and women
- most important disease in the United States
- number one cause of death
* are the number one killer of men and women, today
- women and men
* becomes more common with age
- of a risk for women after menopause
* can arise when either clot formation or clot dissolution is abnormal.
* can be a major factor in poor circulation to the extremities
- dangerous during pregnancy if untreated
- lead to heart attacks and stroke, often at an early age
- therefore cause disease in all other tissues and organs of the body
* causes more deaths than all cancers combined.
* continue to be the leading cause of death and disability in Hawaii.
* disease of lifestyle , and therefore largely preventable.
* exact an incalculable toll in human pain and suffering.
* health risk which everyone can significantly reduce.
* includes diseases of the heart and blood vessels which develop over time
* includes heart disease and stroke
- disease, stroke and high blood pressure
* is America's leading killer of both men and women
- Australia s biggest killer
- South Carolina's number one health problem
- also a leading cause of disability
- any disease that affects the heart and blood vessels
- associated with a gradual deposition of fatty plaques on artery walls
- currently the nation's number one killer
- important, but so is violence
- more common in built-up areas
- number one and cancer number two
* is of multifactorial etiology
- particular concern to the older diver
- one area in which there are significant differences between the sexes
* is one of the leading causes of disability
- main causes of death in many developing countries as well
- our number one killer in the United States
- prioritized as a leading cause of death in the United States
- responsible for a preponderance of health problems in the United States
* is the Number One killer of men and women in the United States
- biggest killer in Western countries
- cause of more deaths than the next seven causes of death combined
- country s leading cause of death
* is the leading cause of death In Canada
- among men and women in the United States
- among postmenopausal women
- among women in the United States
- and disability among racial and ethnic groups
- and disability in older people
- and illness in British Columbia
- for all racial and ethnic groups
- for men in the United States
- in American women
- in Canada today
- in Tennessee
- in adults in the United States
- in both men and women of all races
- in developed countries
- in persons with diabetes mellitus
- in the United States among both men and women
- in the United States and Europe
- illness and death in women
* is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality among persons with diabetes
- and mortality in the United States
- health problem in the Western world
* is the leading killer of American women
- people with diabetes
- most common cause of death in American women
- nation s number one killer of adults
* is the number one cause of death and disability in the United States
- mortality in California
* is the number one killer in America
- the USA, and, in many cases, it is preventable
* is the number one killer of American women
- both women and men in America today
- number-one cause of death in the United States
* is the primary cause of death in the United States
- in the diabetic population
- principal cause of death in postmenopausal women
- tip of the iceberg
* is two to four times more common among people with diabetes
- common in people with diabetes
- very complex
* kill more people than any other single disease.
* kills more than half a million women each year.
* kills more women than all cancers combined
- types of cancer combined
- nearly one million people every year in the United States
- ten times as many women each year
* leading cause of illness and mortality in women
- impotence
* major cause of premature mortality in Australia
- health problem worldwide
* multifaceted disease affecting the health of the U.S. population.
* progresses more rapidly after menopause, when estrogen levels decrease.
* refers to a variety of diseases that affect the heart and blood vessels.
* remain the leading cause of death for American women.
* remains the largest single cause of death in Australia
- leading cause of death in America
- main cause of the increased mortality seen in diabetics
- number one cause of death among post menopausal women
* represent the most important cause of mortality in industrialised countries.
* serious condition.
* special threat because there are generally no warning signs of disease.
* takes many years to develop.
* tends to manifest itself in specific ways unique to various communities. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease | aneurism:
Aortic aneurysm
* Most aortic aneurysms grow slowly
- have no symptoms at all
* Most aortic aneurysms occur in the abdominal aorta, the main cause being arteriosclerosis
- abdominal aorta, the main cause being atheriosclerosis
* are a very common and potentially deadly disease
- classified by their location on the aorta
* can form as a result of advanced age, atherosclerosis or other conditions
- result in rupture and cause fatal hemmorrhage
* dilation of the aorta that occurs over many years.
* is an aneurism
* occur when a weakness develops in a part of the wall of the aorta.
Cerebral aneurysm
* are abnormal blisters on arteries of the brain
- in general responsible for it
* can be present in the brain for years without causing symptoms.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease:
Aneurysm
* All aneurysms have the potential to rupture.
* Many aneurysms have no symptoms until they burst.
* Most aneurysms are asymptomatic until they rupture
- fusiform or show uniform dilatation of the entire circumference of the vessel
- of an atherosclerotic etiology
- stable for decades
* Most aneurysms occur in large blood vessels, especially the aorta
- the main artery of the body - the aorta
- result from the development of abnormal arterial vessel walls
* Some aneurysms can produce double vision, blurred vision and stroke with paralysis.
* cardiovascular disease
* is diseases
- illnesses
* require careful follow-up with medication or surgery to avoid a rupture
- emergency treatment
### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease | aneurysm:
Small aneurysm
* Many small aneurysms pose very little danger and are simply monitored annually by ultrasound.
* enlarge slowly, but probably as an exponential function.
Unruptured aneurysm
* Some unruptured aneurysms do cause symptoms depending on their size and location in the brain.
* can compress the third cranial nerve and the anterior visual pathways.
Circulatory failure
* cardiovascular disease
* has many possible causes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease:
Heart disease
* Most heart disease arises from atherosclerosis.
* Most heart disease is acquired
- caused by blockages in the arteries that supply blood to the heart
- due to blockages in the arteries that supply blood to the heart muscle
* Some heart disease is mild and some is severe.
* ' general term that means that the heart is not working normally. Babies can be born with heart disease. This is called 'congenital heart disease'. If people get heart disease later, it is called 'acquired heart disease'. Most heart disease is acquired.
* accounts for more than half of the deaths due to smoking
- women s deaths than cancer, diabetes and accidents combined
- one-third of all deaths in women with lupus
* affects men, women, and children of all ages
* are cardiovascular diseases
- the most preventable cause of death in the United States
* can affect anyone.
* can be deadly for men and women, especially women
- hereditary
- in an advanced stage before symptoms even arise
- silent, or it can have warning signs
* can cause angina pectoris, a chest pain that can follow physical activity
- impotence
- develop in any breed of dog or cat
- increase the risk of stroke
- kill without warning
- lead to fear of exertion
- manifest as chest pain, tightness or discomfort
- mean big changes in lifestyle
- result from tissue build-up associated with carcinoid tumors
- strike suddenly
- take many forms and varies widely in severity
- turn the nail beds red
* causes patients to become extremely tired and short of breath.
* claims more deaths in America than any other disease
- women s lives than any other disease
- twice as many female lives as all cancers combined, including breast cancer
* comes in many forms, some more common than others.
* continues to be the leading cause of death in Erie County
- of death in women and men
* degenerative condition of aging aggravated by Western lifestyles.
* develops over many years
- when there blockage preventing blood flow through the arteries
* disease that people can do something about.
* disorder that affects the heart muscle or the blood vessels of the heart.
* does have a relationship with levels of estrogens that decline after menopause
- seem to run in some families
* effects one in three women.
* form of early, or chronic, scurvy.
* good example of gender-based differences.
* greater risk to many whose mobility is limited.
* growing medical problem.
* has no early on symptoms
- geographic, gender or socio-economic boundaries
- the most significant impact on life span
* have no geographical, gender or socioeconomic boundaries.
* includes diseases of the heart and blood vessels.
* increases dramatically after menopause when menstrual periods stop
- stroke risk six times above normal
* increases the risk of coronary heart disease
* is America s number one killer.
* is America's number one killer, and stroke is the leading cause of disability
- one in five
- number-one killer
- Britain's biggest overall killer of women
- almost twice as likely to develop in inactive people
- also the leading cause of death in the United States
* is an added risk
- epidemic in the United States
* is an equal opportunity killer - affecting both sexes, every race, and all ages
- important risk factor for stroke
- inevitable result of aging
- any disorder that affects the heart's ability to function normally
- at epidemic proportions in North America and much of the developed world
- because of excess
- by far the biggest killer in the United States and other industrialized countries
* is caused by a variety of factors
- narrowing of the coronary arteries that feed the heart
- when arteries to the heart become blocked or narrowed
- common among children with certain varieties of muscular dystrophy
- complex
- controllable
- currently the leading cause of death in America
- different
- essentially a disease of middle-aged men
- extremely rare in infants and children
- five times more prevalent in diabetics
- generally lower in light to moderate drinkers
- greater among African-American men than white men
- in direct proportion to the concentration of cholesterol in the blood
- increased when there are high homocysteine levels in the blood
- irreversible
- just one of the many applications of bioengineering
* is linked to risk factors
- the buildup of fatty deposits in blood vessel walls
- listed as America's number one killer
- merely the latest common affliction thought to be partly caused by the bacterium
* is more common
- deadly than all forms of cancer combined
- likely in people with gum disease then people with healthy gums
- most common in the western world
- much less common among vegetarian men, with vegans having the lowest risk of all
* is no longer the leading cause of death in the United States
- respecter of class or status
- one of the costliest diseases to treat
* is one of the leading causes of death and disability in western society
- of premature death in western societies
- of the death in the United States
- major complications of diabetes
- most serious side effects of diabetes
- number one killers in North America
- our number one health problem and cause of death
- presumed to be job-related for pension purposes under state law
- quite complex, and it takes years and years of studying it to get a clear picture
- rampant in America
- recognized as the number one epidemic in American people
- responsible for over half of the deaths in the Western World
* is still the number one killer of both men and women in the United States
* is the biggest killer of both males and females in the United States
- cause of approximately half the deaths in the United States each year
- chief cause of death among American women of all ages
- greatest killer of women in Israel
* is the leading cause of death among American adults
- among Pennsylvania females
- among adults in the United States
- among both men and women in the United States
- among both men and women nationwide
- among nations with high consumption of animal products
- among women in Pennsylvania and nationwide
- among women past menopause
- among women who have gone through menopause
- and disability among Canadian women
- for adults worldwide, researchers note
- for both men and women in the United States
- for women
- in America, followed by cancer and stroke
- in American women
- in Arizona
- in Michigan and is higher than the national average
- in Minnesota
- in Virginia
- in both Texas and the nation
- in people with diabetes
- in postmenopausal women
- in the United States and in many other countries
- in the United States today
- in women and a major cause of ill health and disability
- is post- menapausal women
- of women in the United States
- diabetes-related deaths
* is the leading cause of hospitalization and death among mid-life and older women
- and death among midlife and older women
* is the leading cause of mortality in the United States
- permanent disability among working adults
* is the leading killer of both men and women in the United States today
- mean AND women in the United States
* is the leading killer of men and women in America
- the elderly
- women in America and other developed nations
* is the major cause of death among diabetics
- in Wales
- in the U.S., followed by cancer
- health problem facing women
* is the most common cause of cardiac arrest
- death for people in the western hemisphere
- medical cause of death in people with severe anorexia
- nation s leading killer
* is the nation's number one killer and stroke is number three
- killer, almost equal to all other diseases combined
- top killer, and it has been for decades
* is the number one cause of death among men
- death among women in the United States
- death in adults
- death in the U.S. for both men and women
- death in the U.S., affecting both men and women
- mortality in women , killing more women than men each year
- killer and it can be prevented
* is the number one killer for men
- women in the U.S. and the leading cause for disability
* is the number one killer in America
- our country
- the U.S., responsible for half the deaths
- the USA today
- the United States and a top contender in other countries
- the United States and several other industrial countries
- the United States and smoking accounts for much of it
- today's society
* is the number one killer of American men and women
- American women as well as Kentucky women
- adults in Indiana
- women in the U.S., more than all cancers combined
- two killer in France, while it remains number one in America
- number-one killer in the United States
* is the number-one killer of both men and women
- women in North America
- other leading cause of early death among women
- second leading cause of death for all people in the United States
* is the single biggest killer in the United States and many industrialized countries
- top killer in the United States, responsible for about half of all deaths
- three times more common amongst smokers
- two to four times more common among people with diabetes
- typically, and wrongly, though of as mostly a disease among men
- used to describe disease, which affects the body's blood circulation
* is very common in the United States
- treatable at virtually every stage
* is, by far, the biggest killer.
* kills far more women than breast cancer
- half of the people with diabetes who die each year
- many more women than female cancers
* kills more American and Canadian women every year than all cancers combined
- women than does any other disease
- people every year than lung cancer
- than five times as many women as breast and ovarian cancers combined
* kills more women annually than men
- each year than cancer, accidents, and diabetes combined
- in South Dakota each year than any other cause
- then men
* kills twice as many women as all forms of cancer combined
- all types of cancer combined
* leading cause of death among U.S. men and women
- for all people in the United States and Florida
* major cause of death in Australia
- health problem and leading cause of death in America today
* means a problem with the heart.
* much bigger problem for older men than for older women.
* needs to be treated by a physician.
* occurs with increased frequency in association with certain risk factors.
* ranks as the number one cause of death in the United States.
* remain a major cause of early death in the Western population, including Canada.
* remains the greatest killer of African American women.
* remains the leading cause of death among U.S. men and women
- nation's leading killer
* remains the number one cause of death for men and for women in the United States
* remains the number one killer in the United States
- of both men and women in United States
* rises in young people.
* serious condition that requires close medical attention
- risk for women, too
* tends to occur earlier and be more severe in people with diabetes.
* tends to run in families with a history of it
* term used to refer to diseases of the heart and blood vessel system.
* trait that clearly has both environmental and genetic components.
* very common problem for much of the population
- serious disease, there are many forms of heart disease and all are deadly | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease | heart disease:
Arrhythmia
* Many arrhythmias are temporary, and can be a result of alcohol, caffeine, stress, or exhaustion
- cause few, if any, symptoms, and most can be treated successfully
- require no treatment as they cause no important problems for the child
* Most arrhythmias are harmless, but some can be serious and can cause sudden cardiac death
- fall into the tachycardia category
* Some arrhythmias are a temporary adjustment of the heartbeat
- potentially fatal, causing sudden death
- can be lethal, especially ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation
- cause a noticeable skip, flutter or palpitation
* are a primary cause of death.
* are abnormal heart rhythms that result from problems in the heart's electrical system
* are abnormal rhythms of the heart that cause it to pump less effectively
- disruptions in the natural rhythm of the heartbeat
- disturbances in the normal rhythm of the heartbeat
- electrophysiological events triggered by chemical signaling dysfunction
- frequent as are altered mental status, nausea vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal
* are the main cause of sudden cardiac death
- most common sign of cardiac involvement, as with any metastatic cancers
- uncommon in acute pericarditis
* are very common, affecting millions of people worldwide
* can be either fast or slow.
* factor into half of all sudden cardiac deaths in the United States each year.
* occur commonly in middle-age adults
- in many forms and are one of the most common heart conditions
- throughout the population
* often can occur without any symptoms at all
- occur during and after heart attacks
### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease | heart disease | arrhythmia:
Heart arrhythmia
* are irregularities of the heartbeat.
* can contribute to such clotting, as can heart attacks.
Heart block
* are cardiac arrhythmia
- heart diseases
* can occur, as well as inflammation of the heart muscle.
* causes no risk to others.
* disorder of the heartbeat.
* is an indicator of the disease process
- another condition that effects the rhythm of the heart
- described as first, second, or third degree
- like a fault in one of the wires, which interrupts the passage of the nerve signal
Tachycardia
* Some tachycardias are so fast that no pulse or only a weak pulse are present.
* are cardiac arrhythmia.
* diminishes over time but remains substantial at higher doses.
* is arrhythmia
* resolves when conditions return to normal.
### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease | heart disease | arrhythmia | tachycardia:
Supraventricular tachycardia
* are common
- fast heart beats originating from the upper chambers of the heart
* occur with or without ventricular conduction abnormalities.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease | heart disease:
Cardiac arrhythmia
* Any cardiac arrhythmia is possible with digoxin intoxication.
* Most cardiac arrhythmias are temporary and benign.
* are a common cause of sudden death in anorexia nervosa patients
- often present
- rare
* become more common with age.
* can range in severity from entirely benign to immediately life threatening
- result from hydrocarbons sensitizing the heart to catacholamines
* is diseases
- the leading cause of death in the Western world
* occur much more commonly in children than most parents believe.
* range in seriousness from insignificant to the life threatening.
* strike like lightning, with no warning.
* term that denotes a disturbance of the heart rhythm.
### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease | heart disease | cardiac arrhythmia:
Atrial arrhythmia
* are a common and serious complication of cardiac surgical procedures
- often harmless
* develop, and pulse, respiration, and level of consciousness decrease.
* is cardiac arrhythmia. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease | heart disease | cardiomyopathy:
Alcoholic cardiomyopathy
* can ensue from heavy consumption of alcohol over a long period of time.
* common diagnosis in long-term alcoholics.
* consequence of excessive alcohol use.
Dilated cardiomyopathy
* can either be idiopathic or have a known etiology.
* frequent and serious complication of idiopathic hemochromatosis.
* is the most common form of non- ischemic cardiomyopathy
- type
- well known in domestic carnivores and in man
* loss of muscle tone decreasing the strength of the heart muscles.
* major cause of heart transplantation.
* occurs most often in middle-aged people and more often in men than women.
* serious condition.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease | heart disease | cardiomyopathy:
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
* Hypertrophic cardiomyopathies are a group of familial disorders.
* disease of the heart muscle with an unknown, cause.
* form of heart disease that causes the heart muscle to enlarge.
* is also an autosomal dominant disorder with a high degree of penetrance.
* is an asymmetric increase in ventricular muscle mass
- autosomal dominant disease
- characterized by an abnormally thick heart muscle
- inflammation of the heart muscle
- often genetic in origin, and tends to run in families
- usually a genetic condition that tends to run in families
* potentially life-threatening enlargement of the heart.
Idiopathic cardiomyopathy
* condition for which no cause is known.
* means the cause of the stretched muscle is unknown.
Nonischemic cardiomyopathy
* Nonischemic cardiomyopathies are less common, progressive diseases.
* includes several types.
Restrictive cardiomyopathy
* Restrictive cardiomyopathies are the least common of the cardiomyopathies in the western world.
* can be very difficult to treat.
* has no specific treatment.
* is another type of heart muscle disease
- extremely rare
- rare in the United States<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease:
Hypotension
* also is extremely rare.
* can also occur after oral administration
- whenever infarction provokes parasympathetic overactivity
- cause a fast pulse, dizziness, and sometimes nausea, vomiting, or fainting
* can occur after rapid intravenous injection causing cardiovascular collapse
- at low infusion rates
- result from gastrointestinal bleeding, dehydration, vagal stimulation, etc
* following acute hypovolaemia depends on the caudal midline medulla.
* frequent side-effect of MAOIs.
* generally responds to volume expansion with normal saline.
* increases the risk of falls and subsequent injury.
* is blood pressure lower than normality
- due to vasodilation and a functional decrease in the effective circulating volume
- illnesses
- low blood pressure
- usually secondary to venodilation and negative cardiac inotropic effects
* occurs, varying from transient to severe.
* rare side effect.
* relative term in the brain-injured patient.
* relatively late sign of shock from blood loss and needs aggressive treatment.
* seems to be related to speed of infusion.
* usually late finding because of the activation of compensatory mechanisms
- sign in children
- responds promptly to supine position and intravenous fluids
### condition | disorder | cardiovascular disease | hypotension:
Induced hypotension
* is used during the approach and surgical dissection of the aneurysm.
* relative contraindication in hypertensive patients.
Orthostatic hypotension
* can cause fainting and falls
- occur with methyldopa administration
* common finding in patients with malaria infections
* is detected by measurement of blood pressure in two or more body positions
- widespread and can be dangerous to the elderly patient
Postural hypotension
* can occur if treatment is initiated too quickly.
* is hypotension
* temporary form of low blood pressure that causes light-headedness. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder:
Celiac disease
* affects both adults and children, and can appear at any age
- children and adults
- people differently
* are disorder
* can affect anyone
- cause anemia, diarrhea, fatigue, itchy skin, bloating and cramping
* causes the intestines to react abnormally to a substance called gluten
- villi to become flattened and lose the ability to absorb nutrients
* condition that impairs the small intestine from properly absorbing nutrients.
* damages the small intestine and interferes with nutrient absorption.
* definite condition with a definite treatment.
* digestive ailment that interferes with the absorption of food nutrients.
* disorder of the mucous lining of the jejunum.
* genetic disease, meaning that it runs in families
- disorder affecting children and adults
* is an autoimmune disease with a small heritable component
- inherited condition, meaning that genetics do play a role
- genetically determined involving two or more concurrent genes
- hereditary, meaning that it runs in families
- one of a group of diseases caused by consumption of gluten
* is the most common genetic disease in Europe
- prototype of delayed pattern food allergy
* is treated by eliminating all gluten from the diet
- with a gluten-free diet and the avoidance of all wheat and rye protein
* rare childhood disease.
* refers to a damaged intestinal mucosa.
* runs in the family.
Cholestasis
* is associated with preproenkephalin mRNA expression in the adult rat liver
- caused by a blockage
- present near the limiting plate
- reduced or stopped bile flow
- the blockage in the supply of bile into the digestive tract
* usually develops in the first few months of life
- second or third trimester and disappears after delivery
Chromosomal disorder
* Most chromosomal disorders happen sporadically.
* are abnormalities in the number or structure of the chromosomes.
* involve extra, or missing chromosomes or rearranged pieces of chromosomes.
Circulatory disorder
* Many circulatory disorders run in families.
* Some circulatory disorder damages small arteries.
Common disorder
* Some common disorder affects adults
- dairy cattle
* Some common disorder causes cysts
- large cysts
* cans have impact
- negative impact
* results from inflammation.
* results in acute pain
Complaint
* are cries
- objections
- pleading
* is disorder<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder:
Conduct disorder
* Conduct Disorder Is a long standing pattern of violating rules, rights, and feelings of others
- is reported more frequently in large urban areas and appears to be increasing
- persistent pattern of violating rules, laws and the rights of others
* can co-occur with adolescent depression and attention deficit disorder
- occur alongside adolescent depression and attention deficit disorder
* develop in late childhood or early adolescence.
* has both genetic and environmental components.
* is diseases
- often a lazy diagnosis
* is the most prevalent single disorder
- serious psychiatric disorder in childhood and adolescence
* overlaps with other conditions.
* represents just a small part in a generalized or overall disinhibition disorder.
* shows no prejudice towards gender.
Demyelination
* can also reduce the safety factor of conduction.
* causes loss of saltatory conduction.
* facilitates axonal regeneration.
- the loss of myelin from nerves
* leads to progressive dysfunction such as seen in multiple sclerosis.
* occurs and is limited to the area of the perivenous cellular cuff
- during the inflammatory phase of the lesion
- in peripheral nerves and nerve roots
* refers to scaring related to abnoralities of myelin in the brain. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder:
Dysarthria
* general term for disorders of articulation and prosody due to neurological damage.
* interferes with normal control of the speech mechanism.
* is difficult, poorly articulated speech.
* is the disorder of articulation due to a motor disturbance of the lips, tongue, etc
- name of a communication problem that affects the clarity of speech
- second most common speech disorder among elderly patients
* occurs and is often severe
- owing to ataxia of the muscles of the larynx
* speech system manifestation of a more extensive movement disorder.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | dysphonia:
Spasmodic dysphonia
* affects the ability of the laryngeal mechanism to function effectively.
* can affect anyone
- be neurogenic, psychogenic, or idiopathic
* causes the voice to break or to have a tight, strained or strangled quality.
* dystonia in which affects only the muscles of the larynx.
* involves the muscles of the throat that control speech.
* result of abnormal physiology.
* type of neurologic disorder called a dystonia that affects the vocal folds.
Dysthymic disorder
* are milder depressive states lasting two years or more.
* chronic, low level depression, that continues for years.
* fairly common type of depression.
* is common among unmarried and young persons and in persons with low incomes.
* relatively common illness that is often treated with antidepressants.
* requires depressive symptoms to be present for two years.
Dysuria
* can affect almost anybody
- occur due to an inflammation or sexually transmitted disease
* is also a common feature of urethritis caused by some sexually transmissible pathogens
- very common among the sexually active younger generation
* is the classic sign of cystitis
- condition in which pain is felt during urination
* means frequent urination of small volumes of urine, often with straining.
* occurs when stones obstruct the passage of urine out of the bladder.
Endocrine disorder
* Some endocrine disorder involves hypersecretions.
* associated with defective spermatogenesis are uncommon. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder:
Epilepsy
* affects a wide variety of people of all levels of intelligence
- approximately one per cent of the Canadian population
- each person differently
- men, women and children and can begin at any age
* affects more than one million women in the United States
- two million people in the United States
- one percent of the population
* affects people in all nations and of all races at every age
- different ways
- of all ages and races
* affects people of all ages, all nations, and all races
- male and female
* also increases a woman s chance of having a baby with a birth defect
- is described in the Bible
* basically is abnormal electrical currents in the brain which can cause a seizure.
* brain disorder causing repeated seizures or fits in the patient
- characterized by recurrent unprovoked seizures
- in which the person has recurrent seizures or convulsions
* brain disorder that causes recurrent seizures
- involves recurrent seizures
- produces sudden and repeated seizures
* broad term for a variety of seizure disorders.
* can adversely affect a patient's cognition, behavior and quality of life.
* can affect anyone at any age at any time
- anytime
- people of any age
- pregnancy, and pregnancy can affect epilepsy
* can also be secondary to another condition, such as cerebral palsy or a brain tumor
- cause unusual behaviour and lead to abnormal perceptions
- have a genetic cause
- occur in animals, including dogs, cats, rabbits, and mice
* can be a genetic trait
- horrible, debilitating problem
- scary word
- difficult to detect
- frightening and confusing for a child
- one of such injuries
* can begin at any time of life
- immediately after birth or can occur for the first time in old age
- carry with it a host of social and pyschological problems
- cause a lifetime of problems
* can develop at any age in children or adults
- time in a person's life
- first appear at any age, although three-quarters of all cases surface during childhood
* can have devastating effects on employability
- effects on sex, and sex has effects on epilepsy
- many causes
- last a few months, years, or life-long
- look like tremor, also
- occur or begin at any age
- start at any age, although it tends to first occur in children and the elderly
* can strike anyone at any age
- time regardless of age, sex, race, or fitness
- anyone, at any age, at any time
- take many forms
* carries a heavy emotional burden.
* causes convulsion-like states.
* chronic and, usually, lifelong condition, and response to medications is individual
- brain disorder that results in seizures
- condition of recurrent unprovoked seizures
- disorder of the brain resulting in the tendency to have seizures
- malfunction of the brain that often results in the tendency to have seizures
- medical problem that for many people can be successfully treated
* chronic neurological condition characterized by recurrent unprovoked seizures
* clinical condition characterized by recurrent seizures
- diagnosis
* comes from the cortex, and it s the tubers that cause that problem
- in many forms, and each person's experience is different
* common condition in our community
- that seems to at least strike across all class boundaries
* common disorder and often goes undiscussed
- of the human nervous system
* complex condition.
* condition associated with a brain disorder.
- two or more recurring seizures
- in which a person seems prone to seizures for no known reason
* condition in which seizures recur again and again
- recur, usually in a spontaneous and unpredictable manner
- the brain s electrical impulses somehow misfire, causing seizures
- of spontaneously recurring seizures
- that results when a person has recurrent seizures
- with recurring epileptic seizures
* difficult disease to diagnose.
* disease of the brain
- state associated with severe disability, and limitations
- that is evident world wide
* disorder affecting approximately one in every two hundred people.
* disorder characterized by recurrent seizures
- recurring, unprovoked seizures
- marked by sudden releases of electrical energy by the brain
* disorder of altered neuronal excitability
* disorder of the brain in which seizures occur repeatedly
- which takes the form of recurring seizures
* disorder of the central nervous system that effects the brain
- that causes seizures
- with many possible causes
* exacts an enormous toll on patients and their families.
* fairly common neurological disorder.
* general term covering a variety of conditions in which seizures occur
- for recurring seizures or electrical disturbances in the brain
- used to describe many different types of seizure disorders
* generic term for a variety of seizure disorders
- used to define a variety of seizure disorders
* has a significant impact on marriage and reproduction
- rate of mortality and often profound social consequences
- very dark history
* has many different causes
- forms ranging from convulsions to momentary lapses of attention
- possible causes, such as brain injuries and tumors
* has no cure, but it can be managed
- is able to be controlled
- single cause
* includes all events, major, minor and auras
- both major or generalized seizures and minor or partial seizures
* involves recurring seizures
- seizures that continue to occur
* is actually an umbrella term covering about twenty different types of seizure disorders
- also well-hidden in another sense
- always a serious disorder
* is an abnormal electrical state of the brain in which neurons fire excessively
- electrical disturbance of the brain characterized by seizures
* is an episodic disability
- ever-growing problem in all dogs, purebred as well as mixed breeds
- as individual as the people who have it and everyone has their own patterns of seizures
* is caused by a disturbance in the brain
- abnormal electrical activity in the brain
- excessive electrical activity in the brain
- uncontrolled electric storms within the brain
* is characterized by recurrent seizures and in general can be controlled by medication
* is common amongst alcoholics
- as well as various neurologic symptoms
- contagious
- covered by the Disability Discrimination Act
* is diagnosed by a physician following a neurological evaluation
- when an individual has a repeating pattern of seizures
- documented to be in ALL Belgian bloodlines
- fairly prevalent in beagles as well, often times causing seizures
- having two or more unprovoked seizures
- highly variable in frequency, duration and severity of seizures
- in no way related or responsible fro a person s behaviour
- known to particularly originate with childhood
- likely to be treated with more medications and higher doses than is bipolar disorder
* is more common in children than diabetes and kidney disease
- diabetes or kidney disease
- the neonates and infants
- frequent in developing countries
- most likely to occur after a head injury
* is no longer a problem since there are medications to treat it
- the stigma it used to be
- respecter of persons
- now more common in dogs than in humans
- of acquired or idiopathic origin
- often present in people with a meningioma
* is one of the most common German Shepherd health problems
- and serious neurological disorders that affects the brain
- treatable chronic medical diseases
- partially responsive to treatment
- particularly devastating in the pediatric age group
- present when a person has recurrent seizures
- probably the most written about disease in Ancient Greece
- rare and there aren t many people who have it
* is recurrent seizures and can develop at any time of life
- related to mental illness
- said to be present when seizures become recurrent and unprovoked
- simply a condition where the patient experiences recurrent seizures
- somtimes associated with or called a seizure disorder
- still one of the most common neurological disorders affecting mankind
- the failure to stop that process
* is the most common and of least consequence to the cat
- least consequence to the dog
- cause of seizures in dogs
- chronic neurological disorder
- form of seizures, also called convulsions or fits
- neurological disease found in dogs
* is the most common neurological disorder among young people
- in man, afflicting millions
- in the world
- of childhood and a common affliction in adults
- of the severe neurological disorders
* is the most common serious brain disorder in every country of the world, including Canada
- neurological condition affecting people of all ages
* is the name given to a series of symptoms that include seizure
- seizure disorders for which no cause can be found
- of the condition in which a person has repeated seizures
- nation's second leading neurological disease
- oldest known brain disorder
- physical manifestation of an underlying brain dysfunction
- repeated occurrence of seizures originating from the brain
- result of abnormal electrical activity in the brain
- second major inherited problem found in Vizslas
* is the tendency to have recurrent unprovoked seizures
- recurrent, unprovoked epileptic seizures
- term used to describe recurring seizures
- underlying tendency of the brain to produce seizures
* is the world's most common brain disorder
- serious, yet treatable, brain disorder
- common, serious neurological condition
- treated by neurologists when available or by psychiatrists in many other places
- used to describe a number of nervous system disorders with related seizures
- usually well controlled with medication
* means a tendency to have recurrent seizures
- spontaneous seizures
- that a child is susceptible to recurring seizures of various kinds
* nervous system disorder that causes seizures.
* neurological disease, a disease of the central nervous system
- disorder affecting the brain and central nervous system
* neurological disorder characterized by a tendency to have seizures
* occurs more frequently in some cultures.
* often starts in childhood but can develop at any age.
* physical condition caused by sudden, brief changes in how the brain works
- characterized by sudden, brief changes in how the brain works
- occurring when there are sudden, brief changes in brain functions
- which is caused by a sudden changes in the brain
* poses serious challenges for children.
* potentially fatal disease.
* primarily affects children and young adults, although anyone can get epilepsy at anytime.
* produces changes in the brain's electrical activity.
* psychological condition.
* public health problem in Asia.
* rare condition.
* recurrent seizure disorder irrespective of cause.
* relatively strong contraindication, in common with mefloquine.
* represents a transient and terrible catastrophe in brain physiology.
* requires treatment, preferably with monotherapy.
* seizure disorder characterized by disturbances of brain function
- resulting from sudden bursts of electrical energy in the brain
* serious disease in itself, but it can lead to several dire complications.
* shared experience across color lines, generation gaps and gender differences.
* sign of low intelligence.
* simply refers to repeated seizures.
* subset of one of the many things that cause seizures.
* sudden abnormal electrical discharge from the grey matter of the brain.
* symptom of an underlying neurologic dysfunction occurring within the brain.
- phenomenon of learning to a pathological extreme
* type of mental illness.
* usually begins in childhood or adolescence.
* varies in how long it lasts.
* variety of disorders that is characterized by seizures.
* very common neurological problem
- complicated illness that can interfere with life in a number of ways
- serious medical condition and individuals do die of it
+ Oculocerebrorenal syndrome: Diseases
* It is also known as 'Oculocerebrorenal syndrome'. People with lowe syndrome are born with cataracts, that is the lenses of their eyes are not totally clear. Many people with the syndrome develop kidney problems at an early age. The brain develops differently, the development of the child happens slower. Such children may often have learning difficulties. Epilepsy can also occur. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | epilepsy:
Generalized epilepsy
* affects the entire brain.
* is epilepsy
- more likely to involve genetic factors than partial or focal epilepsy
Partial epilepsy
* affects only one part of the brain.
* is the most common seizure disorder in adult patients.
* tends to be associated with cavernous hemangiomas and arteriovenous malformations.
Symptomatic epilepsy
* is caused by physical defects in the brain.
* refers to seizures caused by an underlying condition.
Eye disorder
* Many eye disorders have no symptoms until it is too late.
* Some eye disorder causes blindness.
* are quite common in the American population.
Fatal disorder
* Some fatal disorder is caused by mutation
- recessive mutation
* affects functions.
Ferment
* Many ferment carbohydrates to lactic acid.
* is disorder
Fuddle
* are a peaceful race, and one of the smallest of the underground races physically.
* is disorder
Headache disorder
* are an enormous public health problem.
* can exist without any obvious structural or metabolic cause.
Hereditary disorder
* Most hereditary disorder is characterized by abnormalities
- collagen abnormalities
* Some hereditary disorder is caused by metabolism
- characterized by excretion
Hydrocele
* Most hydroceles are asymptomatic or subclinical
- develop because of blocked lymphatic flow
- disappear during the first year of life
- grow to a certain size and then stabilize
- resolve spontaneously
* also develop after infection, injury, or local cancer tumors.
* are benign swellings of the scrotum
- diseases
- easily treatable, too
- more common in boys who are born prematurely
* can reoccur.
* is disorder
* often occur with inguinal hernias.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder:
Hyperactivity
* Hyperactivities are disorder.
* can be a problem for some children.
* is another word for being overactive
- caused by a biochemical abnormality
- common in childhood, but does tend to improve in adolescence and adulthood
- considered a complex problem by homeopaths
- less prevalent among girls, who instead often seem quietly distracted or spacey
- really the brain's attempt to generate new stimulation to maintain alertness
- secondary to poor focusing and impulse control
- the most frequent justification for drugging children
* more consistent behavior in AS than is the happy demeanor.
* often diminishes during adolescence, but the attentional difficulties remain
- occurs with inattentiveness and impulsivity
- stops in the late teenage years
* seems to be the expression of either hypoglycemia or food allergies or both.
* technical term frequently referred to in lay terms as uncontrollable behavior.
* tends to diminish with age.
* usually stops in the late teenage years. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder:
Hypertension
* Most hypertension is due to diet and weight, while some is due to heredity.
* Most hypertension leads to disorder
- heart disorder.
* can lead to diseases such as heart attack, stroke, and kidney disease. Even a small increase above this level can cause problems if it is not fixed for a long time. Hypertension can often be fixed with changes in diet or lifestyle, such as eating less salty food or doing more exercise. However, many people still require medicine to help fix their hypertension
* See High blood pressure.
* adversely affects calcium homeostasis.
* affects about one of every four American adults
- nearly one in three adults
* afflicts about one in four American adults, both men and women, of all ages.
* also predisposes the arteries to atherosclerosis.
* blood pressure higher than normal.
* can affect all types of people
- several regions of the body when the blood pressure becomes too high
* can also cause damage to the retina and the kidney
- impair an expectant mother's kidney, liver and brain functions
* can also lead to a stroke or kidney failure
- strokes, kidney disease, and aneurysms
- be difficult to control
* can cause damage to many parts of the body
- headache, blurred vision, blindness, heart damage, and stroke
- strokes, heart attacks, heart and kidney failure
- damage the body by causing the heart and blood vessels to work overly hard
- go undetected for years
- increase the risk for coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure and stroke
* can increase the risk of having a heart attack and dying from cardiovascular diseases
- a stroke, developing altitude sickness, or angina
- injure the kidneys, impairing their functions
* can lead to diseases such as heart attack , stroke , and kidney disease
- enlargement of the heart and to vascular damage
- heart attack stroke and kidney failure
* can lead to heart disease, heart failure, kidney failure and strokes
- stroke, and kidney failure
- stroke or heart attack, and in some has a genetic basis
- stroke, heart failure, or kidney damage
- occur in children or adults
- remain symptomless for long periods before arterial or organ damage appears
- result in narrowing of the blood vessels that supply the brain
* causes characteristic blood vessels changes, mirroring the systemic vasculopathy
- increased filtration of lipoprotein into the intima from the blood
- the harder arteries to constrict and to compress the more flacid veins
* chronic disease, accounting for the largest number of physician office visits.
* common cause of kidney failure in Australia
- comorbidity of obesity
- complication of pregnancy
- complication, perhaps on the basis of cysts causing local ischemia
- concomitant of obesity
- development with the onset of diabetic nephropathy or shortly thereafter
* condition diagnosed by chronic high blood pressure in the arteries.
* develops and pulmonary haemorrhage frequently develops.
* develops as a consequence of the increased pumping by the heart
- increased pumping pressure of the heart
- in the pulmonary vessels
* disease in which a person' s blood pressure is persistently high
- that is common in the United States
* does occasionally give subtle warning signs
- the same as do some other medications
* exacerbates conditions.
* forces the heart to pump against greater arterial resistance.
* greater risk factor in diabetics than in non-diabetics.
* increases afterload
- blood volume and consequently blood pressure
* increases risk among obese women
- and severity of impotence
- the risk for serious cardiovascular problems
* increases the risk of having a stroke, which also increases with age
- heart disease and stroke and can damage eyes and kidneys
- renal deterioration in systemic lupus erythematosus
* is also a controllable risk factor to reduce the potential risk from heart disease
- potential and more common cause of afib
- risk factor for cognitive impairment, dementia, and chronic kidney disease
* is an extremely common form of cardiovascular disease
- increase in blood pressure above the normal level
* is another cause of kidney disease
- condition that is ripe for genetic somatic therapy
- leading cause of heart disease in the general population of Senegal
- major cause of congestive heart failure
- problem linked in part to racist incidents at work
* is associated with a significantly increased risk of morbidity and mortality
- erectile dysfunction
- severe obesity
- believed to damage the choroidal vasculature
* is blood pressure that is greater than normal
- remains elevated over a safe level
- both a disease and risk factor for cardiovascular disease
* is chronic conditions
* is common among the elderly and is known risk factor for heart disease and stroke
- and is frequently present before development of renal impairment
- in hyperparathyroidism
- when renal failure is severe
- considered a major risk factor for heart and kidney disease and stroke
- consistent elevation of systemic arterial blood pressure
- dangerous because it causes the heart to work extra hard
- diagnosed when the patient has persistently high blood pressure
- especially dangerous because there are often no warning signs or symptoms
* is high blood pressure, and it's bad news
* is higher blood pressure than normal
- in blacks than in whites
- illnesses
- indeed an affliction of aging
- itself a complex disease with genetic and environmental components
* is known as the silent killer
- to affect the blood vessels and major factor in heart attacks
- linked to heart attacks, strokes and other serious health problems
* is more common in high-risk newborns
- prevalent in men than in women
- pronounced with mineralocorticoids and their effect on renal sodium excretion
* is most common among blacks
- commonly cause by high salt intake
- much more prevalent in both communities than in the island dwellers
* is often a concomitant condition
- asymptomatic even untreated
- preventable and is definitely treatable with lifestyle and dietary changes
- the cause of heart disease, as well as of other serious organ failures
- one of the major causes of disability and death all over the world
* is one of the most common causes of death and disability
- causes of left ventricular hypertrophy
- chronic health conditions in developed countries
- medical complication of pregnancy
- important risk factors for heart attacks and strokes
- precipitated by a number of factors
- present if either or, both the systolic or diastolic readings are elevated
- preventable and treatable
- rare, most patients having decidedly low blood pressure
- really a major player in heart failure
- reduced when diastolic function improves
- relatively common in adults with the disorder
* is simply an increase in blood pressure
- increased pressure in the blood vessels
- the diagnosis given when readings consistently rise above normal
* is the leading cause of heart attack and stroke
- controllable risk factor for stroke
* is the medical term for an abnormally high blood pressure
- what most people call High Blood Pressure
- referring to high blood pressue
- more commonly used term for high blood pressure
* is the most common health condition for women in the United States
- frequent and important risk factor for cardiovascular diseases
* is the most important preventable risk factor for premature death worldwide
- prevalent treatable chronic condition in the United States
- prime reason for monitoring blood pressure
- single most important treatable risk factor for stroke
- sustained elevation of arterial blood pressure
* is the term for blood pressure that is consistently above normal for a long time
- that is consistently higher than normal
- that is higher than normal
- that remains elevated for prolonged periods of time
- typically a hybrid of physiological, emotional and mental factors
- variable that related to multivessel disease
- when the blood pressure is too high and hypotension is when it is too low
* leading cause of cardiovascular disability and death
- factor in developing kidney disease
* major complication in elderly people who suffer from gout
- contributor to heart disease, stroke and kidney disease
- factor in heart attack and stroke
* major risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality
- coronary heart disease and stroke
- heart disease and the chief risk factor for stroke
- many serious health problems
- stroke, heart attack and kidney disease
- in the development of heart disease and stroke
- threat to life and health
* means high blood pressure.
* medical term for blood pressure that is higher than normal
- that means high blood pressure
* more important risk factor for stroke than for atherosclerotic heart disease.
* never goes away, but it can be controlled.
* occurs much more frequently in patients with diabetes.
* occurs when blood presses on the artery walls with too much force
- the force of blood against the artery walls rises
* often accompanies diabetic nephropathy
- runs in families
* plays a major role in aortic atherosclerosis and aneurysm formation
- significant role in the development of arteriosclerosis and atherosclerosis
* possibility, as vitamin deficiency, some bleeding disorders, and drug abuse.
* possible outcome of long term obstruction of a kidney from kidney stones.
* presents information on hypertension geared towards medical professionals.
* problem for some, as are kidney stones.
* produces a narrowing of the arteries when blood pressure is significantly elevated.
* puts stress on blood vessel walls.
* ranks as the second most frequently occurring condition among the elderly.
* reduces life expectancy, and the higher the pressure the greater the mortality.
* remains a major public health problem in middle-aged and elderly people
- one of the leading causes of death in the United States
* requires drug treatments
* results from a complex interaction of genes and environmental factors
- in an increase in afterload on the left ventricle
* risk factor for a multitude of potentially life-threatening illnesses.
* risk factor for cardiovascular disease, stroke and kidney disease
* silent disease meaning the symptoms often go unnoticed
- killer because it is asymptomatic
* speeds the clogging of the arteries and is the biggest risk factor for strokes.
* stimulates baroreceptors in the carotid sinus, aorta and cerebral vessels.
* stresses the kidney capillaries, increasing risk of leakage.
* very common vascular disease
- silent, deadly symptom of heart disease
+ Hypertension, Cause, Primary hypertension
* In almost all contemporary societies, blood pressure rises with aging and the risk of becoming hypertensive in later life is considerable. Hypertension results from a complex interaction of genes and environmental factors. Numerous common genes with small effects on blood pressure have been identifiedThe International Consortium for Blood Pressure Genome-Wide Association Studies. Genetic variants in novel pathways influence blood pressure and cardiovascular disease risk
- Classification, Neonates and infants: Diseases and disorders of the cardiovascular system
* Blood pressure is not measured routinely in the healthy newborn. Hypertension is more common in high-risk newborns. A variety of factors, such as gestational age, postconceptional age, and birth weight needs to be taken into account when deciding if a blood pressure is normal in a neonate
- Complications
* Hypertension is the most important preventable risk factor for premature death worldwide. It increases the risk of ischemic heart disease strokes, peripheral vascular disease, and other cardiovascular diseases, including heart failure, aortic aneurysms, diffuse atherosclerosis, and pulmonary embolism. Hypertension is also a risk factor for cognitive impairment, dementia, and chronic kidney disease
* Hypertension is diagnosed when the patient has persistently high blood pressure. Traditionally, diagnosis requires three separate sphygmomanometer measurements at one-month intervals. Initial assessment of hypertensive patients includes a complete history and physical examination. With the availability of 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitors and home blood pressure machines, importance of avoiding an incorrect diagnosis of patients with white coat hypertension has led to a change in protocols. In the United Kingdom, current best practice is to follow up a single raised clinic reading with ambulatory measurement. Follow-up can also be done, but less ideally, with home blood pressure monitoring over the course of seven days | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | hypertension:
Chronic hypertension
* can increase the risk of a woman s developing pre-eclampsia in pregnancy.
* is one of the major diseases in western societies.
Ocular hypertension
* causes no damage to vision or the eye.
* has no noticeable signs or symptoms.
* is higher than normal pressure of the eye.
Portal hypertension
* correlates with the degree of phlebosclerosis.
* is caused by a blood clot
- the scarring that occurs in cirrhosis
- diseases
- increased blood pressure in the veins of abdominal organs
- malignant hypertension
- the probable cause of the esophageal varices<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | hypertension:
Pulmonary hypertension
* Some pulmonary hypertension leads to enlargements.
* The disease makes it hard to breathe. Some people with the disease need extra oxygen. This disease can also make a person dizzy and become easily tired. Some people with the disease faint easily. The symptoms get worse when exercising or working hard. Pulmonary hypertension serious disease, and it can be fatal. The disease makes it harder for the heart to pump blood. Because the heart has to work harder, it can also become sick. Some people who are very sick may need a lung transplant or a heart-lung transplant to live.
* affects only the blood vessels in the lung.
* can be difficult to diagnose
- have many causes
- occur by itself, but is often caused by an existing disease
* chronic life-threatening disease that cripples the lungs and heart.
* develops as a response to increased resistance to blood flow.
* diagnosis of exclusion.
* disorder of the blood vessels in the lungs.
* has nothing to do with systemic hypertension.
* is elevated blood pressure in the lungs.
* is high blood pressure in the arteries leading to the lungs
- lung diseases
- regularly present in respiratory failure
* makes the heart sound different.
* means that the blood pressure in the pulmonary artery is too high.
* rare disorder in which the pressure in the lungs is too great.
* refers to an abnormally elevated blood pressure within the pulmonary system.
* serious disease , and it can be fatal
- problem
* very rare condition.
+ Pulmonary hypertension, Signs and symptoms: Cardiology :: Pulmonology :: Diseases
* Because many diseases can make it hard to breathe, a doctor must learn about the patient's background. This helps the doctor to treat the patient, even if the patient has another disease. The doctor also does several tests. Pulmonary hypertension makes the heart sound different. One test is to measure the blood pressure inside the 'pulmonary artery', the blood vessel that goes from the heart to the lungs.
Renovascular hypertension
* develops as a result of decreased blood flow to the kidney.
* is characterized by high cardiac output and high peripheral resistance.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | hypertension:
Secondary hypertension
* frequent finding in adults with neurofibromatosis.
* is diseases
- due to an identifiable cause, often kidney disease
- high blood pressure caused by a specific disease or condition
* is hypertension
- that occurs because of another disorder
- the most common type in veterinary medicine
- treated by treating the underlying cause
* means that the hypertension is caused by another disease.
+ Hypertension: Diseases and disorders of the cardiovascular system
* Primary hypertension means that the hypertension is not caused by any other disease of the body. Secondary hypertension means that the hypertension is caused by another disease.
Severe hypertension
* can cause morning headaches, dizziness, or chest pain, among other symptoms.
* requires drug treatment to lower the blood pressure.
Systemic hypertension
* increases the risk of diabetic retinopathy.
* is known to accelerate coronary atherosclerosis. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | hypertension:
Uncontrolled hypertension
* can lead to stroke, heart failure, and kidney failure.
* is one example of what concerns heart doctors most.
* leading cause of death.
* leads to heart attacks, strokes, and kidney failure
Untreated hypertension
* affects many organs.
* can damage the kidneys and lead to stroke, heart attack, and heart failure.
Ill
* is disorder
+ Abide with Me, Lyrics, English: 19th century songs
* Ills have no weight, and tears no bitterness.
Immunodeficiency
* Immunodeficiencies occur when one or more components of the immune system are defective
- of the components of the immune system are inactive
* can occur in people who have undergone organ transplants.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder:
Immunosuppression
* appears to be a function of the chorion.
* are illnesses.
* can lead to a variety of opportunistic infections.
* following transplantation also increases risk.
* increases the frequency and severity of sinusitis
- risk for vaccine-associated paralytic polio
* is administered according to well-established protocols.
* is also a common predisposing factor to respiratory fungal infections
- problem underlying allergic diseases of the skin
- risk factor for vulvar cancer
* is the mainstay of treatment for all of the vasculitides
- treatment for graft rejection and autoimmune disease<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder:
Impaction
* are conditions
* can be serious if it occurs high up in the bowel
- occur when a section of the intestine is damaged by parasites or toxins
* is commonly the result of misguided efforts to remove ear wax
- especially dangerous for hatchlings and juveniles
- the most common disorder of the anal glands
* occur in birds of all ages.
* occurs most often in the third molars of the lower jaw
- when the duct or tube through which an anal sac empties becomes clogged
* refers to the accumulation of dry, hardened feces in the rectum or colon
- collection of dry, hardened feces in the rectum or colon
Inflammatory disorder
* Most inflammatory disorder is caused by deposition.
* Some inflammatory disorder causes enlargements
- lymph node enlargements
- triggers excretion
* account for a large percentage of the degenerative diseases.
* can affect the muscles of mastication.
* involve, swelling, pain, heat, and loss of function of the affected tissues.
Kidney disorder
* Many kidney disorders share the same initial symptoms.
* Some kidney disorder triggers excretion.
Language disorder
* are concerned with the development of language and linguistic processes
- most likely to occur following strokes on the left side of the brain
* predicts familial Alzheimer disease.
Learning disability
* Most learning disabilities involve difficulty processing information by the brain.
* is disorder
### condition | disorder | learning disability:
Dyscalculia
* are diseases.
* causes people to have problems doing arithmetic and grasping mathematical concepts.
* involves difficulty with math skills and impacts math computation.
* is learning disability
* refers specifically to the inability to perform operations in maths or arithmetic.
* refers to a difficulty with mathematics due to processing issues
- difficulties in using numbers and math functions
Dysgraphia
* are diseases.
* is learning disability
* occur because of damage done to the brain.
Dyslexia
* affects more males than females
- reading, spelling, writing, memory and concentration
* comes in many forms and there is no single cause.
* continues throughout life.
* refers to difficulty with reading, writing and spelling.
* runs in families and thus is inheritable.
* tends to run in families and continues throughout life
- slow down processing of information in the brain | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder:
Lipid disorder
* are reported as common in dogs
- risk factors for heart disease, the leading cause of death in the United States
* is one of the major risk factors for people with diabetes.
* lead to the development of atherosclerosis, America's number one killer.
Liver disorder
* Some liver disorder is caused by alcohol consumption
- excessive alcohol consumption
- excessive consumption
* produce itching combined with jaundice.
Medical disorder
* Many medical disorders can cause memory problems.
* Some medical disorder relates to nutrition
- poor nutrition
- disorders can make people highly susceptible to lead poisoning
* are usually curable with treatment.
* relate to patients admitted for medical reasons other than psychiatric.
* results in acute pain
Mental disturbance
* accompany the physical symptoms.
* is caused by wanting and craving what is beyond our power
### condition | disorder | mental disturbance:
Affective disorder
* are extremely common as well as often severe and disabling
- illnesses that affect the way people feel, think and act
- quite common
* is mental disorder.
* mental disturbance | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | mental disturbance:
Anxiety disorder
* Most anxiety disorder occurs after events.
* Most anxiety disorders do respond to treatment
- respond best to a combination of medication and other treatments
* Some anxiety disorder affects adults.
* affect approximately seven to fifteen percent of the population
- more people than depression or substance abuse
* are a class of disorders marked by feelings of excessive apprehension and anxiety
- distinct group associated with abnormal reaction to fearful situations
- major focus of therapy
* are among the most common of all the mental disorders
- easily treated of psychiatric problems
* are chronic, however, and recurrence is common
- irrational, and can intensify if untreated
* are highly prevalent among people with alcoholism
- treatable with a combination of cognitive therapy and medication
- more common than any other class of psychiatric disorder
- one of the most common and pervasive mental disorders
* are quite common among older people
- amongst the general population
- real disorders that require treatment
- real, medical illnesses
- some of the most common conditions people suffer with
- stable if untreated, and associated with other psychological problems
- stress related
* are the most common mental health disorders in children and adolescents
- problem facing children today
- problem in America
- problem in the United States
- problems that occur in children and adolescents
* are the most common mental illnesses in America
- in the United States today
* are the most common of all mental illnesses, and they are also the most treatable
* are the most common psychiatric condition in the United States
- illnesses in children
* are the most prevalent group of psychiatric disorders in the United States
- of the psychiatric disorders
- treatable of all mental illnesses
- nation s most common mental illness
- nation's most common type of emotional problem
- number one mental disorder in America
- number-one mental health problem in America
* are very common in anorexia and bulimia
- the community
* can also co-exist with physical disorders
- coexist with physical disorders
* can be acute or chronic
- either acute or chronic
- long-lasting and interfere greatly with a child's life
- very disruptive, very disabling
- cause distress in a child's life
- keep people from coping with stress and can disrupt daily life
- start in childhood and can be a chronic problem
* cause significant suffering and functional impairment in the affected children.
* constrain or severely impair the social functioning of affected older adults.
* have a number of complications.
* is also common and debilitating
- diseases
- marked by unrealistic worry or excessive fears and concerns
- medical conditions
* merge with depression.
* run in families and genetic or biological factors play a role in most forms
* take a variety of forms, ranging from general anxiety to panic attacks
- many forms
* tend to strike in young adulthood, but can affect anyone at any age
- wax and wane
### condition | disorder | mental disturbance | anxiety disorder:
Agoraphobia
* are anxiety disorder
- phobia
* is anxiety disorder
Phobia
* is actually a kind of panic reaction caused by specific stimuli or situations.
* is an anxiety disorder
- unreasonable fear or dread
Simple phobia
* Most simple phobias develop during childhood and eventually disappear.
* are fears of specific things such as insects, infections, flying
- more likely to develop in girls and generally begin before the age of five
- the fear of specific objects or situations that cause terror
### condition | disorder | mental disturbance | anxiety disorder | simple phobia:
Acrophobia
* are phobia
* is simple phobia | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | mental disturbance:
Conversion disorder
* is mental disorder
- when psychological stress causes the loss of physical functions
* subtype of somatization disorder.
Dissociative disorder
* develop under fairly consistent circumstances.
* is disassociation
Emotional disorder
* Most emotional disorders can cause sleep disturbance.
* are the most common of all.
* constitute the core syndromes of psychotic disorders.
Emotional disturbance
* affects the digestive system.
* are frequent in persons who view their obesity as a lack of self-discipline
- often likely to be a consequence of obesity rather than the cause
- very common with the onset of delirium<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | mental disturbance | emotional disturbance:
Clinical depression
* affects men and women of all ages and races
- mood, mind, body, and behavior
* afflicts many women with heart disease but effective treatments are available.
* can be a medical problem that only medication can help
- cause extreme fatigue
- contribute to eating disorders
- lead to a breakdown in mental functioning and even suicide
* can occur in any woman, regardless of age, race or income
- to anyone, at any age, and to people of any race or ethnic group
* common emotional disorder which affects both body and mind
- illness that usually goes unrecognized
* common, frequently unrecognized illness that can be effectively treated.
* complex illness that can be triggered by many things.
* disease much like any other, resulting from a chemical imbalance
- which needs to be treated with proper medication
* highly treatable disorder which has a variety of causes.
* interferes with and disrupts a person's job and family life.
* involves more than just feeling blue.
* is an emotional disturbance
- illness that needs medical attention just like any other illness
- illness, and it requires specific treatment
- any of a group of illnesses called mood disorders
- associated with poor recovery from stroke
- caused due a variety of causes
- characterized by a list of symptoms that last over a long period of time
* is more serious than simply feeling blue
- than twice as common in women than in men
- much more severe and lasts far longer than normal
* is one of the most common illnesses
- treatable types of mental illness in America
- readily treatable with counseling and medication
* is the most common of the psychiatric disorders
- commonly diagnosed emotional problem
- prevalent mental illness in the USA today
- twice as common in women as it is in men
* lasts for a long period of time
- at least three months
- much longer periods of time and has more symptoms
* low, unhappy, irritable mood and it s there every day, all the time.
* medical illness that attacks both the mind and the body
- can be effectively treated, in most cases
* real illness, and needs to be treated as such
- problem that affects real women
* refers to a condition serious enough to require professional treatment.
* serious and prevalent mental illness with tremendous costs for society
- but treatable illness
* serious health problem that affects the total person
- impacts the total person
- illness that affects mind, mood, body and behavior
* serious medical disorder that can be debilitating and can lead to suicide
- that, in many cases, can be treated
- physical illness that affects the entire person
* serious, but common illness that is treatable
- dangerous condition that needs attention right away
* stays around two weeks or more and, if untreated, can stay around a long time.
* treatable illness that can strike anyone at any age.
* varies in form from mild to moderate to severe.
* very treatable illness
* whole body disorder. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | mental disturbance | emotional disturbance:
Delirium
* are diseases
* is common during the final days of life
- in hospitalized elderly patients
- reversible, even in advanced illness
* occurs, commonly, in persons with dementia.
* tends to disturb the sleep-wake cycle, such as daytime fatigue or nighttime agitation.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | mental disturbance | emotional disturbance:
Depressive disorder
* Most depressive disorders are readily treatable with a combination of medication and psychotherapy.
* are highly treatable.
* can make individuals feel exhausted, worthless, helpless, and hopeless
- put women at risk for suicide
* come in different forms, just as do many other illnesses
- do other illnesses such as heart diseases
- like other illnesses
- various forms
* interfere with individual and family functioning.
* is affective disorder
- an emotional disturbance
- one of the most successfully treated disorders
* respond readily to treatments such as psychotherapy or appropriate medication.
Encopresis
- mental disorder
* frequently is associated with constipation and fecal impaction.
* is more common in boys than in girls.
* occurs when loose stool leaks around the fecal mass and presents at the anoderm.
* serious disorder that have various medical and emotional causes.
Neurosis
* Neuroses can stem from loading himem
- develop from conflicts of the mind and psyche
- occur because of traumatic events experienced in childhood
* is diseases
### condition | disorder | mental disturbance | neurosis:
Hysterical neurosis
* Hysterical neuroses are repressive, where the repressed emotion is visible.
* is neurosis<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | mental disturbance:
Personality disorder
* Most personality disorders share features with normal personality traits.
* are a little different in adolescents than in adults
- both frequent and difficult to treat
- disorders of trait or pattern
- generally resistant to medications and to therapy
- incurable
- long-term problems
* are the best possible responses to abuse
- most difficult disorders to treat
* do therefore reflect longstanding personality dysfunction.
* involve inflexible and maladaptive responses to stress.
* is diagnosises
* is mental disorder
* make the recovery process difficult.
* term used to describe a number of different conditions.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | mental disturbance | personality disorder:
Schizoid
* Many schizoids are asexual.
* can often seem coherent while acting out their roles within the world of delusion.
* frequently react passively to most events whether they are adverse or positive.
* is personality disorder
+ Schizoid personality disorder: Neurology :: Personality disorders :: Relationships
* Schizoid personality disorder' is a Cluster A personality disorder which involves not being interested in social relationships, tendency toward a solitary lifestyle, being secretive and being emotionally cold. This condition is by no means the same as schizophrenia, though people with SzPD will sometimes share similar characteristics as blunted effect or detachment. People who have SzPD do not want a personal relationship which requires emotions. People with SzPD are introverts who feel the need to be independent or alone. Many schizoids are asexual. Any relationships they may have do not involve emotional attachment. SzPD is more common in men than women.
Metabolic disorder
* Most metabolic disorder causes defects.
* Some metabolic disorder causes absorption
- is characterized by excretion
- leads to deposition
* Some metabolic disorder occurs in late pregnancy
* are the most common causes of neuropathy in our population.
* can also give a picture of ptosis.
* is disorder.
* result when the thyroid secretes too little or too much thyroxine.
### condition | disorder | metabolic disorder:
Galactosemia
* is metabolic disorder
* likewise is inherited. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | metabolic disorder:
Phenylketonuria
* now causes few cases of mental retardation.
+ Birth defect, Genetic defects, Lethal or damaging genes: Health problems
* In the case of a chemical deficiency, the problem may be curable. For example, phenylketonuria was a cause of mental retardation. Doctors came up with a simple test to find which babies have this condition. They found that if these children got treated and followed a strict diet, they could get enough of the chemical they needed. Phenylketonuria now causes few cases of mental retardation.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder:
Mood disorder
* affect a wide variety of people.
* are among the most common and most treatable of all mental illnesses
- biochemical in nature, just like diabetes, and are just as treatable
- highly treatable - but often go undiagnosed
* are more common in married people
- single, divorced and separated people
- one form of serious mental illness
- some of the most treatable of all mental illnesses
- uncomfortably common
* can also co-exist with other problems such as anxiety or attention deficit disorder
- be a very isolating illness
- cause major turmoil for the individual, family, and school
- have a negative effect on how mothers interact with their babies
* can make a person feel fatigued, worthless, helpless and hopeless
- achieving in school difficult
* cans have impact
- negative impact
* involve disturbances in emotional, cognitive, behavioral, and somatic regulation
- intense moods which last for longer than normal periods of time
- responses in emotional, cognitive, and behavioral regulation
- serious morbidity and a substantial risk of death
* is also a symptom of age-related memory change
- diseases
* share many similar symptoms with fibromyalgia and visa versa.
* take on a different form in the young.
Movement disorder
* Many movement disorders are familial and have an underlying genetic basis
- inherited, which means they run in families
* Most movement disorders are chronic and progressively disabling.
* Some movement disorders progress over time while others improve or remain unchanged.
* can also occur during alcohol abuse and withdrawal
- vary considerably from child to child
* suggest extrapyramidal system dysfunction.
Muscle disorder
* Most muscle disorder causes symptoms.
* Most muscle disorder is caused by defects
- characterized by weakness
Musculoskeletal disorder
* Some musculoskeletal disorders respond best to treatment in the early stages of the disease.
* are a main cause for early retirement and work incapacity.
* are common among drummers, pianists, string players, and others
- and costly conditions that occur in many different businesses
* lead to pain and suffering and result in high costs to industry.
* vary greatly in severity and degree of permanence.
* waste time and money.
Nervous disorder
* Some nervous disorder occurs in birds.
* is disorder
Neurological disease
* Many neurological diseases are also directly related to aging
- can affect humans
* Some neurological diseases are caused by ingestion.
* affect several million people in the United States.
* are illnesses.
* can present as lameness, weakness, paralysis, seizures, or behavioral changes.
* is disorder
* structural disturbance or a malfunction of the central nervous system. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | neurological disease:
Brain damage
* associated with high bilirubin levels usually causes sensorineural hearing loss.
* begins in as few as four or five minutes without oxygen
- to occur within four minutes if breathing stops
- with the first symptom and progresses during a stroke
- effect many areas of cognitive functioning
- occur without any obvious sign
* can produce a severe loss of function such as aphasia or agnosia
- startling perceptual effects
- result if breathing stops for five or more minutes
- turn a person into a non person
* is an injury
- irreversible
- often permanent, but it is preventable
* occurs in some cases of premature birth.
* possible long-term effect of encephalitis.
* resulting from suppression of lung and heart function is generally permanent.
* results from deficiencies
- exposure
- heavy exposure
- iodine deficiencies
* spreads as the blood flow is interrupted.
Brain disease
* Most brain diseases affect life
- afflict humans
* are the eighth leading cause of death.
### condition | disorder | neurological disease | brain disease | agnosia:
Visual agnosia
* can occur with and without an hemianopia.
* is an agnosia
- associated with lesions of the left occipital and temporal lobes
### condition | disorder | neurological disease | brain disease | aphasia:
Anomia
* difficulty in finding the correct word to describe an object, action, or situation
- with word-finding or naming
* indicates a posterior temporoparietal abnormality or degeneration.
* is aphasia
- present and comprehension is affected by attention and memory deficits
Receptive aphasia
* involves difficulty understanding spoken or written language.
* is aphasia
Apraxia
* can affect the understanding of language.
* has no surgical or pharmaceutical treatments.
* is an oral motor disorder which results in a severe articulation, or expressive, disorder
- loss of skilled movement
- thought to result from damage to the cerebral cortex
* motor planning problem which affects the ability to formulate the sounds of speech.
* neurological disorder which can affect the body, or speech, or both.
* neurologically based, severe speech disorder. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | neurological disease | brain disease:
Cerebral palsy
* affects the body s motor function, muscle control and coordination.
* can be contagious
- mild or severe
- include milder versions or more severe symptoms which lead to total dependency
- result from damage to parts of the brain that control movement
* chronic disorder that impairs control of movements.
* comes in a variety of forms and with a continuum of severity.
* condition caused when the brain gets hurt, or damaged
- that has no cure
* cruel collection of varied conditions caused by injury before or during birth.
* disorder of motor development
- movement or coordination caused by an abnormality of the brain
- that damages the brain before, during, or after birth
* gets worse with age.
* group of chronic conditions affecting body movements and muscle coordination
- disorders characterized by impaired body movement
* is an example of a central coordination disorder
- basically brain damage
* is brain damage
* is caused by a lack of oxygen to the brain at birth
- an injury to the brain before, during, or shortly after birth
- injury to the developing brain
* is characterized by an inability to fully control motor function
- fully control muscles, movement, and posture
- poor muscle control ranging from clumsiness to severe paralysis
- diagnosed mainly by evaluating how a baby or young child moves
- different for every person
- diseases
* is due to abnormal development or damage occurring to the developing brain
- an injury to the brain motor tissue before or during birth
- illnesses
* is neither contagious nor inherited
- progressive or communicable
- something that happens to the brain
* is the most common crippling disorder among children
- permanent physical disability of childhood
- prevalent life-long physical disability in America
- name given to a group of disorders which affect posture and movement
* is the result of damage to motor areas in the brain
- the brain prior to or shortly after birth
- thought to be due, at least in part, to a shortage of oxygen to the brain
* lifelong disorder.
* neuro-motor disability that is caused by problems with the brain.
* non-progressive disorder of the brain that occurs in a growing child.
* nonprogressive disorder.
* result of damage to the developing brain usually during or near birth.
* term describing a collection of disorders which affect movement and posture
- that describes a group of disorders that affect movement control
- used for various non-progessive disorders, resulting from brain damage | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder | neurological disease | brain disease:
Drug addiction
* Most drug addiction affects individuals
- is brought about through one's own fault
* accounts for thousands of hospital emergency room admissions each year.
* can and does affect people of all ages, all professions, and all social classes.
* can cause dramatic weight change
- liver dysfunction
* causes death
- stigmas
* chronic illness which can include relapse
- relapsing disease
* disease that affects the entire family.
* disease, and anyone suffering from a disease needs treatment.
* form of escape or even self abuse.
* full time job, eating up a person' s time along with their brain cells.
* good model of what sin is like.
* has both a powerful psychological as well as the physical component.
* impacts virtually every area of life in our city.
* is addiction
- an illness of the spirit
- caused by physical dependence
- difficult to treat
- habituation
- more a health problem than a criminal problem
- often a way of life people rely on to cope with, or avoid coping with, the world
- part of a cluster of behaviors
- rampant
- similar to diseases like hypertension, diabetes and asthma in other respects
- the rage among schoolchildren
* is, among other things, a chronic disease.
* leads to social withdrawal, self-alienation, and disdain for the future.
* major public health problem worldwide.
* nonexertional impairment.
* pervasive disease.
* robs productivity and ruins lives.
* serious, debilitating disorder that demands intensive long-term treatment.
* takes away people's ability to make decisions.
* treatable disease.
* way of life people rely on to cope with the world.
Brain disorder
* Most brain disorders increase the affected person's risk of getting mental health problems.
* account for more disability than any other disease.
* are very common.
* can affect people at any age - children, adolescents, adults and the elderly
- and do strike our most vulnerable members of society-our children
- be stressful to cope with but also alter temperament, emotion and thought<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder | neurological disease | dyskinesia:
Tardive dyskinesia
* can be permanent even after a few doses
- become permanent
* causes involuntary muscle spasms and twitches in the face and body.
* is characterized by repetitive, involuntary, purposeless movements
- dyskinesia
- seen most often after long-term treatment with antipsychotic medications
* late side-effect of neuroleptic treatment.
* late-appearing, often irreversible side effect.
* movement disorder that is caused by certain antipsychotic drugs.
* neurological syndrome caused by the long-term use of neuroleptic drugs.
* occurs more frequently in elderly female patients and can be irreversible.
* set of abnormal, involuntary movements of the face or extremities.
* severe side effect of medications.
Neurological disorder
* Some neurological disorder affects pupils.
* Some neurological disorder causes motor movement
- unusual movement
- is caused by parasites
* Some neurological disorders are very common
- result from tumours within the central nervous system
* are a vast medical problem.
* do seem to be among the most common childhood ailments in the Middle East.
* influences attitude.
* is disorder
* progress rapidly and incapacitate the victim.
Neuromuscular disorder
* All neuromuscular disorders have a genetic cause.
* Some neuromuscular disorders can interfere with digestive processes, including elimination.
* affect individuals of all ages, socioeconomic backgrounds and ethnicity
- the nerves that control voluntary muscles including arms and legs
Pain disorder
* can be either acute or chronic.
* is more common in people with mood disorders, such as depression and bipolar disorder
- one of the somatoform disorders
* very difficult diagnostic call because pain is subjective. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder:
Panic disorder
* Panic Disorder can exist comorbidly with medical as well as other psychiatric disorders
- condition in which persons experience sudden, severe attacks of anxiety
* Panic Disorder involves feeling very afraid all of a sudden, for no apparent reason
- sudden, unexpected attacks of intense terror
* Panic Disorder is the experience of spontaneous panic attacks
- fear of having a spontaneous panic attack
- state in which a person feels severe fear and thinks the threat of death
- triggers episodes of intense fear that strike without warning
* affects middle-aged and older adults as well.
* can also lead to depression and substance abuse
- appear at any age, although it is more likely to begin in young adulthood
- be distressing and disabling
- coincide with asthma or be confused with it
- last for a few months or for many years
- lead to episodic hypertension
- occur with or without agoraphobia being present
- radically impair family, work, and social relationships
- restrict what people do
* common and treatable disorder.
* fits well into the medical model, including diagnosis, treatment and prognosis.
* involve recurrent attacks of panic or anxiety.
* ' is an anxiety disorder involving panic attacks. In addition, big changes in behavior might happen in at least one month, and the person might keep worrying about having other attacks. Panic disorder serious condition that can happen at any age. It can be treated with psychotherapy and antidepressants.
* involves ongoing random panic attacks.
* involves sudden, intense and unprovoked feelings of terror and dread
* is about anxiety
- an anxiety disorder that runs in families, and probably is genetic
- another type of anxiety
* is characterized by recurrent panic attacks
- sudden rushes of intense anxiety
- chronic, though, and patients often relapse if treatment is stopped
- common in primary care
- different from a panic attack
- highly treatable, with a variety of available therapies
- less common, but usually more serious, than phobias
- marked by repeated panic attacks without apparent cause
- more common among women than men
- one of the most curable mental health problems in today's society
- probably the best studied and understood of the anxiety disorders
- quite responsive to specific treatment procedures
* is the fear of having a spontaneous panic attack
- nervous systems flashing danger signals at inappropriate times
- twice as common in women as in men
- two to three times more prevalent among women
- usually chronic and tends to be a reaction to stress
- very different from everyday anxiety
* lifelong illness which waxes and wanes.
* major source of visits to hospital emergency rooms or to the physician's office.
* makes people panic suddenly, without cause.
* occurs suddenly and can happen at any time.
* real condition involving serious attacks that seem to occur for no reason
- illness and it has to be treated
* real, treatable illness.
* strikes twice as many women as men.
* tends to continue for months or years
- run in families, suggesting a biological component to the disorder
* type of anxiety disorder
* very common and very disabling problem. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder:
Psychiatric disorder
* Many psychiatric disorders require a combination of drug therapy and psychotherapy.
* Most psychiatric disorders respond to treatment with medications.
* Some psychiatric disorders are very difficult to diagnose accurately
- interfere with the ability to think and memorize quickly
* are brain illnesses that arise through no fault of the patient or the family
- difficult to identify and treat - even in the best circumstances
- highly prevalent and impairing conditions
- of major clinical relevance in our society
- treatable with psychotherapy and drugs
* can increase or decrease one's libido.
* following childbirth is common, and much of it is serious.
* interfere with sleep, and lack of sleep intensifies symptoms.
* present in a number of different forms in the elderly.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder:
Psychological disorder
* affecting the aging adult include dementia, depression, and alcoholism.
* are actions rather than events and they are of some value to the patient
- frequently misunderstood and sometimes feared
* can contribute to vampiric behavior.
* coupled with jealousy can result in uncontrollable outbursts of violence.
* increase the likelihood of problems with substance abuse.
* is disorder
+ Vampire, Other: Mythology
* Psychological disorders can contribute to vampiric behavior. As well as the fact that drinking blood has always been believed to give you the strength of the one you drink from. That belief stems all the way back to ancient civilizations.
Rare disorder
* Most rare disorder affects bone growth
- causes defects
* Some rare disorder causes weakness
- contributes to death
* affects age male smokers
- cigarette smokers
* involves activities
- such activities
* strike people of all ages, races and ethnic background.
Recessive disorder
* Most recessive disorder is caused by defects
- factors
* Some recessive disorder affects mucuses.
* Some recessive disorder is caused by metabolism
- mutation
- point mutation
* occur only when a pair of mutant genes is present at a homologous site.
* tend to result from failures in genes that code for enzymes.
Replant disorder
* cause growers serious problems.
* delays economic production and can lead to tree death.
Rioting
* are disorder.
* felony publishable by up to five years in prison.<|endoftext|>### condition | disorder:
Roller coaster
* Most roller coasters have sides.
* Some roller coasters demonstrate kinetic energy.
* are a means to stress individuality and creativity
- fast
- in many theme parks and of primary concern to aspiring designers
- like parabolic aircraft
* are located in carnivals
- fairgrounds
- rides
- turbulence
* can be wooden or steel, and can be looping or nonlooping.
* come in many different styles.
* is disorder
* offer thrilling rides.
* use only a few different types of forces and energies.
Schizoaffective disorder
* complex and poorly understood clinical entity.
* forms a very good bridge between schizophrenia and affective disorder.
* is diseases.
* refers to a pattern of illness which is qualitatively different.
Seizure disorder
* Some seizure disorders are difficult to control despite medications and other therapies.
* are common, requiring medications for control
- treated with anticonvulsant medications
* can complicate a pregnancy as well.
* causes adverse effects
* causes significant adverse effects
* make up a significant proportion of referrals to veterinary neurologists.
Sensory disorder
* can impact their ability to learn and interact with their peers and teachers.
* have many causes and are incorporated within many other medical diagnoses.
Serious disorder
* Some serious disorder is caused by herbages
- young herbages
* Some serious disorder occurs in late pregnancy
* impairs functions
- kidney functions | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | disorder:
Several disorder
* affect the motility of food as it travels down the esophagus.
* can cause the thyroid to produce too much or too little thyroxine.
* have abiotic origins.
Smother
* ing in-laws affect a significant number of marriages.
* is disorder
Speech disorder
* is any condition that affects a child's ability to speak
* refer to difficulties producing speech sounds or problems with voice quality.
Thyroid disorder
* All thyroid disorders are much more common in women than in men.
* are also common hormonal culprits.
* are among the most common endocrine disorders
- endocrinological diseases
- common, especially in women
Tropical sprue
* are diseases.
* is disorder
- thought to be caused by infection
* occurs chiefly in the Caribbean, southern India, and Southeast Asia.
Vascular disorder
* Some vascular disorder involves problems.
* leading to bleeding are unusual.
Vestibular disorder
* affect one-fourth of the general population and half of the elderly.
* produce varying degrees of loss of equilibrium, causing imbalance and ataxia.
Vision disorder
* affect one in every four school-age children.
* can interfere with work, leisure activities, and everyday tasks.
* caused by head injury are treatable, but they are frequently over looked.
Voice disorder
* are often signs of other medical problems.
* involve differences in the quality, pitch, and loudness of the sound.
* occur with alarming frequency among school teachers.
* result from a variety of local and systemic conditions.
Doubt
* are usually symptoms of something underneath the surface.
* is emotion
- part of human experience
- uncertainty
* state of mind
### condition | doubt | hesitation:
Slothfulness
* causes one to fall into a deep sleep.
* gives rise to dislike, repulsion and anger.
* is hesitation
* pervades in almost every aspect to today's society.
Mental reservation
* comes from knowledge.
* is doubt
Reasonable doubt
* doubt based on reason and common sense.
* is an elusive concept that can be defined differently by reasonable people.
Dry condition
* Some dry conditions increase pressure.
* are a fact of life.
* can also increase the number of wildfires
- cause fires easily and, as they say, it takes only a spark
* create problems.
* enhance scab development, especially early in the growing season.
* occur where cool dry air warms up, sucking up moisture from the surroundings.
* persist for several weeks
Dryness
* causes a desire to water plants
- cessation in bacterial growth since there are no nutrients present to feed on
* helps prevent the reproduction, spread and transport of disease organisms.
* is caused by lack
- for equations, for logic
* leads to breakage at the quick, peeling, and low breaks along the side of the nails. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | dryness:
Dehydration
* Most dehydration affects blood sugar levels
- performance
- is caused by diarrhea
- leads to constipation
- produces sensation
* Most dehydration requires attention
- medical attention
* Some dehydration causes death
- reductions
* Some dehydration increases blood pressure
- is caused by warmth
* Some dehydration leads to death
- renal diseases
- reduces ability
* affects all fluid compartments
- power, aerobic and anaerobic parameters, and cognitive functioning
* alone can produce headache and nausea.
* also can be a complication.
* also causes fatigue
- the body temperature to rise
- depletes electrolyte levels, lean muscle tissue, and aerobic power
- increases muscle glycogen use, which leads to the onset of premature fatigue
* also leads to many serious illnesses
- muscle cramps
- occurs with aging
* big part of hang-overs
- problem for animals living in air
- risk, as well as losing two of the body's minerals -sodium and potassium
* by-product of oxygen deprivation at high altitudes.
* can actually have a palliative effect by decreasing anxiety and pain
- affect both sexes, all ages, but is most dangerous in newborns and infants
* can also affect mental functioning and co-ordination
- the body's ability to digest food and metabolize fat
* can also cause fainting and dizziness
- hypernatremia
- make the circles more obvious
- result from a bad sunburn
* can be a big problem in the summer heat
- life threatening condition
- medical emergency
* can be a problem in the heat
- with certain drugs and when nausea or diarrhea occurs
- problem, especially if the weather is hot
- real problem for any air traveler, and especially so for a pregnant woman
- serious problem during the warm weather
* can be a serious problem for babies
- children
- another factor in injuries
- as severe in winter as in summer
- dangerous at any age but is particularly so in small children
- deadly
- deceptive because it feels exactly like fatigue
- devastating
- extremely fatal, leading to severe dehydrating syndrome or even death
- lead to fainting, low blood-pressure, and fatigue
- life-threatening
- rapid so fluid replacement is essential
- serious and require intravenous fluid replacement
* can be serious, especially for infants, children, and the elderly
- in remote areas of the outdoors
- simply an annoyance when mild but can be deadly when extreme
* can be the cause of bad health
- many of our body s illnesses
* can be very dangerous, especially for babies and toddlers
* can become dire quickly, resulting in weakness, exhaustion and delirium
- serious very quickly
- bring on headaches
* can cause a host of ills like headaches, fatigue and constipation
- worsening of symptoms and additional feelings of weakness and dizziness
- central nervous system damage
- dementia like symptoms of confusion, etc
- disorientation, severe fatigue and even fainting
- dizziness and headaches
* can cause fatigue, cramping, reduced performance and heat exhaustion
- weakness, irritability and muscle cramps
- heart arrythmia, and that's what happened to Poppy in Florida last night
* can cause muscle aches and cramps, dry eyes and skin
- cramping and fatigue
* can cause serious health complications that require immediate medical attention
- illness or death
- problems in older adults
- uncomfortable symptoms
- definitely trigger headaches
* can develop gradually and serious problem
- in infants and small children within hours
- even lead to hospitalization
- gradually develop and serious problem
- hasten the development of cataracts
- have some serious cumulative effects over the long haul, including pulled muscles
* can impair a person's coordination
- pulmonary defense mechanisms that normally clear infectious material
- increase the risk of developing altitude illness
- injure the baby
- kill refrigerated mealworms
* can lead to crankiness and a whole host of other, more serious, conditions
- damage to the central nervous system
- early labor
- electrolyte imbalance, which can cause muscle cramping
- fatigue, headaches, and even muscle cramps
- headaches, poor concentration, constipation, nausea and low energy
- heatstroke in just a little time
- kidney failure, dry hair and skin and hair loss
- muscle cramps, heat stroke, premature fatigue, or even muscle injury
- tiredness and loss of strength
- limit strength, endurance, and aerobic capacity
* can make food poisoning worse
- jet lag worse
- sickle cell disease worse by causing the red blood cells to sickle faster
* can occur any time of the year
- even in cold weather
- in some cases of diarrhea
- quickly in heat or with diarrhea or vomiting
- quite quickly in children
- rapidly due to vomiting and diarrhea
- with little or no warning and can have serious effects on the body
- occur, as well as other medical complications
* can quickly bring the human body to a grinding halt
- reduce the blood volume by reducing the water content of the blood
* can result due to lack of water intake while exercising
- in kidney failure, heart failure and death
- seriously impair the body's ability to produce heat
* can set in and cause death in a matter of hours
- quickly in the desert
- show as a ruffled coat, hunched posture
- sometimes contribute to an attack of gout
* can trigger a sickle cell crisis
- contractions and early labor
- the effects by making the blood thick and sticky
- worsen nephrotoxicity
* can, in turn, create a urinary tract infection which can lead to incontinence.
* caused by diarrhea is the second leading cause of death in children
- excessive sweating can lead to heat exhaustion and heat stroke
* causes a further loss of thirst and further vomiting
- an imbalance in the liquids and dissolved solids in the urine
- discomfort in the terminally ill
- energy generation in the brain to decrease
- fatigue and low energy
- further increases in pulse and body temperature
- increased thirst and water consumption
- issues
- lethargy
- mucus to become very thick, which is what leads to feelings of congestion
- premature labor, especially in the third trimester
* causes the fluid volume of the body to decrease
- organs to work harder and the body can shut down quickly, resulting in death
- vessels to constrict and blood to thicken
* comes from improper irrigation i.e. forgetfulness.
* common cause of exhaustion, fatigue and headaches
- headache at altitude
- feature even in normal horses that complete the ride
- problem from working in heat
* commonly develops in anesthetized animals.
* concentrates the body's electrolytes.
* condition caused by a lack of liquids in the body.
* condition in which the body or certain body tissues suffer from lack of water
- suffers from a lack of water
- water or fluid loss far exceeds fluid intake
* constant threat to reptiles in captivity.
* contributes to cramps and injuries on many levels.
* danger during their long hours of physical exertion.
* deals with surface water loss.
* decreases the circulation to two very important organs, the liver and the kidney.
* develops quickly in children so offer frequent cool drinks when it is hot.
* frequent sign of illness in guinea pigs.
* function of time and pressure.
* good method for preservation of fruits and vegetables.
* happens within days.
* has a much greater negative affect on muscle cells than on fat cells
- significant effect on the body's performance
- little effect on cerebral oedema
* has many causes, such as previous medication, dry environment, or poor diet
- forms
* hazard of acute diarrhea, and can lead to severe weakness and death.
* health threat in any warm climatelike summer.
* hurts performance by reducing endurance, and increases the risk of serious heat illness.
* impairs cognitive functions
- physical and mental performance
* increases core temperature to dangerous levels and can precipitate premature labor.
* increases the fetal renal response to atrial natriuretic factor
- potential for hypothermia
- renal response to atrial natriuretic peptide in the fetal sheep
- risk of skin injury
* inhibits the healing process.
* is also a big killer of babies
- another frequent pitfall of air travel
- hard on the kidneys
- often a problem
- possible so make sure to ingest fluids
* is always a threat, even during the fall and winter
- easier to prevent than it is to treat
- present with decompression illness
* is an important concern during the first three weeks of life
- issue in cold winter months just as it is in the summer
* is another leading cause of hangovers
- potential problem with excessive caffeine consumption
- risk of hot weather exercise
- associated with weariness, constipation and increased risk of kidney stones
- by far the quickest and probably the most frequently used method of weight loss
* is caused by an excessive loss of water and salts from the body
- excessive loss of fluids from the body, and can be fatal
- the very low temperatures in the lower stratosphere
* is common due to the lower humidity levels in the plane
- during prolonged endurance events in hot weather conditions
- in patients with pancreatitis
* is common in people with burns
- severe diarrhea
- since the diabetic usually has less natural lubrication than the nondiabetic
- so bring ample amounts of water
- dangerous for the mother and fetus
- difficult for diabetics
- evident in many cases
- extractions
- extremely serious, and requires immediate medical attention
- from buffer through ethanol series to n-butanol
- hard on the kidneys, and chronic dehydration can lead to kidney damage and failure
- just as big an issue in cold winter months as it is in the summer
- likely the single biggest reason puppies are vomiting
* is more an art form than an exact science
- serious for infants and children than for adults
* is often a concern for breast-feeding women
- moderate to severe
- to blame for muscle cramps
* is one of the biggest causes of fatigue
- hazards to birds during their plane flight
- great stresses on the prostate
- leading causes of preterm labor
- main reasons for fatigue
- major causes of poor performance and injury
- most common causes of impaction colic
- reason for a mild fever
- only one health problem associated with water
- part of plastinations
* is particularly dangerous for children, who can die from it within a matter of days
- important in hot countries
- perhaps the most common reason for sluggish race times and discomfort on the run
- possible, but uncommon
- probably the most senseless of injuries that can happen to a child
- quite dangerous
- rampant, particularly because of the recent diarrhea epidemic in Kosovo
- sometimes severe
- successful by drying slowly and consistently from the inside out
- surprisingly common, especially in summer
* is the biggest cause of cannibalism in insects
- concern in most vomiting episodes
* is the biggest threat from diarrheal diseases in children
- of diarrheal disease in children
- catalyst that accelerates the aging process
- common cause of a lot of headaches
- condition that occurs from a loss in body water
- enemy of any distance runner
- first and most simple step in the downward spiral
* is the loss of body water in excess of intake
- total body water
* is the main concern when traveler's diarrhea climbs on board, but it can be prevented
- danger with any diarrhea
- major cause of problems large and small on backpacking trips
* is the most common death of chameleons in captivity
- dangerous thing that can happen with burn victims
- serious complication right after hatching
* is the number one cause of muscle tears and strains
- reason for salt cravings
* is the primary cause of morbidity and mortality from the diarrheal disease
- danger with diarrhea
- principal cause of fatalities in Death Valley
- process of restoring liquid to dried food
* is the removal of a water molecule, which is aided by a dehydratase
- reverse of the hydration reaction of alkenes
- thought to be one of the triggers of premature labor
- treated by replacing electrolytes and fluids and controlling vomiting and diarrhea
* is treated with fluids given intravenously
- oral or intravenous fluids
- salt and fluids
- uncommon after toddler years
- usually a major factor in their depleted condition
- very frequent
* is very serious for a rat
- in hamsters because they are so tiny
* key risk factor for developing kidney stones.
* kills pups in a hurry
- three million children every year
* knows no season and can be a risk in hot or cool weather.
* lack of fluid intake.
* leading cause of kidney stones...
* leads patients to lapse into comas and die peacefully.
* leads to asthma attack
- cramps, muscle strains and spasms
- irreversible kidney damage
- lethargy and headaches
- pulled muscles, cramps, very slow recovery times, and lactic acid buildup
* leaves teeth and bone fragments, which are pulverized to the consistency of coarse sand.
* loss of body fluids, which are made up of water and salts.
* lowers the brain electrolyte level which can cause short-term memory loss.
* main threat from heat stress.
* major cause of confusion and other medical problems in older people
- muscle spasms
- contributing factor to heat related injuries
- health risk when exercising outdoors, and high altitudes only make it worse
- implication of diarrhea
* major source of next-morning discomfort
- performance decrease while climbing
- threat in the cold, dry climate
- winter risk
* makes all of the symptoms of jet lag worse
- allergy symptoms even worse
- urine more concentrated and therefore more likely to produce stones
* means more painful contractions and slower labor.
* occasionally occurs in children.
* occurs by various means
- easily, especially in children with diarrhoea
- long before the swimmer actually feels thirsty
* occurs more readily because older people frequently have less of a sense of thirst
- much quicker than starvation
- naturally in warm climates, and in cold climates, it is called freeze drying
- over a few days, leading to muscle breakdown and multiple organ failure
- very easily during the winter, especially under plastic
* occurs when a kitten either has insufficient fluid intake or excessive fluid loss
- children lose more fluid than they take in
* occurs when the body loses more fluid than it is able to take in
- fluids than it takes in
- water more quickly than it is replaced
- body's fluid stores drop too low
- patient loses more liquid than they can take in
- too much fluid is lost from the body
* often causes bad breath, especially first thing in the morning
- spells death for a hamster
* places the patient at risk for impaired skin integrity.
* plays a major role in bringing on migraines.
* potentially serious complication of stomach flu.
* precursor to hypothermia.
* predisposing condition for frostbite and hypothermia.
* prevents cactus cells from bursting when they freeze.
* problem because creatine pulls water into muscle cells
- symptoms and can be expressed as a fraction of total body water deficit
* profoundly reduces thermoregulatory and physical capacity.
* promotes jet lag.
* quickly causes loss of attentiveness and mental energy.
* real danger for people who are ill or disabled, and it can easily be avoided
- health risk, but consumers can protect themselves by drinking plenty of water
- risk and can result in death or serious injury
* reduces kidney function and can lead to uric acid build-up
- skin blood flow
- the ability to sustain exercise for longer than a minute or two
* removes all the moisture.
- immediate fluid replacement by mouth or intravenously
- the presence of an acid and the application of heat
* resulting from a fever causes the cells to sickle even more.
* results from excessive water loss
- inadequate replacement of lost body fluids
* results in damage
* risk factor for salivary gland disease.
* selectively increases dopamine synthesis in tuberohypophyseal dopaminergic neurons.
* serious condition in babies and young children
- hazard in desert regions
- medical condition that often requires hospitalization
* serious problem for anyone exerting effort
- infants and toddlers with decreased fluid intake
- that can occur within a day or two if water is unavailable
* serious, and life-threatening condition.
* sets in, and shock and even death can occur.
* severely limits athletic performance.
* significant risk during hibernation.
* silent problem that affects many lives.
* slows the digestive process.
* sometimes leads to death.
* stresses the gland.
* tends to increase postoperative pain and also increases the chance of bleeding.
* threatens life.
* translates into a lowered blood volume or less warm blood circulating.
* triggers responses.
* very serious condition, especially in small children.
* weakens the flow of lymph in the system and makes the body less resistant to infection. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | dryness | dehydration:
Chronic dehydration
* can cause symptoms that mimic disease.
* takes the greatest toll on kidney function.
* taxes the kidneys, and can contribute to kidney failure at fairly young ages.
Excessive dehydration
* can be life-threatening.
* requires a knife or other sharp instrument to remove.
Mild dehydration
* Most mild dehydration affects performance
- impairs cognitive functions
- produces sensation
* can cause sluggishness, dry and itchy skin, headaches, indigestion, constipation
- result in fatigue
* is common and is usually easily reversed by drinking lots of fluids
- the most common catalyst
- when there fluid loss of five percent from the body
Rapid dehydration
* causes mechanical injuries to the protoplasm after water loss.
* is the next stage in diabetic hyperosmolarity.
Serious dehydration
* can cause dizziness, disorientation, headaches, sweating and lethargy.
* is something to avoid, it is dangerous and in some cases can mean death.<|endoftext|>### condition | dryness | dehydration:
Severe dehydration
* can affect blood pressure, circulation, digestion and kidney function
- also result in kidney failure
* can cause death
- dizziness, headaches, nausea and a rapid heartbeat
- serious heat illnesses
- the body to go into shock and is potentially fatal
* can lead to death
- heat illness, heat stroke and even death
- hospitalization and even death
- kidney and circulation problems
- organ failure and even coma if left untreated
- shock and death
* is also life threatening
- the primary cause of morbidity and mortality
* leads to low blood pressure, loss of consciousness, and eventually deep coma. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | dryness:
Drought
* Most drought affects crops
- environments
- growth
- regions
- trees
* Most drought causes starvation
- widespread starvation
- wildfires
* Most drought creates conditions
- disasters
* Most drought creates environmental conditions
* Most drought destroys habitats
- wildlife habitats
- has effects
* Most drought increases erosion
- wind erosion
* Most drought kills seedlings
- leads to extinction
- occurs in regions
* Most drought weakens seedlings
* Some drought affects biomass
- peanuts
- plant biomass
- total biomass
* Some drought causes crops
- other crops
- destroys food sources
- kills animals
* Some drought lasts for many years
- persists for years
* accompany both south winds and north winds.
* affect everyone
- insurance only through the impact of land subsidence on buildings
- the growth and productivity of coconuts and breadfruit
- their numbers by killing the plants on which they browse
* affects all parts of our environment and our communities
- areas
- human health as well
- humans, animals and plants
- the salinity, clarity, and nutrient influx of estuaries
- water levels for use by industry, agriculture and individual consumers
* also bring increased problems with insects and diseases to forests and reduce growth.
* alter with floods to take a huge toll of human lives.
* appears to be a major factor causing plants and certain weeds to store nitrate
- an important factor favouring population increases of glassy cutworm
* are a long time with no rain
- another devastating type of climate extreme
- caused by a depletion of precipitation over time
- common and can be very long
* are common in New Mexico
- arid and semiarid lands
- cyclic in the State
- dangerous to nature
- disasters on a slow fuse
- exceptional meteorological events
- recurrent climatic phenomenon
- widespread in India, Southeast Asia, and especially Australia
* become severe if several months pass without significant precipitation.
* bring hardships to the both rural and urban communities.
* brings starvation.
* can actually result in later flooding
- affect the abundance of natural bear food
- aggravate or accentuate the diseased condition of a plant
* can also make it easier for diseases or predators to decimate wildlife populations
- occur in places such as Australia, Indonesia, and southern Africa
* can be just as severe as rainfall intensities
- meteorological, agricultural, hydrological, or socioeconomical
- bring danger to cattle
- happen just about anywhere in Australia, but their severity is relative
- impact an island over the long term, rather than immediately
- lead to wildfires that burn vast areas of forest
* cans have impact
- serious impact
* cause changes to ecosystems
- famines and floods cause death and disease
* causes a desire to water plants
- damage
- famine, which contributes to decentralization and unrest
- low soil moisture levels, creating ultra-dry brush that catches fires easily
- plants to shut down their growth process
- reductions
- shortages of local food production
- the water table to drop, heavy rains cause it to rise
* changes patterns
- weather patterns
* continue to occur over many parts of the globe in varying degrees of severity and duration.
- ideal conditions
* decreases growth, producing a narrower ring
- the availability and abundance of the natural food supply
* deeply affects the land, water, and people of the Southwest.
* encourage locusts and rodents, while floods foster fungi and mosquitoes.
* exacerbate tensions over land and water use.
* exacerbates the problem of ensuring a sustainable yield of potable water.
* have at least two direct impacts on farmers and ranchers.
* historically occur in the region in cycles.
* impacts the frequency and the severity of forest fires by setting up ideal fire conditions.
* increase the potential for wildland fires.
- nitrate concentration in plants
* increases the chance for high levels of prussic acid in plants
- of winterkill by reducing the volume of water in the lake
- rate of natural die-off of plant roots
* induces oxidative stress in pea plants.
* is capable of last years
- most severe in Florida
- natural hazards
- probably the most important factor controlling crop yield worldwide
- time periods
* kills mature trees
* occur every few years and with that comes malnutrition
- frequently
- from time to time and sometimes result in famine
* occur in Indonesia, Australia, and Africa
- other, normally moist areas
- regularly in the habitats occupied by the southern hairy-nosed wombat
- when a long period passes without substantial rainfall
* occurs in Indonesia, the Philippines and Australia
- when transpiration exceeds the plant's ability to supply water through the roots
* often results in a culling of older and infirm horses
- mass displacements of population
- stalks trees with little if any notice Falling limbs came first
* portends dangerous and long fire seasons throughout much of the United States.
* poses serious hazards to human and wildlife populations in many parts of the world.
* produces famine and disease.
* recur frequently and cause cyclic changes in the flora and fauna of the region.
* reduce or destroy the maize crop.
* reduces habitat quality
* refers to a lack of precipitation over an extended time period.
* regenerates the soil, producing healthier wetlands once the region again becomes wet.
* results in loss reductions
* still happen, and when they do, babies as well as adults die.
* stresses pearl millet, causing nitrate levels to be higher than normal.
* take their toll on trees.
* tend to do their worst on land that is already arid, and where societies are on the margin
- drive communities apart
* threatens both crop and livestock production.
* usually take a season or more to develop.
* vary in length and intensity, and either factor can have a devastating economic impact.
+ Desertification, Causes: Environmental issues
* The distribution of rainfall in the surrounding area of desert is uneven. From 1970 onwards, the world's weather has been changing. There has been less rain, and the world is becoming more dry. Drought affects the area surrounding. As a result, many crops and animals have died. There is no vegetation to protect the soil. The topsoil is removed by sudden flash floods or strong wind. This makes the soil erode and the desert spread towards the surrounding area.
+ Sunspot, Their effect on Earth: Weather :: Solar System :: Astrophysics
* Sunspots are cooler than the rest of the sun, but many scientists think that when there are a lot of sunspots, the sun actually gets 'hotter'. This affects the weather here on Earth, and also radio reception. Without sunspots the earth would probably be cooler. In the same way, if there were too many sunspots, the earth would get really hot, and there would not be a lot of rain. This would make lots of on the Earth. Droughts are a long time with no rain. People need rain to live. The food we eat can not grow without a lot of rain. A drought can be a very dangerous thing. The sunspots help keep Earth the right temperature. This is cold when compared to other areas on the surface of sun.
+ Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa National Park, Climate and seasons: National parks in Australia :: Protected areas of the Northern Territory :: Pitjantjatjara
* Rainfall is usually low, very hard to predict. Climate statistics for Australian locations'. Australian Government, Bureau of Meteorology. Retrieved 16 March 2012. Rain is most common between November and March. Droughts are common and can be very long. The most rain recorded in one year was in 1974. The least amount was in 1965. The year 1965 was also the end of the longest drought that has been recorded here, which lasted six and a half years. They are very important for refilling the groundwater supply and can put a lot of life into the ecosystems. The last major rainfall was in 2009, which got of rain. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | dryness | drought:
Agricultural drought
* are droughts that affect crop production or the ecology of the range.
* happens after meteorological drought but before hydrological drought.
* refers to factors related to irrigation and soil moisture.
Devastate drought
* Most devastate drought increases wind erosion.
* affects areas.
* increases erosion
Occasional drought
* can reduce the levels of water supplies necessitating rationing by lock-off.
* normal, recurrent feature of virtually every climate in the United States.
Prolong drought
* Most prolong drought affects crops.
* cans have impact
- serious impact
Prolonged drought
* can also adversely affect insect numbers.
* causes leaves to drop, but recovers with new water.
Severe drought
* Some severe drought causes crops.
* affects regions.
* can cause millions of dollars in losses to farmers
- kill jack pine seedlings
- render areas too low in food or water for occupation
* coupled with high winds and low humidity make for large fires.
* exists in much of the Midwest.
* is probably the most common cause of prussic acid poisoning.
* kill crops, shrink lakes, and dry topsoil until it is carried away by the wind.<|endoftext|>### condition | dryness:
Dry mouth
* allows fungus and bacteria to grow.
* can affect oral health by adding to tooth decay and infection.
* can also make it difficult to eat, speak, or swallow
- hard to wear dentures
* can cause increased plaque buildup, which increases the risk for periodontal disease
- soreness, ulcers, infections, and tooth decay
- make swallowing food difficult
- result in rampant tooth decay, mouth lesions and pain, and serious digestive problems
- sometimes lead to other problems, such as salivary gland infections
* caused by Sjogrens can also cause tooth decay.
* is another problem faced by many older adults
- caused by medications
- dryness
- natural during sleep
* is the last outward sign of extreme dehydration
- most frequent side effect of tolterodine therapy
- very LAST sign of dehydration
* occurs in a small number of patients
- when the flow of saliva decreases
* particular problem with long term use of heterocyclics.
* puts people at high risk for cavity formation and yeast infection.
* symptom that appears to be unrelated to hydration state.
Ocular dryness
* can lead to chronic keratoconjunctivitis and corneal ulcers.
* responds to the use of artificial tears applied every one to three hours.
Vaginal dryness
* can also cause painful sex
- have a variety of causes
- play a role in the cause of decreased libido
* is accompanied by itching
- also common during and after menopause
- probably a result of the swelling mentioned above
* major symptom in many women.
* normal phenomenon associated with menopause.
* very common complaint of women, especially as they approach menopause.
Ecological condition
* Most ecological conditions affect survival.
* Some ecological conditions promote newborn survival
Ecological niche
* Live in cold, wet climate.
* Some ecological niches become predation.
Economic condition
* Most economic conditions change over time.
* appear to be related to the rate of violent crime.
* are conditions
- one of the important factors determining the human rights situation
- responsible for poor health in children
* support the cultural values of which influence family size.<|endoftext|>### condition | economic condition:
Full employment
* exists when only frictional and structural unemployment exist.
* is an economic condition
- described as the absence of involuntary unemployment
- key to alleviate poverty and to strengthening social order
* is the level of frictional and structural unemployment
- working person's best friend
* means that they are all getting an income and are thus able to pay taxes.
* natural consequence of an economy successfully seeking profit.
* provides workers with significant power over their wages and conditions of work. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | economic condition:
Recession
* Most recessions involve a tangle of forces
- last only a year or two before good times return
* affects all sectors of the economy.
* are albums
- an inevitable, and ultimately healthy, part of the normal business cycle
- economic conditions
- largely a result of a letup in that consumer demand
- low probability, they are rare and they happen for numbers of different reasons
* are natural events that purge excesses
- in the early years of a major technology shift
- part of a capitalist economy
- processions
* are, therefore, macroeconomic in nature.
* causes people to open their minds to gaining alternative sources of income.
* come in many shapes and sizes.
- caused by continuous operation at high power and RPM settings
- expressed in alternating planes of light and shadow
* occur about one year in four
- with unpredictable frequency and duration
* start at the peak of a business cycle and end at the trough
- in people's heads
* usually occur when consumers stop spending, which then drives down income growth.
Shakeout
* are economic conditions.
* is an economic condition
Emotional condition
* affect physical health.
* have effects.
Emptiness
* causes fear and confusion.
* does have power.
* gives birth to form.
* is connection
- created by forms
- hunger
- located in space
* refers to the ultimate nature of all things.<|endoftext|>### condition | emptiness:
Vacancy
* Vacancies also allow for impurity atoms to exist in a lattice, which can change material properties.
* Vacancies are defects arising when a lattice site is mising an atom
- emptiness
- point defects in crystalline materials
- situations
* Vacancies can mean the underutilization of plant and equipment
- often be responsible for creep and other failure mechanisms at higher temperatures
- occur as a result of superannuations, resignations and death, among other reasons
* is emptiness | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Environmental condition
* Most environmental conditions affect behavior
- evaporation
- gene expression
- survival
- water evaporation
* Most environmental conditions are experienced by individuals
- mothers
- change over time
* Most environmental conditions exist in countries
- other countries
- require excretion
* Some environmental conditions affect ability
- fitnesses
- pathogen replication
- kill plants
- lead to death
- limit crop production
- stimulate broodiness
* add to the irritation of a toxicant.
* affect areas
- development
- performance
- the survival and behaviour of plants and animals
* are conditions
- critical in determining the frequency of indirect transmission
- extremely important in disease development
- factors in fatigue and illness
- important for the development of the disease
- one of the factors contributing to pesticide spray drift
* are the key factor in hybrid-herbicide interactions
- variety-herbicide interactions
* become more hospitable for humans and larger mammals.
* can affect grain composition
- group size and composition
- the yield of sugar
* can cause two major problems with regard to evaporation
- waste
- influence reaction rate and therefore how fast pesticides break down
- modify the appearance of plants
* change in time and space
* determine migration behavior
- variation
- which mode of nutrition they use
* enable certain species of plants and animals to colonize habitat borders.
* have a direct correlation on public health issues and the economy.
* have an impact on many living organisms
- important influence on the development of spider mite populations
- major effects on the health, opportunity, and security of poor people
- more influence on watering than any other factor
* impact health.
* influence life history strategies
- the process of flowering and setting of pods
* limit growth.
* permit the maintenance and transfer of pathogenic foodborne microorganisms.
* play a key role in estimating stock abundance
- large role in the value of a trait
- an important role in the establishment of many natural enemies
* promote development.
* require enhance excretion<|endoftext|>### condition:
Erection
* are a reaction to a sexual signal
- structures
- the result of a neurovascular event triggered by cognitive or tactile stimulation
* begins when a man receives sensory and mental stimulation.
* begins with sensory and mental stimulation
- or mental stimulation, or both
* bridge that connects people.
* demonstrate that the nerves to the penis are normal.
* is caused during arousal by more blood flowing into the penis than flows out
- construction
- essentially a vascular phenomenon which is under neural control
- in with teens love having sex
* occur in males of all ages, including babies and old men
- response to stimulation
- when the penis gets stiff and hard - sometimes for no reason
* occurs after a period or arousal
- due to the action of specific nerves known as the nervi erigentes
- when pellet is absorbed
* occurs when the blood flow to the penis increases when a man becomes sexually aroused
- spongy tissues of the penis are engorged with blood
* parasympathetic function.
* start in the mind.
### condition | erection:
Frequent erection
* Frequent Erections Staying sexually active can help prevent impotence.
* stimulate blood flow to the penis.
Penile erection
* involves the relaxation of smooth muscle in the corpus cavernosum.
* is primarily a vascular event.
External condition
* are the accidents of life.
* can affect the speed or rate and direction of change in matter.
Extreme condition
* Most extreme conditions cause events.
* Some extreme conditions cause death
- disasters
- natural disasters | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Eye condition
* Many eye conditions require more pharmaceutical intervention than topical medicine can provide.
* Some eye conditions cause general loss across the whole visual field
- vary with general health
Fatal condition
* Most fatal conditions associate with infection.
* Some fatal conditions occur in divers
- rabbits
Favorable condition
* lead to growth
- population growth
* lead to rapid growth<|endoftext|>### condition:
Fibrosis
* also affects the lungs.
* begins by being laid down around blood vessels and around endometrial glands.
* begins, plaque grows and begins to obstruct blood flow.
* can lead to severe, irreversible airway obstruction
- obliterate the usual anatomical planes
* causes hardening or stiffening of tissues in the skin, joints, and internal organs
- retraction of the mesentery
- the lungs to stiffen, making it difficult to breathe
* decreases elasticity of the lung.
* is accompanied with inflammation.
* is common in and around early lesions
- to several chronic liver diseases, as it sign of hepatic injury
- common, but cirrhosis is rare
- increased in the dermis
- medical diagnosises
- often an important, and sometimes necessary component of the repair process
- part of pneumoconiosis
- pathology
- prominent as healing occurs
- scar tissue that forms as a result of persistent inflammation in the liver
* is seen as healing takes place
- scar formation in the patient s liver
* is the accumulation of synthesized collagen in tissue
- thick, rigid tissue in response to chronic inflammation
- deleterious but variable consequence of chronic inflammation
- deposition of connective tissue in internal organs
- growth of scar tissue due to infection, inflammation, injury, or even healing
- process that replaces lost parenchymal tissue, resulting in scar formation
* leads to the development of portal hypertension.
* major obstacle to all types of gene therapy in muscle disease.
* occurs variably in some areas of the tumor.
* process that follows chronic inflammation in the progression of scleroderma
* rare but serious adverse effect.
* reduces the efficiency of the lung and, hence, strains the heart.
* result of the natural reparative process.
* spreads throughout the stratum compactum and stratum spongiosum.
* then occurs and is followed by traction and detachment of the retina. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | fibrosis:
Cystic fibrosis
* Some cystic fibrosis causes problems.
* affects children of both sexes.
* affects specific cell type in cystic fibrosis
- sweat gland secretory coil
* affects the cells that produce mucus, sweat and digestive juices
- entire body
- mucus and sweat glands of the body and is caused by a defective gene
* can lead to excessive loss of potassium due to loss in sweat.
* chronic illness involving many body organs.
* common cause of chronic pancreatitis in children
- genetic disorder in the Caucasian population
* complex, chronic disease.
* condition in which thick mucus is formed in the lungs and breathing passages.
* devastating genetic disease common in people of north- European descent.
* failure in the chloride channels.
* fatal, congenital lung disease.
* genetic defect that causes excessive mucus production that clogs the airways.
* genetic disease that affects the respiratory and digestive systems
- causes a constant thick mucous in the respiratory system
- where the child receives a mutant gene from each parent
- disorder caused by a recessive allele at a single gene
* genetic disorder that fills the lungs with mucus
- results in a mutated chloride ion channel
- which is caused by a recessive allele
* has a parallel in resistance to cholera in the population
- variety of symptoms
* hereditary disorder of the lungs and digestive system.
* is an autosomal recessive disorder that affects multiple organs.
* is an example of a genetic disease
* is an example of an advantageous mutation
- inherited disease that is caused by a mutation on a gene
- incurable disease
* is an inherited condition
- disease affecting many organs
* is an inherited disease that affects the entire body
- the respiratory and digestivesystems
- another genetic disease being tested for
* is caused by a defective gene inherited by offspring from each parent
- that affects multiple aspects of cellular function
- faulty transferal of salt from within organs and their outer surfaces
- one faulty gene
- primarily by a defective chloride-channel gene
- characterized by abnormally thick mucous that clogs the lungs
- deemed the most common fatal genetic disease in the United States today
* is diagnosed by testing sweat and by testing lung or pancreas function
- with a sweat test, which measures the amount of salt in perspiration
- equally common in boys and girls
- genetic conditions
- illnesses
* is inherited as a simple recessive
- an autosomal recessive trait
- just one of the hundreds of genetic birth defects that occur each year
- most common in the Caucasian population
- no longer only a children's disease
- one disease that researchers are trying to cure through gene therapy
* is one of the best understood human genetic diseases
- genetic diseases for which gene therapy has been developed
* is one of the most common autosomal recessive disorders in the United States
- genetic diseases in Caucasian populations
- inherited single gene disorders in Caucasians
- of the serious inherited disorders present in children
* is the deadliest genetic disease in the u-s
- first genetic disorder discussed
- leading genetic killer in the United States
* is the most common fatal genetic disease among white children
- illness among whites
- hereditary disease in the United States
- inherited disease in Caucasians
- inherited disease in the U.S. white population
* is the most common lethal genetic disease in the United States
- hereditary disorder affecting children and young adults
- recessive disease in the caucasian population
- severe inherited disease in whites
- common, fatal genetic disease in the United States
- frequent lethal genetic disease of childhood
* is the number one genetic killer of children and young adults in the United States
* life-threatening condition
* lung disease caused by a mutant gene.
* occurs in all ethnic groups
- most commonly among people of Northern European descent
- when both genes in the pair have a mutation
* recessive autosomal trait.
* serious disease which is normally fatal in early adulthood.
* severe disorder of the lungs and digestive system.
* takes a toll on families as well.
+ Cystic fibrosis, What CF does to the body: Genetic conditions :: Respiratory Care
* Cystic fibrosis affects the entire body. Overall the body has trouble moving salt to the parts of the body that need it. Since the body has trouble moving salt, it piles up in places it is not supposed to like the lungs, stomach and intestines. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | fibrosis:
Liver fibrosis
* is oftern the forerunner of cirrhosis
- usually the result of cirrhosis
* represents the uniform response of liver to toxic, infectious or metabolic agents.
Lung fibrosis
* can develop if paraquat is swallowed or inhaled.
* causes early impairment in gas exchange leading to exertional dyspnea.
* is also common
- characterized by fibroblast hyperplasia
- consistent with relatively short-term high exposure rate in animal experiments
Myelofibrosis
* bone marrow disorder in which fibroblasts replace normal elements of the marrow.
* difficult diagnosis to make.
* is fibrosis
Pulmonary fibrosis
* can lead to prolonged mechanical ventilation and lung dysfunction.
* causes a cystic appearance, or honeycombing, within the lungs.
* complicated, chronic illness that can derive from many different causes.
* devastating disease, like cancer, with a high mortality rate.
* is rare
- the abnormal formation of fiberlike scar tissue in the lungs
* occurs when the thin layer of tissue around the lung's alveoli are damaged.
### condition | financial condition:
Insolvency
* Insolvencies are financial conditions.
* is the inability to pay debts.
* problem which can and does affect every type of business.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Flatulence
* are recorded in men and women sensitive to spirulina.
* common symptom of giardiasis.
* is caused when bacteria in the digestive tract break down food items producing gas
- gas created through bacterial action in the bowel and passed rectally
* is the passage of air or gas from the intestines through the rectum
- term given to excessive passing wind
* normal physical activity and happens in every person, especially after a heavy meal.
* occurs in people during stressful situations.
* serious problem with legumes.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Genetic condition
* Most genetic conditions affect people
- run in families
* Some genetic conditions affect biology
- height
- melanocyte biology
* Some genetic conditions are caused by mutations in a single gene
- inherited or passed down in families
- more common in individuals from specific ethnic groups
- cause stature
* are a problem in some dogs, particularly purebreeds
- chronic conditions
- rare
- universal
* can greatly increase the risk of cancer.
* impact individuals at all stages of life.
Grow condition
* influence choices.
* lead to growth.
Growth condition
* require special treatments.
* result in production.
Habitat condition
* affect detection.
* are physical and chemical variables that occur in aquatic habitat.
* influence the course of many wildlife diseases. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Hallucination
* Most hallucinations involve the total person physical, mental, and spiritual.
* Seek emergency treatment.
* Some hallucination is caused by lack.
* A 'hallucination' is seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling or feeling things that do not really exist. Usually people have to be awake and conscious to have hallucinations. That way, a person who sees or hears something that is not really there has a hallucination. Hallucinations are different from dreams. When people dream they are not awake. Hallucinations are also different from illusions. Illusions are based on real perceptions, which are distorted or interpreted in a wrong way.
* are a prominent and disabling symptom of schizophrenia.
* are also common
- common with schizophrenics
- distortions of the senses
* are false perceptions or unreal apparition
- that occur in the absence of an appropriate stimulus
- visual, auditory, olfactory, or tactile perceptions
- internal impulses projected onto images in the real world
- mainly auditory
- more common at higher doses
- most commonly auditory or visual, but can occur in any sensory modality
- perceptions that occur without connection to an appropriate source
- perceptual experiences that occur without sensory input
- rare and are only seen at high doses
- subjective and individual
- visual and auditory
- what the doctors call it
- when someone sees, hears, smells or feels something that isn t really there
* arise from over stimulation, or over-excitation, of certain regions of the brain.
* associated with bromocriptine appear to be dose-dependent
- ropinirole appears to be dose-dependent
* can affect all of a person 's senses.
* can also be frightening
* can be auditory, olfactory, visual, or tactile
- frightening to the person and the caregiver
- in any of the senses, but hearing voices is the most common hallucination
- powerful, but can be distinguished from reality
* can occur at any time during the course of treatment
- in all sensory modalities, but visual hallucinations are most common
* come to life.
* emerge from an imbalance of self-monitoring and reality modelling.
* frequently occur with dementia.
* generally have no objective reality
- occur to people who are imaginative and of a nervous make up
* increase the chaos.
* indicate an unwanted influence on the brain.
* is delusion
- diseases
- objects
- pathological
- symptoms
- the truth our graves are dug with
* mental condition
* occur either in wakefulness or in the transition between sleep and wakefulness
- in isolation with no other symptomatology
- involving the senses of sight, sound, and touch
- less frequently in the elderly than in middle-aged persons
- only at particular times and places and are associated with the events
* refer to internal stimuli that have no basis in external reality.
* respond to a lessening of stress and an increase of antipsychotic medication.
* usually result from drugs or mental disorders.
+ Hallucination, What are the different types of hallucinations?: Psychology :: Health
* Hallucinations can affect all of a person's senses. People with the mental illness of schizophrenia may hear sounds or voices that are not really there. People with certain mental illnesses may also have hallucinations in which they see a person or thing which is not really there. People are less likely to have hallucinations in which they smell or touch something that is not really there. Certain forms of epilepsy can cause hallucinations. Finally, hallucinations can be the result of certain substances taken or of certain physical constellations.
### condition | hallucination:
Auditory hallucination
* are a common symptom of schizophrenia
- most common
- usually a symptom of schizophrenia
* can be frightening, or pleasant.
* is hallucination. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | hallucination:
Hypnagogic hallucination
* are the type usually associated with narcolepsy.
* occur just before falling asleep
- when falling asleep
Hypnogogic hallucination
* are dream-like thoughts that occur at sleep onset.
* can also be another sign of restless sleep
- occur several times a week to several times a day
* occur while falling asleep, and hypnopompic hallucinations upon awakening.
Visual hallucination
* are abnormal
- less common
- most notable in low light
* can be frightening, or pleasant.
* happen less often.
* is hallucination.
Hazardous condition
* Most hazardous conditions develop over time.
* can occur when blood contains either too little or too much glucose.
* exist in most workplaces.
Health condition
* affect children
- people
* have effects
- side effects
* require attention
- medical attention
Heart condition
* Most heart conditions have few different causes.
* Some heart conditions cause death
- sudden death
* are the most common physical symptoms.
* have causes | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Hibernation
* Are active all winter.
* Most hibernation affects dormouses
- lasts for months
* Most hibernation occurs in mammals
- responses
* Some hibernation occurs in hollow trees
* attempts by domesticated hedgehogs can be serious or fatal.
* begins in the fall.
* common response to the cold winter of temperate climates.
* cuts down on the energy needed to stay alive.
* depends on temperature, species and abundance of food.
* differs from species to species.
* dormant sleep-like state.
* enables animals to survive long periods of cold.
* ends in the spring, and mating takes place soon afterwards.
* form of adaptation where the animal s metabolism slows down to very low levels
* great strategy that enables animals to conserve energy when food is scarce.
* happens when gopher tortoises metabolism runs low.
* helps animals survive the changing seasons.
* induces expression of moesin in intestinal epithelial cells.
* is akin to a period of deep sleep.
* is an adaptation that helps black bears survive the winter
- inactive state that some animals go into during cold weather to survive
- associated with a. b. c. d. circadian rhythms
* is by nearly full-grown caterpillars
- the third-stage caterpillars
- caused by cold, winter conditions
- clearly a strategy to promote over-winter survival
- controlled by an internal clock
- dictated by climatic conditions and to a species trait
- dormancy
- like a very deep sleep
- more than just sleep
- much like the daily burrowing activities of the lizard
- retirement
- suggested by the seasonal accumulation of fat
- the process that occurs in mammals such as birds during the winter
* is the way bears adapt to nature, and survive the harsh winter weather
- conserve energy through the season when their food supply disappears
- used by many organisms that remain hypothermic for days or weeks or months
- usually a safe way to pass the cold winter
* is when an animal goes into a state of low metabolism due to extreme cold
- animals slow down for the winter and fall into a sleep-like state
- where the name dormouse comes from
* is, A state similar to sleep in which some animals pass the winter.
* key adaptation of the hedgehog during winter.
- till the return of spring, when they wake back in a bony-skinny shape
* needs vary according to the type of turtle.
* occurs at the larval stage
- during winter months
- for about seven months
* occurs in egg stage
- members of almost every type of mammal
- on land and occasionally in streams and springs
- when an animal remains inactive to save energy through the harsh winter
* often takes place in large groups.
* path of evolution that was taken by most animals to survive harsh winters.
* period of rest lasting several months.
* process of deep comatose sleep.
* provides a means for an animal to conserve resources when food is scarce.
* reduces the bear's energy consumption at a time when food is scarce.
* refers to the dormant state some animals go into to survive the winter.
* roosts in caves or mines.
* seems to be less complete in prairie dogs than in true ground squirrels.
* sleep-like state that lasts for extended time periods
* state of inactivity and metabolic depression in endotherms
- reduced metabolic activity during the winter
* takes place in winter, and estivation takes place in summer
* technique that animals have developed in order to adapt to harsh climates.
* too behavioural adaptation for surviving harsh winters.
* turns off all power, thus conserving battery life.
* usually ends earlier in warmer, more southern regions
- takes place in the fall when they retreat to any shelter they can find
* way for animals adapt to the changing climate
- to avoid many of the stresses of winter
+ Dormouse, Characteristics, Hibernation
* Hibernation is where the name dormouse comes from. The sleepy behaviour of the Dormouse character in Lewis Carroll's 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' also shows this trait. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | hibernation:
True hibernation
* Most true hibernation affects dormouses.
* entails a state of deep sleep with greatly reduced metabolism. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Hunger
* Most hunger accompanies poverty.
* Most hunger causes health problems
- significant health problems
* Some hunger is caused by drought
- prolong drought
* affects everyone and everyone can affect hunger
- nearly one-seventh of the world's population, and is inexpensively averted
- the young and old, men and women, boys and girls equally
* afflicts one out of seven people on Earth.
* always brings with it significant costs to the individuals it touches and to all of society.
* can contribute to temper tantrums
- kill just as well as a bullet
* causes a desire to buys
- cooks
- eats
- fish
- discomfort
- eating
* causes significant health problems
- starvation
* comes in many forms.
* component in more than half of the deaths of the world's children.
* constraint to their economic and social development.
* continues to be a pervasive problem in the United States
- impact our health, our children and our workforce
* creates a very strong physiological drive to eat.
* cry that needs to be answered.
* desire for food and is normal.
* diminishes adults' health and ability to concentrate as well
- concentration as well
* dissipates quickly, followed by withering and depression.
* drives the chicks into the ocean in search of food.
* exists because of inequitable and inadequate distribution of food.
* exists in Southwestern Pennsylvania
- rural areas as well as in urban areas
- virtually every corner of the world
- year round
* factor that is influenced in part by water temp and available forage.
* feeds on the quantity.
* folds are another sign of malnutrition.
* follows war, as crops are ruined, food reserves are looted, and supply lines are cut off.
* forces people to be what they never thought they'd become.
* form of pain which disappears in the extrem- ity of starvation.
* fuels conflict and crime, reduces productivity and shortens life span.
* governs everywhere.
* harms a child's ability to learn.
* healthy sign.
* hurts lives and the life of the community as well.
* increases in parallel.
* indicates the households' absolute poverty.
* interferes with sleep.
* involves more than food.
* is also a fact of life for many of the nation's older citizens.
* is an annual statewide initiative to raise funds to feed the hungry in Arizona
- effect of poverty and poverty is largely a political issue
- inevitable outcome when war disrupts food production
- insult to the fundamental values of the international community
- overriding factor of judgement in many cases
- as much a deterrant to falling asleep as is having a heavy meal
- chemical affinity, the desire inherent in atoms for one another
- contest between rich countries and poor countries
- desperate and powerless, without reason or strength
- endemic and on the rise in Africa
- evil, and it is worse when hunger and loss of hope or faith to take action go together
- feelings
* is felt by a slave and hunger is felt by a king
- only in the present
- found even amidst affluence, and in cities as well as in rural areas
- human made - created out of plenty
- human-made
- humanity's oldest and deadliest enemy
* is more important than sleep
- than just food
- no stranger to the needy people in many parts of the world
- often the result of direct political decisions
- one example of motivation which creates the desire to eat
* is one of a set of seemingly intractable global issues
- our basic appetites, and greed resulting in gluttony is one of our basic sins
- the most powerful urges that humans experience
- overwhelmingly a problem attributed to human endeavor, however
- part of life and they accept it
- present in low-income locations within the States
- rampant in the developing world
- rape, molestation, alcoholism, dowry, female infanticide and feticide
- sensation
- sometimes just thirst in disguise
* is still rampant but it often remains invisible
- the world's number one killer of people
- strongly related to poverty and other economic factors
- such a basic and persistent state that there is no sense trying to overcome it
* is the body's signal that it needs food
- to take in food
- constant corrosive companion of millions
- craving for food that is associated with objective sensations
- direct result of social and economic causes
* is the first threshold to cross in eradicating poverty
- on the way out of poverty
- greatest disease
- monitor image of appetite, the drive to get food
* is the most basic indicator of economic distress
- influential disease
- severe level of food insecurity
- mother of impatience and anger
- quiet, forgotten, daily catastrophe
* is the result of a series of political and economic decisions
- economic, social and political decisions
- overpopulation
- same, no matter where the people are
- supreme disease
* is what makes diets fail
- many people suffered from
- widespread in India
* kills people's incentive, sapping their strength, both physically and emotionally.
* leads to desperation.
* limits people s ability to learn and be productive.
* major consequence of poverty
- constraint on human development and the realization of human rights
- problem in the wake of the economic crisis
* makes people more likely to splurge and overeat later.
* manifests itself in subtle ways.
* natural desire of a living being.
* often disappears after a day or two
- leads to overeating
* pains because hunger kills.
* persists throughout the world.
* physiological response to the absence of food.
* political and social problem
* powerful and potentially painful drive
- thing
* prevents farmers from planting their fields.
* primary binge trigger, but so are uncomfortable emotional states.
* problem of production.
* puts our kids at risk of malnutrition and the lifetime of chronic illness that can result.
* rapidly growing problem in America and around the world.
* real and immediate issue in our communities
- problem in our world and even in the Charlotte community
* reduces the ability of adults to learn job skills and be productive citizens.
* related signal.
* remains a pervasive reality for millions of people in the United States, as well
- stark fact of life for large numbers of households
* represents a basic denial of the opportunity for people to develope to their potentials
* result of poverty, and there predominance of low paying jobs.
* results from severe weather, wars or government mismanagement.
* rises from extreme poverty, sometimes in conjunction with war and famine.
* risk factor for an in-flight emergency.
* seducer to enervate the population.
* serious issue, especially in America.
* significant factor in the daily lives of thousands of men, women, and children.
* silent crisis affecting families all across America.
* stimulates nourishment.
* stops when rationing stops.
* takes place after the body has used up all the excess stored in the body.
* universal symbol of deprivation and an important indicator of extreme poverty.
* very powerful physiological force that creates a strong desire to eat
- real problem facing millions of adults and children in the United States every day
* violation of human dignity.
* worldwide problem that grows with each new war, drought, flood, and earthquake
* year-round issue. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | hunger:
Chronic hunger
* derives from low real incomes.
* has an economic impact as well.
* is both a cause and effect of poverty, the paper states
- fundamentally a problem of low real incomes, in both rural and urban areas
Malnourishment
* also heightens the risk of obstructed labour.
* is hunger
- still an issue in some countries of the region
- the most common illness and prevails with orphaned pups
* leading cause of premature death in pet birds.
* leads to immune suppression.
Physical hunger
* is obvious, seen in swollen bellies borne by malnourished limbs
- to the body as spiritual hunger is to the mind or intellect
* physiological process that occurs every three to four hours.
Prolonged hunger
* can result in permanent damage to body and mind.
* has damaging effects on health, growth, and chances for survival.<|endoftext|>### condition | hunger:
Starvation
* Most starvation has effects
- indirect effects
* Most starvation leads to death
- depletion
* Some starvation affects pigs.
* affects all races in South Africa
- surviving children in an emotionally severe manner
* also take lives
- tends to increase feelings of depression, anxiety, irritability, and anger
* can also damage the heart and brain
- cause harm to vital organs such as the heart and brain
* can induce conidiation in submerged culture
- mental states such as anxiety, depression, and even psychosis
- lead to damage of vital organs and, eventually, death
- occur when millions of caterpillars literally eat all of their food supply
* causes a desire to kill
* does many horrendous things to one's body.
* following the loss of forage due to fire potential threat.
* induces cyst formation or cell mating
- two haploid cells of opposite mating type to fuse and to form a zygote
- vacuolar targeting and degradation of the tryptophan permease in yeast
* is also common among athletes who are intent on losing weight
- an extreme form of hunger
- common when populations exceed the food supply
- diseases
- extreme suffering or death from prolonged lack of food
- horrible things
- privation
- probably the commonest cause of death and occurs when seal numbers change suddenly
* is the condition usually observed
- greatest threat to subadult and older, weaker polar bears
* is the most common and obvious affliction seen in horses at auctions
- severe form of malnutrition
- presumed cause of death
- thought to be the main cause of mortality
- thus one of the greatest threats that lions face
- usually the result of faulty udders
* leads to cannibalism in more ways than one
- increased anxiety depression, obsessive rigidity and to medical dysfunction
- profound developmental changes
* major cause of death for newly hatched penguins.
* makes the flesh of the fish denser but also softer.
* means to control seizures.
* occurs because of the distorted ownership of the foodchain
- when a process never gets a chance to run
* principal cause of colony losses.
* slow and painful death.
### condition | hunger | starvation:
Oxygen starvation
* Most oxygen starvation causes damage.
* can result from a prolonged or difficult birth.
* leads to brain cells committing suicide over the following three to four days.
Hygiene
* Most hygiene helps life
- includes baths
* is medicine
### condition | hygiene:
Basic hygiene
* can help prevent meningococcal disease.
* is essential to help prevent infections and the outbreak of epidemics.
Careful hygiene
* can help reduce the spread of the infection.
* helps prevent the spread of infection at home and at work.
* is the only protection against cholera. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | hygiene:
Good hygiene
* can help prevent pinworm infections.
* helps detect lice earlier and improves control
- prevent repeat infections
* is also an important issure for practicing bodywork.
* is crucial to prevent infection for dogs, cats, and people
- preventing anal itching
* is important in preventing the spread of infection
- prevention of skin abscesses
- to prevent any disease, including influenza
- necessary to prevent reinfection
* protects it from harm, strengthens immune system, reduces physical ailments.
* reduces the spread of infective agents.
Meticulous hygiene
* eliminates bacterial and fungal growth, thereby reducing the chance of infection.
* is essential to prevent reinfection
- vital to prevent the spread of infection<|endoftext|>### condition | hygiene:
Oral hygiene
* becomes more important for children who drink a lot of juices and eat more sweet items.
* consists of both personal and professional care.
* is an integral part of overall health
- as important to a pet's health as it is to a person's health
- necessary for all persons to maintain the health of their teeth and mouth
- one of the most overlooked aspects of pet health care
- part of personal care and support for the activities of daily living
* is particularly important for any child with bad breath
- in the elderly
- the primary prevention against dental caries<|endoftext|>### condition | hygiene:
Personal hygiene
* clear indicator of man's personality.
* contributes to personal success.
* is especially important during the acute and convalescent periods
- essential in controlling body lice
- extremely important under tropical conditions
- important during a herpes outbreak
* is important for the consideration of others
- health and safety of others
- most important for the control of pinworms
* is the best preventive measure against parasitic infestations
- key to prevention
- way a person maintains their health, appearance and cleanliness
* is very important for anyone working in a laboratory
- when handling agrochemicals
* means individual cleanliness and habits.
Poor hygiene
* can also spread yeast infections
- contribute to folliculitis
* causes shigella to be easily passed from person to person.
* leads to disease and potential fatality.
Proper hygiene
* goes a long ways in keeping our entire body healthy.
* is as essential to optimum health as diet and exercise
- integral to optimal health
Sleep hygiene
* includes all non-medication related activities that can enhance sleep.
* is directed at changing bad sleep habits
- the name for behavioral techniques that offer the best hope for chronic insomnia
- very important in the treatment of depression
* means a comfortable bed and a comfortable, quiet, dark room.
Hypercapnia
* can induce arousal from sleep in the absence of altered respiratory mechanoreception.
* is associated with elevated plasma levels of epinephrine and norepinephrine.
Hypercarbia
* can occur as the disease worsens.
* is also common for people sitting in hot tubs.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Hyperpigmentation
* appears as dark brown patches on the face and hands.
* can occur after several types of cosmetic surgery
- in focal or diffuse forms
* generally is restricted to areas of the body exposed to sunlight.
* is an increase in skin pigmentation
- present where there has been secondary infection
- the excessive production of melanin
- very chronic in chronic inflammatory skin disease and endocrine dermatoses
* means excess color.
* naturally fades with time after swelling has gone down.
### condition | hyperpigmentation:
Suntan
* come from exposure to ultraviolet rays, which most people get from the sun.
* is hyperpigmentation
Hypocapnia
* is still able to reduce cerebral blood flow and therefore to oppose the vasodilation.
* reverses the fentanyl-induced increase in cerebral blood flow velocity in awake humans. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | hypothermia:
Mild hypothermia
* is characterized by controllable shivering.
* potential treatment for acute ischemic stroke.
Ice condition
* are difficult to judge when the ice is covered with snow
- extremely dangerous, if there is any ice at all
* can vary greatly with a temperature change as small as one degree
- widely
* change rapidly in early and late season or during warm weather.
* occur in the winter.
* play an important role in ice-related deaths.
* vary depending upon the weather
- from lake to lake | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Illness
* All illness has physical and mental manifestations
- is viewed as an imbalance of tension and relaxation
- traumatizes individuals and families and all death is tragic
- illnesses are indicative of an incorrect lifestyle either physically or psychologically
* Any illness can cause tiredness, mood changes or loss of appetite
- vomiting, especially in infants
* Many illness can affect mood, concentration and so forth
- illnesses affect multiple organ systems
* Many illnesses are caused by disease or disorders
- psychosomatic
* Many illnesses can cause a type of breath that can be misinterpreted as alcoholic
- fevers, which increase fluid loss
- symptoms similar to gonorrhea
- weight loss
- commonly seen during the winter months have similar symptoms
* Many illnesses have multiple causes
- some lifestyle components
- sore throat as a symptom
* Many illnesses have their origin in distortion of the supportive etheric field
- roots in improper nutrition
- manifested by psychological symptoms are actually the result of physical disorders
- result from immune system malfunction causing it to attack the body's own tissues
- start out with the same symptoms as colds and allergies
- stop being contagious shortly after treatment is started
- suffered by humans are self-limited and resolve without treatment
* Most illness is caused by unhealthy eating
- related to stress, lifestyle, and diet
- the result of improper maintenance of the body
* Most illnesses affect adrenal functions
- organs
- are bad because they usually kill or damage parts of a body
* Most illnesses are caused by bacteria
- infection
- substances
- toxic substances
- viruses
- characterized by fevers
- just illnesses, and have nothing to do with evil spirits
- mild and easily treated with antibiotics
- short term and pass on their own
- signs that something is wrong with the whole
- associated with Campylobacter infection are sporadic
* Most illnesses cause fevers
- health problems
* Most illnesses cause major health problems
- nausea
- come from bacteria, viruses, parasites, and chemicals that contaminate food or water
* Most illnesses have effects
- psychological effects
* Most illnesses lead to problems
- serious problems
* Most illnesses occur because of improper selection of food, and the improper preparation of food
- in the summer and fall
- require treatments
* Most illnesses result in breathe problems
- urinary problems
- start with a drop in energy levels
* Much illness is caused by the loss of the soul.
* Some illnesses affect finches
- goats
- hearts
- mice
- terrapins
* Some illnesses are carried by insects
- mosquitoes
* Some illnesses are caused by co poison
- conditions
- consumption
- crowd conditions
- dog hookworms
- exposure
- leptospiras
- microorganisms
- protozoans
- salmonellas
- smoke
- characterized by inflammation
- can also cause diarrhea, which is even more serious
* Some illnesses cause birth defects
- coughs
- paralysis
- have a distinct bad smell and flavor
- kill pets
- occur in men
* Some illnesses result in death
- health outcomes
* Some illnesses result in unfavorable health outcomes
* Most illnesses are bad because they usually kill or damage parts of a body. Many illnesses are caused by disease or disorders
* affects a person's water requirement as well.
* afflict humans.
* also brings hunger into many households
- seems to have no effect on weight gain, provided the animal lives
* appears an average of three weeks after a person eats contaminated food.
* are always the result of exposures over time.
- generally related to social, economic, political, and environmental circumstances
- ill health
* are located in bodies
- brains
- elderly people
- hospitals
- nursing homes
* are located in old ladies
- stomachs
- medical conditions
* are used for rests
- sinning
- usually due to poisoning
* begins most frequently with fever, runny nose, cough, and sometimes wheezing.
* can affect people in all walks of life, but disproportionately it affects the old.
* can also affect driving abilities as people age
- result from toxins that are released by the microorganisms themselves
- alter temperature
* can be acutely life-threatening in the disseminated form of the disease
- life threatening, particularly for persons with weakened or immature immune systems
- bring about a loss of control over many aspects of life
* can cause a downward social drift
- an imbalance in qi, and an out of balance qi can cause pain or illness
- develop from eating sand, especially if animals have access to it
- hold a child back in school
- increase the risk of methotrexate
* can last for weeks or months and can be fatal
- up to six days
- make blood sugar levels rise
- manifest in many forms
* can occur after inhaling infectious aerosols from rodent saliva or excreta
- due to stress of the body, injury, etc
- pose special problems for people who have diabetes
- threaten their ability to continue to live independently
* caused by bacteria are usually more severe than viral illnesses
- herpes viruses include genital herpes, cold sores, shingles, and chicken pox
- mold or other indoor contaminants depends on dose
- mosquito bites are very rare
* causes hair loss.
* challenge to body, mind and spirit.
* changes our relationship with our bodies.
* communication from our higher self.
* continues to rise, and there has been a steady increase in euthanasia and abortion.
* creates an even greater demand for healthful food.
* decreases a client's ability to communicate in a second language.
* depletes the body s stores even further.
* deprives persons of the strength and mobility necessary to navigate many public spaces.
* disrupt normal body rhythms.
* disrupts their concentration and interferes with learning.
* does create fears.
* fact of life and a metaphor.
* generally curbs a person's appetite.
- specific symptoms
* hold back a child's growth.
* holistic term meaning the experience of the disease or stress.
* include cardiovascular diseases
* includes meaning, experiences and patterns of coping with symptoms
- measles, mumps and meningitis
* increases fluid needs particularly along with fever, vomiting, and diarrhea
- the chances of suicide
* is also a process.
* is an expression of chaotic events
- frozen energy, occurring when the energy body closes, or rigidifies
* is an imbalance in homeostasis
- of an individual s energy field
- unconscious problem-solver
* is associated with drinking unpasteurized orange juice
- eating contaminated food products, predominantly poultry and eggs
- obstruction of energy flow
- blamed on an imbalance in the three humors that exist in all living things
* is caused by eating the pre-formed toxin in food
- exposure to toxin in the water, either through contact or inhalation
- lack of understanding
- losing energetic equilibrium, and magnetotherapy helps to recover it
- many different reasons
- characterised by diarrhoea, vomiting and fever
- characterized by periods of remission and exacerbation
- created in that part of the body associated with that lost soul
- expensive in terms of money
- feared because of the cost of health care
- how the patient copes with the disease
- merely a symptom of dis-ease between mind and body
* is more common and more severe in adults than in children
- during the fall and winter months
- frequent and more severe in age extremes
- likely to result when a large number of eggs or tissue cysts are ingested
- much more serious for adults than for children
* is often infinitely complex
- self-limiting usually lasting four to seven days
- only a condition
- our bodies response to a stress or a stressor
- present when gas appliances are in use
* is seen as a manifestation of the body's attempt to defend and heal itself
- to have both natural and spiritual causes
* is the alteration of normal biophysical and social-psychological mechanisms
- beginning of all psychology
- same, in that there is always a cause
- thought to be the result of spiritual disharmony
* is usually self-limiting
- worse in very young and very old people
- viewed as an opportunity for personal growth and transformation
- what a patient feels and suffers, for example, pain, nausea, fatigue or insomnia
* journey of self-discovery taken by the health care provider as well as the patient.
* knows no boundaries and impacts upon people who have both a home and a work life.
* leads to higher levels of negative mood, which leads to higher scores on neuroticism.
* link to human genetics.
* major cause of family poverty.
* makes it more difficult to control blood glucose.
* manifested by depression can exacerbate symptoms and make things worse.
* manifests themselves in a series of symptoms, some of which can be rather painful.
* matter of deviance from cultural norms and values.
* means physical illness which first manifests itself during a Journey.
* more synthetic language than words.
* normal response a healthy body makes to an unhealthy situation.
* notorious reason for relapse.
* occur very often in children.
* occurs if sufficient numbers of live salmonella bacteria enter our bodies through food.
* occurs more frequently in summer than in winter
- often in the warm months
* occurs when the bacteria enters the baby's blood stream
- body fails to respond to changes from the normal range
- client's adaptive response is unsuccessful
- flow of our natural electromagnetic force becomes blocked
- within two to ten days of consuming contaminated food
* often affects their growth
- are a result of irregularities in daily living
- begins with chills and thirst, followed by high fever
- causes one to focus on certain sensations or memories to the exclusion of others
- creates a crisis which can lead to the opportunity to change
* part of life and to be accepted.
* persists as a systemic illness, with or without localizing signs and symptoms.
* presents many problems for the child, the family and for healthcare professionals.
* problem of mankind.
* progresses rapidly causing loss of consciousness and possibly death.
* raise safety concerns on imported produce.
* range from mild to very serious infections that can kill vulnerable people.
* refers to the patient s experience.
* related to mosquito bites are rare, especially in New York City
- still uncommon
- mosquitoes are rare
* render a person extremely vulnerable to life changes.
* require therapy
- of their imbalance
* resulting from conditions associated with employment is called systemic disease.
* run through the whole population.
* sate of being out of health or sick-symptoms like pain often appear.
* shape our lives as much as do material circumstances.
* sometimes bring it about, especially illnesses which are almost fatal.
* state of disharmony characterized by broken and weak defenses and less resistance.
* subjective experience of disease.
* tend to arise from imbalances in nature.
* threatens the ability to regulate physiological processes.
* treated include cancers of the breast, prostate, head, neck, lung and lymph nodes.
* typically develops quickly, and dogs can become very sick within just a few days.
* usually begins abruptly with fever and other symptoms
- with an abrupt onset of systemic malaise
- lasts several days to weeks, with an average of four to seven days
* word of negative power.
+ Theme Hospital, The Game: Simulator video games :: 1997 video games :: Electronic Arts video games
* Some illnesses are quite unusual. One is the bloaty head disease where the patient's head blows up. Another is the slack tongue disease, where the patient has an unusually long tongue. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness:
Acute illness
* Most acute illnesses require therapy.
* are really eruptions of underlying chronic problems.
* can hinder athletic performance by influencing several different body systems.
* progresses to become subacute.
Altitude illness
* can spoil a vacation, causing nausea, headache, and difficulty breathing.
* is caused by a diminished supply of oxygen at higher elevations
- lack of oxygen in our thin mountain air
- usually preventable if ascent is slow
Catastrophic illness
* is an illness
* means life-threatening illness.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness:
Chronic illness
* All chronic illnesses have significant medical, psychological, and social components.
* Many chronic illnesses can cause pain
- lead to anemia
- disrupt a child's schooling
- have deformities or other symptoms that are easily observed by others
* Most chronic illnesses are the result of cumulative unhealthy lifestyles
- show an enzyme deficiency
* Some chronic illnesses are congenital, while others strike later in life.
* affects both mind and body.
* are a source of continual stress
- the leading cause of death in the United States
- very draining upon a family
* brings unwanted changes.
* can interfere with a healthy sex life.
* consumes an increasingly large percent of the health care dollar.
* has that affect.
* includes dependence on alcohol and drugs.
* increases dramatically with age.
* influences our lifestyles.
* is another sign of the plague
- never a welcomed guest in anyone's life
* play a major role.
* represents an extension of the features of the acute illness.
* requires coping as well as understanding and support from family members.
* source of crisis for the afflicted person.
Collapse
* are happening
* cause collapses.
* is an illness
### condition | illness | collapse:
Cardiovascular collapse
* can occur without respiratory symptoms
* prompts a massive stress response. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | collapse:
Heat exhaustion
* Have the person lie down in a cool place and sponge the body with cold water.
* Most heat exhaustion causes fatigue.
* affects athletes.
* can evolve into heat stroke.
* can lead to dizziness, blurred vision, nausea, and eventual collapse
- heat stroke, which is life-threatening
- occur on any fire
* can progress quickly to heat stroke, a potentially fatal condition
- very quickly to heat stroke
- quickly lead to heat stroke
- result in headaches, dizziness, nausea, and possibly chills and confusion
* causes a person to become nauseous and light-headed
- fatigue, dizziness and disorientation
- impaired ability, dizziness, headache, vomiting and clammy skin
- pale, clammy skin, weakness, nausea and heavy sweating
* common response to working in summer weather.
* happens from overexercising, which causes the body to lose fluids
- when one is exposed to heat for a prolonged period of time
* involves symptoms and signs of fluid and salt loss.
* is caused by excessive exposure to heat and the depletion of body fluids.
* is caused by excessive fluid loss in a hot environment
- exposure to excessive, moist heat
- inadequate fluid intake
- overexposure to high temperatures and humidity
* is caused by the failure to adjust to extended exposure to high heat
- loss of large amounts of fluid and electrolytes
* is characterized by an increase in core temperature and heart rate
- extreme weakness or fatigue, dizziness, nausea, and headache
* is characterized by fatigue, nausea, headache, and clammy and moist skin
- weakness, and even collapse
- due to dehydration
* is due to more profound loss of water and electrolytes
- water and electrolyte loss
- fatigue, sometimes leading to collapse, caused by overexposure to heat
- heatstroke
* is marked by excessive dehydration and electrolyte depletion
- fatigue, heavy sweating, dizziness, nausea and fainting
* is more likely after a few days of a heat wave than when one is just beginning
- serious than heat cramps
- severe than heat cramps and has several symptoms
- related to heat stroke, although they are two separate problems
* is the body's response to an excessive loss of water and salt contained in sweat
- the loss of water and salt from sweating
- early sign that the body needs to rehydrate
- most common form of heat illness
* is the next severe form of heat injury
- step beyond simple dehydration
- stage before heat stroke where sufferers become weak and sweat heavily
- warning the body gets that it is getting too hot
* is usually reversible if the body is cooled off right away
- the result of excessive heat and dehydration
* medical emergency.
* milder condition than heat stroke.
* more severe condition than heat cramps.
* occurs before heat stroke.
* occurs when a dehydrated person continues to exercise
- children get hot and lose too much fluid through sweating
- heat stress causes fluid depletion
- the body is unable to cool itself properly
* occurs when the body loses excessive amounts of water and salt through sweating
- too much fluid and salt
* serious medical condition.
* starts with weakness, nausea, dizziness and profuse sweating.
* takes time to develop, while heat stroke can strike suddenly
* warning that the body is getting too hot.
Heatstroke
* begins when a person's internal thermostat stops working.
* causes multiple metabolic abnormalities.
* is possible with prolonged exposure and physical activity.
* occurs in two forms, exertional and classic
- when the body is unable to lose heat
* occurs when the body's central control mechanisms fail
- thermoregulatory system stops working
Implosion
* has no effect on creatures in gaseous form or on incorporeal creatures.
* key point in the science of revitalizing of water, or the erasing of information. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | collapse | implosion:
Gravitational collapse
* continues to produce energy release which, in turn, causes expansion.
* is implosion
* requires great density.
Sunstroke
* are heatstroke
- strokes
* form of heatstroke caused by overexposure to the sun.
Common illness
* Some common illnesses affect mice
- cause a reduction of smell
* are more acute, indicating a weakening of the immune system.
Decompression illness
* can also cause cochlear gas emboli with hearing loss.
* continuum from no symptoms or signs to severe multisystem involvement.
Decompression sickness
* is an illness
* occurs when there is production of nitrogen bubbles in the circulation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness:
Disease
* All disease comes from a state of unforgiveness.
* All disease goes from inside the body to outside
- less vital to more vital organs
- is the result of inhibited soul life
- shortens life by deteriorating the quality of the tissue
* All diseases are curable by the body by adhering to natural healing-principles
- opportunistic, the natural result following the disruption of a healthy body
- reversible
* All diseases have a genetic component
- hundreds of underlying causes
- manifest according to their own frequency
- occur in shades of gray along a continuum of imbalance along spectrum of disease
- originate from one common cause and have one common method of cure
- take their origin in overloading the stomach
* Any disease can affect the immune system, changing the way it functions
- cause low thyroid output as a preservative function
- is an acquired immune deficiency
- result of body, mind, emotions, and spirit interactions
* Every disease affects in some way and to some degree every organ, every tissue every molecule.
* Every disease has a cause, although the causes of some remain to be discovered
- history
- single cause
- certain characteristic effects on the body
- is related to an imbalance of the doshas
* Keep plants healthy.
* Many disease carrying pests flourish in tire piles
- causing organisms normally occur in the same environment as the fish
- have origin in the month
- strains no longer respond to antibiotics, in part because of overuse
* Many diseases affect the circulatory system
- condition of the airways
- joints or muscles of people of all ages
* Many diseases also impair the functioning of the immune system
- kill prairie dogs off
- take years to develop
* Many diseases are caused by bacteria
- viruses
- cyclical
- either preventable or easily treatable if caught in the early states
- host specific, that is, they develop only on a single host
- preventable through simple , non-medical methods
- seed-borne, so it is important to recognize certain of the seed diseases
- self-limiting
- single-cause conditions
- soil born, and they appear in hydroponic systems in contaminated media
- spread largely or entirely by insects and mites
- still active in other countries
- the result of mental stress
- attack strawberries
- build up in the soil when the same crop is grown in the same field year after year
* Many diseases can affect the tricuspid valve
- ventilation to perfusion ratio
* Many diseases can cause chronic pain
- respiratory failure
- destroy organs or other necessary body parts
- effect the retina including hypertension, diabetes, immune deficiency and others
- have different presentations
- make the spleen enlarge
* Many diseases can result in abnormal amounts of protein in the urine
- chronic active hepatitis in dogs
- survive by using weed plants or other crops as alternate or alternative hosts
- trace their origins to toxic build up in various tissues and organs
* Many diseases cause changes that can only be detected by an inspection of the cells
- great suffering and some kill animals by the million
- physical handicaps
- similar clinical signs, making diagnosis even more difficult
- commonly affecting older people give little warning of their presence
- disrupt cellular function or destroy tissue
- exist for which information and education offer a powerful vehicle for prevention
- get better with or without treatment
- have a single cause agent, such as a specific virus or bacteria
* Many diseases have an acute phase and a chronic phase
- incubation period before they exhibit symptoms
- certain risk factors that can be controlled
- multiple symptoms, with no two individuals being exactly alike
- signs that are detected in the eyes
- symptoms in common
- the same symptoms
- their roots in our genes
- improve over time, or at least cycle through periods of improvement and illness
- infect roses
- initiated by chemical hazards require decades to develop
* Many diseases involve disruption of particular organ systems or our body's natural defense systems
- inflammation, for example, cystic fibrosis, allergies and cancer
- proteins
- manifest themselves in the oral cavity
- occur only at certain growth stages
* Many diseases occur when cells manufacture unwanted proteins
- foliage is wet
- originate or show early signs in the mouth
- overlap with disorders of the gastrointestinal tract, skin, and lungs
- predispose men to impotence
- rely on funding from major drug companies to find treatments and cures
- require the tick to be attached for six or more hours to transmit disease
* Many diseases result from business anxieties
- gene-environment interactions
- in pulmonary interstitial fibrosis
- run in families
- show such variation patterns
- spread in characteristically patterns
- stem from deficiencies in diet
* Many diseases thrive in warm humid weather
- under crowded growing conditions
* Many diseases usually associated with adulthood actually have their origins in childhood
- begin in childhood
* Most disease is either self-limiting or incurable
- food born so take precautions to eat only thoroughly cooked food
- takes long enough to develop that the connection to diet is lost or overlooked
* Most diseases affect ability
- brain functions
- children
- domestic animals
- human survival
- humans
- internal organs
- kidney functions
- lab animals
* Most diseases affect multiple internal organs
- organ tissue
* Most diseases affect other animals
- productivity
- respiration
- sexual organs
- structure functions
- water quality
- white clover growth
- wild animals
- afflict humans
* Most diseases appear many years after exposure
- to be a response to multiple factors
* Most diseases are a result of complex interactions between genes and environmental factors
- also subject to environmental influences
* Most diseases are carried by cockroaches
- common cockroaches
- rodents
* Most diseases are caused by bacterial infection
- blood parasites
- deadly microbes
* Most diseases are caused by equine influenza viruses
- fungal pathogen
- genus
- germ
- herpes viruses
- iodine deficiencies
- microbial pathogen
- mutation
- novel pathogen
- other organisms
- pox viruses
- protozoan parasites
- rabies viruses
- reaction
- several different viruses
- squirrel pox viruses
- vitamin c deficiencies
- characterized by symptoms
- complex, and correlation between genes and disease is weak
- dose related
- due to the imprisionment of the Power animal
- irregularities and dysfunctions
- multi-gene disorders involving more than one gene
- preventable if the pet is kept current on their vaccinations
- skin ailments
- soil born and or air or plant borne
- species specific
- tissue specific, because only certain tissues have receptor molecule needed
- transmitted by mosquitoes
- water-borne
- arise from the complex interactions among hundreds our even thousands of molecules
* Most diseases associate with deficiencies
- deposition
- magnesium deficiencies
- vitamin a deficiencies
- begin in the colon because of improper elimination
* Most diseases cause abnormalities
- blood clot issues
- breathe difficulty
- damage
- excretion
- extensive damage
- fetal damage
- fevers
- food security issues
- grain storage problems
- health problems
- heart problems
- high fevers
- identical symptoms
- irritation
- kidney problems
- liver damage
- much damage
- muscle weakness
- neurological damage
* Most diseases cause permanent damage
- respiratory problems
* Most diseases cause serious health problems
* Most diseases cause severe damage
- similar symptoms
- vision problems
- caused by fungi and bacteria thrive in moist, humid conditions
- come from the uncharacteristic growing conditions of vanilla
- damage esophagus tissue
* Most diseases develop in adults
- under wet conditions
- do tend to recur due to pathogen buildup
* Most diseases have a genetic basis
- non-gene trigger
- common causes
- components
- consequences
- devastate effects
- features
- genetic components
- late onsets
* Most diseases have many features
- similar features
- more than one gene involved
* Most diseases have obvious effects
- phenotypic effects
- phases
* Most diseases have severe consequences
- widespread effects
* Most diseases involve many genes in complex interactions, in addition to environmental influences
- the interaction of several genes and the environment
* Most diseases kill animals
- patients
* Most diseases lead to damage
- death
- lung infection
- nerve damage
* Most diseases occur in hosts
- probably have some genetic component, the extent of which varies
- produce toxins
* Most diseases require attention
- awareness
- contributions of genetics and environment
- immediate treatments
- lifelong treatments
- medical attention
* Most diseases result from complex interactions among hundreds or even thousands of molecules
- in clot problems
- tend to reoccur due to pathogen buildup
* Much disease is borne of loneliness and isolation.
* SOME diseases are strongly related to poverty.
* See Infectious Diseases.
* Some disease is helped by surgery
- processes such as hypertension cause secondary changes in the placenta
* Some diseases affect abdomens
- abundances
- albatrosses
- apples
- apricots
- areas
- backs
- bantengs
- birds
- bones
- brains
- budgerigars
- capybaras
- cats
- cattle
- cedar
- cheetahs
- chests
- chickens
- cockatoos
- cucumbers
- deer
- desert tortoises
* Some diseases affect domestic cats
- geese
- rabbits
- doves
- european rabbits
- female dogs
- finish pigs
- fruit
- glands
- goats
- grapefruit
- hands
- heads
- hearts
- hedgehogs
- hollies
- homeostasis
- horses
- human microevolution
- immune responses
- infants
- intestines
- juvenile sea cucumbers
- kidneys
- kittens
- lambs
- leaves
- levels
- limbs
- livestock
- lymphocyte homeostasis
- man women
- marmosets
- mollusks
- moose
- mountain goats
* Some diseases affect newborn infants
- nose albatrosses
- only certain portions of a plant
- our fluid intake
- ovaries
- pancreases
- papaya
- peach fruit
- peppermints
- photosynthesis
- pinyons
- pituitary glands
- platypuses
- pregnant women
- premature infants
- puppies
- red cedar
- reproduction
- retinas
- seedlings
- size
- small intestines
- squirrels
- stone fruit
- syndromes
- tails
- tasmanian platypuses
- the salivary glands
- twigs
- wild birds
- young women
* Some diseases afflict children
- slave women
- young children
- also have excessive hair growth as a symptom, but they are less common
* Some diseases are carried by animals
- carnivores
- leafhoppers
- raccoons
- caused by 'infection'
* Some diseases are caused by abnormal imprinting
- accumulation
- adult tapeworms
- amoebas
- bacterium salmonellas
- bats
- caterpillars
- consumption
- defects
- drink water
- ingestion
- lack
- motile bacteria
- nicotine poison
* Some diseases are caused by parasitic amoebas
- protozoans
- pathogenic bacteria
- plasmodiums
- rats
- roundworms
- smoke
* Some diseases are characterized by a single cycle during the year
- abdominal pain
- acute diarrhea
- cell growth
- degeneration
* Some diseases are characterized by intense abdominal pain
- sudden fevers
- congenital and are therefore present at birth
- inborn and cause permanent defects on an individual
- malignant or cancerous, such as mesothelioma and lung cancer
- manifest and others are latent or immanent
- more common among young children, others in adults
- no longer treatable with antibiotics
- polygenic or multifactorial, inherited through changes on several genes
- potent killers
* Some diseases are spread through contaminated water or food
- coughing, sneezing, physical contact, or exchange of body fluids
* Some diseases are the result of damage by infection by other organisms
- intrinsic failures of the system
- same and some are different
* Some diseases are transmitted by aphids
- beetles
* Some diseases are transmitted by domestic livestock
- yaks
- fleas
- german cockroaches
* Some diseases are transmitted by green aphids
- peach aphids
- infect rodents
- rat fleas
- suck insects
* Some diseases are transmitted to bison
- brush rabbits
- wild bison
- viral and others are fungal
- worse than others but few people approve of any disease
- arise because of a variant in a single gene
* Some diseases associate with consumption
- point source exposure
* Some diseases associate with recreational exposure
- water exposure
- solar exposure
- attack western juniper
- can be genetic
* Some diseases can cause dry eye
- lymph retention in the body called as lymphedema
- have either natural or artificial causes
- lead to heel pain
- persist longer than one year, while others can attack more than one crop
- carried by the blood are life-threatening, and some are universally fatal
- carry aphids
* Some diseases cause a change in the odor of urine
- an increase in the ESR, while others cause a decrease
- anemia
- bad things to build up in the liver
- blindness
- blockage
- cell death
- chest pain
- deformities
- early death
- extinction
- failure pneumonia
- frequent diarrhea
- headaches
- heart disease death
- infect fruit
- infertility
- join pain
- massive mortality
- paralysis
- premature mortality
- pressure
- progressive mental as well as physical handicap
- rigidity
- scars
- severe diarrhea
- shell deformities
- significant mortality
- stature
- sudden death
- testicles to swell
- tumors
- ulcer
- causing icterus are fatal, but others have a good prognosis for full recovery
- change the body's requirements for nutrients
- come from sheep
- consume the body like wildfire
- covered are atherosclerosis, heart failure, cholesterol and high blood pressure
- develop differently in women than in men
* Some diseases develop in men
- many years after individuals are exposed to toxic chemicals
- exhibit peculiar geographic and age distribution
* Some diseases have a pronounced age predisposition
- devastate impact
- molecular mimicry
- multiple codes, all of which apply to different but pertinent conditions
- patient populations of fewer than a hundred
- sex-linked inheritance, some result from too many or too few chromosomes
- spontaneous remissions
- such horrible pain that no medication can ease
- tendencies
- to be managed before the onset of symptoms
- types
- uniform patterns
* Some diseases infect flowers
- gorillas
- tamarins
- vertebrates
- wild tamarins
- involve disturbances in fatty acid metabolism
* Some diseases kill american elm trees
- badgers
- brothers
- insects in a few hours or days, but the milky disease works slowly
- larvae
- native plants
- pine
- sea turtles
- starfishs
- tigers
- vines
- white pine
* Some diseases lead to arthritis
* Some diseases occur in adults
- chinchillas
- foxes
- ileums
- infect animals
- terminal ileums
- more commonly on one species than another
- much more frequently in some breeds than others
- prefer nutrient-starved turf, while others like large amounts of nitrogen
- related to genetic inheritance are diabetes, sickle cell anemia, and some cancers
* Some diseases require blood testing for diagnosis
* Some diseases result from accumulation
- an abnormal recessive gene
- development
- egg transmission or organisms through the use of infected breeder flocks
* Some diseases result in bone deterioration
- mass die offs
- spread to temperate zones
* Some diseases threaten apes
- chimpanzees
- cougars
- great apes
- pikas
- trigger a response by the immune system and cause an increase in the number of WBCs
* There are numerous diseases of sorghum.
- both quality and yields of harvested crops
- elk populations
- production efficiency and profitability
* affecting muscles include polymyositis, dermatomyositis and inclusion body myositis
- the cardiovascular system are called cardiovascular disease
* affecting the nervous system are common in sheep and goats
- can directly repress sexual desire
* aggravated by air pollution include chronic sinusitis, bronchitis, asthma, and allergies.
* also are responsible for reductions in grain and seed quality
- cause avoidable pain and suffering to many animals
- mask the effect of parasitism and thus they are considered before parasitism
- start by mutation or other genome altering mechanisms
- take their toll, with rabies and distemper being the most common
- threaten Georgia's forests
* appear and men die prematurely.
* appearing in European bison populations can bring serious threats to the whole species.
* are a constant threat to poultry
- frequent cause of poor rooting
- major cause for the rapid decline of cantaloupes after the first harvest
* are a part of nature
- the natural world
- standing problem when one tries to mass rear insects for whatever reason
- transitory, intermediary, future state of health
- acute or chronic
- almost unknown among Icelandic horses
- also a threat to spinach
- among the threats facing corals
* are an important method of natural insect control
- ongoing part of nature
* are capable of kill
- strikes
- the presence and action of specific microorganisms
- conditions resulting from either an excess or deficiency of functionating
- due to bad or immoral life-style and behaviors
- evil, as is the action of bacteria
- illnesses
- important in determining the success or failure of watermelon production in Georgia
- independent, they can be categorized, and each disease has a cause
- like spelling mistakes in a normal gene
- likely to have had a major hand in driving some species to extinction in recent years
* are located in hospitals
- human bodies
- labs
- rugs
* are more common in older people
- prevalent in areas of higher rainfall than in dryer regions
- mostly of the scorbutic class
- much more effectively controlled on a preventative rather than a curative basis
- only one cause of poor plant growth
- potentially present in used house water only where occupants are ill
- problems, and problems can be solved
- rare on foliage and flowering plants
- rare, insects seem to dislike
- result of unnatural diet
- specific entities constituting specific problems and requiring specific solutions
- spread by infection
* are the least common cause of headache
- major limiting factor for improving productivity in scavenging systems
- unlikely to affect all species the same way
* are used for killing
* are usually more frequent and serious in late season and during periods of high humidity
- species-specific
- worse in dry parts of the year and when soil fertility is low
* associated with environmental factors are highly concentrated among the poor.
* attack skin
* become rare events
- so deadly when they slip outside their normal ecological niche
* being studies include hypertension, diabetes, dementia, depression and sexual dysfunction.
* bring slow and agonizing deaths to people.
* build up in the plants over the years, causing fruit production to drop gradually.
* can affect any part of the heart
- different parts of the heart
* can also develop by an increase in apoptosis
- infect insects and lower their numbers
- produce toxins that damage or kill human tissue, as in food poisoning or cholera
- arise from infection , environmental conditions , accidents , and inherited diseases
* can be a particular problem with winter crops because of rainy, humid weather conditions
- costly to the producer
* can cause enzymes to stop functioning or decrease their activity
- more rapid movement of food through the intestine
* can cause serious reductions in yields of Korean lespedeza
- yield losses in late planted oats
- destabilize governments, and destroy fragile communities and economies
- develop and spread rapidly when grass remains moist overnight
- enter wounds caused by lawn mowers whacking the tree trunks
- include damping-off during germination, fungal blights and rots, and viruses
- occur if numerous copies of mitochondrial DNA within a cell have been altered
- reduce the size of the kernels and discolour the seed
- seriously reduce both the yield and quality of barley produced
- severely limit pecan production
* can spread from salmon in the crowded pens to wild salmon
- to chickens from pet birds and wild birds, so limit contact where possible
- transfer from animals to humans
* cause a variety of medical problems for parakeets
- significant problems
- suffering and, in some cases, permanent disability or death
* caused by a defective immune system are of particular concern among many purebred fanciers
- damp are sticky, muddy, greasy and stagnant
- fungi and bacteria commonly result in losses of fresh produce
* caused by fungi are often a problem on all types of bentgrass greens
- the most damaging to most crops, including cucurbits
- nematodes require special attention
- organisms in humans are known as pathogenic diseases
- pathogenic summer heat occur only in summer
- the virus are particularly common among people with reduced immunity
- viruses often appear as abnormal or distorted growth
- water-borne bacteria include cholera and typhoid
* commonly transmitted by contaminated surface water include cholera, typhoid and giardiasis.
* communicated by touch are common on the road.
* considered to be of autoimmune origin include myasthenia, rheumatoid arthritis and lupus.
* continue to be a problem, especially viruses transmitted by insects
- greatly limit plantation productivity
- have an enormous impact in every aspect of daily life
- muscle tissue
* destroy many people.
* disappear and all men become long-lived.
* diseases, such as lupus.
* enter the body when there deficiency or excess of any ray in our body.
* enters through the roots and plugs water conducting vessels.
* evolve to effectively work in new host.
* flourish in an acidic environment
* have a way of building-up if the same vegetable crop is planted too long in the same spot
- evidence
- importance
- much greater impact on landscapes of one or two species
- no eyes
* include emphysema
- measles
* involving the brain, brainstem and peripheral nerves are more common than muscle disorders
- skin and underlying soft tissues are legion
* known as aspergilloses attack the respiratory tract and others cause topical diseases.
* limit the ability of animals to produce optimum levels of meat, milk, and fiber
- utility in tropical climates
* live in dead plant material.
* move in, and insects do their thing
- quickly among vine crops, especially cucumbers, and speed up in wet weather
* often appear very suddenly, and can severely weaken or kill a plant within days
- damage flowers and prevent fruiting
* overcome genetic resistance in new cultivars in just a few years.
* play a natural role in wildlife population control.
* progresses slowly.
* represent evolution in progress.
- international attention
* result in clot problems
* resulting from the consumption of food are quite common
- in fever can manifest as changes in behavior and personality
* run rampant for lack of basic medicines.
* sometimes cause pets a lot of pain, which distracts pets from doing what they love.
* spread by ticks are no recent phenomena to the new world
- more rapidly among wet plants
- to cities
* take a tremendous toll on the wild dog.
* therefore tend to show cycles.
* transfered by insects is the number one cause of sickness and death in the world today.
* transmit more readily in humid, crowded buildings.
* transmitted by rats to man pose a serious public health problem in tropical countries
- vectors usually leave via a vector
+ Disease, Causes of disease:
* Disease can also be caused by eating toxic or old foods. There are small germs in old foods that can cause diseases. Sometimes the germs produce chemicals or toxins which causes the disease. An example of a mutation is cancer. Living or working in an unhealthy environment can also be a cause for diseases. Diseases are more common in older people
- Treatments of disease
* Some diseases can be helped with medicine. Some disease is helped by surgery. Not every disease can be helped with medicine or surgery, though. An example is diabetes. People who usually treat diseases are called doctors or physicians
+ Germ theory of disease: Microbiology :: Medicine
* He also put some meat in a jar and covered it with gauze. Maggots were found on the gauze but not inside the jar. But when he placed meat in an open jar, maggots were found on the meat and inside the jar. Experiments like this proved that maggots come from flies who lay eggs, not from rotting meat. Later scientists would prove that diseases did not come from the air. Diseases are spread by infection.
+ Infection: Infectious diseases :: Microbiology :: Parasitism
* Some diseases are caused by 'infection'. Infection is when another organism gets into a person's body and causes harm. These four kinds of infectious agents cause most infectious disease. There are other kinds though. Prions are a form of virus that are basically abnormal clumps of proteins. We are not even sure that prions are alive.
+ Liver, Liver diseases, Types of liver disease: Anatomy of the digestive system
* Some diseases cause bad things to build up in the liver. Hemochromatosis causes extra iron to build up in the liver. Wilson's disease causes extra copper to build up in the liver. Both of these diseases hurt the cells and can cause very bad liver disease that kills people.
+ Public health: Medicine
* Most countries have their own government public health agencies, sometimes known as ministries of health, to respond to domestic health issues. Many diseases are preventable through simple, non-medical methods. Public health plays an important role in disease prevention efforts in the developing world and in developed countries, through local health systems and through international non-governmental organizations. In the developing world, there may not be enough trained health workers or monetary resources to provide a basic level of medical care and disease prevention.
+ Testicle, Health issues, Size: Anatomy of the male reproductive system :: Glands | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease:
Acne
* Most acne is caused by irritation and allergy.
* affects adolescents at a time they are developing their personalities.
* begins when oil collects at the base of the hair follicle
- tiny glands in the skin become clogged with fluid or dead skin cells
* includes inflammation.
* is an inflammatory disease
* is skin diseases
* occurs during the adolescent and young adult years
- young-adult years
- often in adolescents and can persist into adulthood
* occurs when hair follicles become clogged by skin cells that block the opening of pores
- oils produced by the skin mix with dead skin cells and plug up hair follicles
- pores in the skin become clogged with a mixture of oil and dead skin cells
- secretions put out by the sebaceous glands become blocked
* often improves, and hair growth on the face is reduced.
* presents differently in black skin.
* represents inflammation or irritation of the oil glands of the face, upper back and chest.
* tends to begin during or right before puberty
- develop in teenagers because of an interaction among hormones, sebum, and bacteria
- reappear when treatment stops, but spontaneously improves over time
### condition | illness | disease | acne:
Acne rosacea
* can be red and oily.
* is acne
Adult acne
* can often be more persistent than teenage acne.
* condition that requires the evaluation and treatment of a dermatologist.
* is common among women in menopause.
* occurs when the sebaceous glands secrete excessive oil.
Cystic acne
* deeper infection of the skin and is more likely to lead to permanent scarring.
* severe form of acne that can cause pitting and scarring.
Facial acne
* is as common in teenaged girls as it is in boys.
* seems to get everyone at some point in life, but is seen most often in the teen years.
Feline acne
* is usually treatable by topical treatment only.
* keratin disorder similar to acne in humans.
Mild acne
* can appear as whiteheads and blackheads or even pimples.
* consists of open and closed comedones and some papules and pustules.
Newborn acne
* Most newborn acne disappears without any special skin care.
* clears up quickly, usually within a few weeks after birth.
Nodular acne
* can result in permanent scarring.
* is the most severe form of inflammatory acne.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | acne:
Pimple
* are a very mild skin infection and never leave scars
- also a source of staph germs
- infections that develop when whiteheads rupture the follicle wall
- sebaceous glands that are infected by bacteria, become inflamed and fill with pus
- the woes of oily skin or changes in sex hormone levels
* begin in pores, or openings on the. skin
- the skin's hair follicles, which are connected to oil-producing glands
- to appear on the face or back due to a change in the amount of oil produced
- when oil and dead skin cells get trapped in pores
* can be an indication of the presence of toxaemia
- come anywhere on the body, anywhere there's skin
* indicates presence.
* is located in faces.
* look like granules of salt.
* often happen during adolescence or puberty
- They are caused by oil getting trapped in the pores of the skin. Pimples often happen during adolescence or puberty. Practicing good hygiene is essential, but even that might not prevent all pimples
* result from pores getting clogged up with shedding skin and excess oil.
* surround affected eye.
* vary in size and appearance.
* zits rash rosacea dandruff varicose veins hives dermis epidermis hair follicle. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | acne | pimple:
Papule
* appear on the central face, especially on and around the eyelids of young adults.
* are at the openings of hair follicles
- benign and normal for some men
- closed comedos, which have become red, swollen, and inflamed
- common skin lesions, and they are usually associated with inflammations
- cystic hair follicles that develop into pustules
- injuries
- often multiple while nodules are often solitary
- red pimples
- small bumps, often slightly red due to the surrounding inflammation
- swelling
* is pimple
* often begin as erythematous macules
- coalesce into circinate or arcuate plaques
- have a striking pattern of parallel ridges
* progress to plaques and then large areas of thickening and crusting.
* resolve when the weight is removed.
Rosacea
* are acne
- chronic conditions
- diseases
* is acne
* starts with episodic flushing which gradually gives way to a fixed erythema.
* tends to be more severe in men
- run in fair-skinned families and tends to occur in people who blush easily
### condition | illness | disease | acne | rosacea:
Ocular rosacea
* can affect both the eye surface and eyelid.
* is probably under diagnosed within the African American population.
Severe acne
* Some severe acne can cause permanent scarring.
* can cause deeper bumps, called cysts or nodules
- scarring, and often affects our self-image
- lead to scarring
* is much more difficult to treat than mild or moderate acne.
* seems to run in families and is seen more often in males.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease:
Acute disease
* Most acute diseases are characterized by symptoms.
* Some acute diseases are caused by consumption.
* affects the lymphatic and respiratory systems and occasionally the brain.
* appears suddenly and lasts a short time, such as an injury or infection.
* is self-limiting if additional exposure is avoided
- usually the result of infection, with a viral source most frequently suspected
- very rare today
* respond rapidly, while chronic cases of long standing, are slower in response.
* run their course and end more or less quickly.
Adrenal disease
* Most adrenal diseases require treatments.
* common form of cancer in the ferret here in the United States.
Allergic disease
* affect a significant portion of the population.
* can predispose an animal to pyoderma.
* is very common and can cause various symptoms involving the ears, nose, and throat.
* represent a major cause of morbidity and disability in the United States.
Animal disease
* Many animal diseases are difficult to diagnose
- cause great suffering and some kill animals by the million
- cross over to humans
* are diseases.
* can wipe out whole herds, with devastating consequences.
### condition | illness | disease | animal disease:
Bluetongue
* has a similar presentation to a number of diseases.
* is an important disease of economic consequence
- insect-transmitted disease that is transmitted by biting gnats
- found in hot countries and sometimes gets as far as Spain
- very prevalent in Southwest and Southern parts of the United States
* reportable disease in Canada.
* serious economic disease, particularly of sheep.
Distemper
* is an animal disease
* kills only half of affected dogs.
* occurs throughout the entire range and is highly contagious. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | animal disease | distemper:
Canine distemper
* affects the central nervous system.
* common disease and is usually fatal.
* different disease caused by another virus.
* has a very high morbidity and mortality in populations of infected dogs.
* highly contagious disease caused by a tiny virus
- contagious, systemic, viral disease of dogs seen worldwide
* is also a viral disease, spread by direct or indirect contact
- an airborne disease that is highly contagious to domestic ferrets
- common when raccoon populations are large
- distemper
- extremely contagious
- fatal for Black-footed Ferrets and it has decimated many populations
- highly contagious and is related to the measles virus
- species
- the greatest disease threat to the dog population
- thought always to be fatal to ferrets
* leading cause of death in young dogs.
* member of the parymyxovirus class.
* occurs wherever there are dogs.
* very contagious viral disease that predominantly strikes young dogs.
* viral infection.
* virus that causes brain infections and sometimes death.
Enterotoxemia
* can be highly fatal to young calves.
* is an animal disease
Locoism
* chronic disease that causes depression, incoordination, and nervousness under stress.
* is an animal disease<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | animal disease | mange:
Demodectic mange
* can cause itching.
* common skin disease in dogs.
* involves the autoimmune system, which is suseptable to such things as stress.
* is caused by a different kind of mite that is normally present in a dog's skin
- microscopic mite that strikes puppies in their first year of life
- more common in oily-skinned shorthairs and pubescent dogs
- seen primarily in two forms, juvenile and adult
- specific to white-tailed deer and is caused by tiny mites living on the hair
- unusual in horses and is seen mainly in immuno-compromised individuals
* red, itchy skin infection that is caused by mites.
* result of stress on the immune system.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | animal disease | mange:
Sarcoptic mange
* afflicts dogs, cats, and other animals, including humans.
* can be very difficult to definitively diagnose
- infect all ages and breeds of dogs
* highly contagious disease caused by very small external parasites called mites.
* is contagious to canines and humans.
* is highly contagious and usually passed from one infected dog to another
- infectious and can spread from dog to dog
- intensely itchy and can be passed between dogs and humans
- sometimes deadly to foxes and coyotes
* is the common mange in hogs
- most important parasite affecting pigs
- very contagious to people and is called scabies in people
* occurs in coyote populations throughout Nebraska
- dogs of all ages, and is transmitted via contact with an infected dog
* reportable and quarantinable disease.
Myxomatosis
* can also infect pet rabbits of the same species.
* disgusting disease that many of have seen in wild rabbits.
* very cruel disease. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | animal disease:
Psittacosis
* also causes chlamydial eye and respiratory infections in cats.
* are animal diseases
- bacterial infection
* can cause a variety of symptoms
- respiratory infections in man
- exist as a completely asymptomatic condition or acute, systemic fatal disease
- infect more than just birds
- occur in a mild form, which can be completely cured
* common and important disease in pet bird medicine
- disease in all types of parrots
* disease caused by the bacterium Chlamydia psittaci
- of low incidence that tends to occur sporadically
* disease that almost any bird can have including chickens, turkeys and pigeons
- is often called parrot fever or chlamydiosis
* fairly common infection among parrots, which can be transmitted to humans.
* is Chlamydia psittaci infection contracted from infected birds.
- upper respiratory infection usually caught from cage birds e.g. parrots
- common in wild birds of all types and can occur in laboratory bird colonies as well
- highly contagious from bird to bird and from bird to man
- prevalent in birds of that category and very infectious to humans
- primarily a lung disease but it can involve several organs
- spread through inhalation of feather and fecal dust
- transmissable to people
- uncommon in children
* produces a large number of symptoms, ranging from nearly asymptomatic to very serious.
* reportable disease in many states since it can infect humans.
* serious disease acquired by handling birds or by inhaling dust from bird faeces.
Rhinotracheitis
* is an animal disease
* tends to be more severe and can cause abortions in pregnant cats.
Scrapie
* fairly common sheep variant of the disease in existance for ages.
* is an animal disease
Shipping fever
* Shipping Fever causes almost one billion dollars of loss each year.
* are animal diseases
- blood poisoning
* can exist in mild, moderate or severe forms.
* common disease in cattle.
Vaccinia
* different virus from the virus that causes smallpox
- which causes smallpox
* has a broad host range which includes humans, small mammals and livestock.
* is used as a live virus vector is some candidate anti-HIV vaccines.
Warble
* appear as a swelling or lump just under the skin.
* are one of the most common techniques found in blues harmonica playing
- parasitic larvae of the warble fly
* come from a planet called Treble in the Orb solar system.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | animal disease:
Zoonosis
* Zoonoses are diseases communicable from animals to man
- in which the causative agents are transmitted between animals and humans
- of animals that can be transmitted to humans
* Zoonoses are diseases that are transmissible between animals and humans
- transmittable to humans from animals
* Zoonoses are diseases that can be transmitted between species
- transmitted from animals to humans
- infect humans and be transmitted by an animal host
- pass from animals to humans
- diseases, the infections of which can be transmitted between man and animals
- infectious diseases transmitted from animals to man
- is the transmission of disease from animals to humans
* disease that can pass from animals to humans.
- infection or infestation shared in nature by humans and animals
* potential complication of xenotransplantation.
Zoonotic disease
* are an extreme threat to public health
- characteristic for animals
- diseases that can be transmitted from animals to people
- sometimes just uncomfortable but sometimes can be life-threatening
- typically endemic and occur in natural foci
* can spread from animals to humans. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | animal disease | zoonotic disease:
Actinomycosis
* is an infection that has a tendency to infect the face, as seen here on the lower jaw
- evidenced by abscesses on the face and neck that multiply rapidly
- zoonosis
* usually pursues an indolent but progressive course.
* zoonotic disease
### condition | illness | disease | animal disease | zoonotic disease | actinomycosis:
Lumpy jaw
* is actinomycosis
- caused by bacteria normally found in the mouths of healthy animals
* occurs when the body brings fibrous tissue to the area to stabilize the weak bones. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease:
Anthrax
* Most anthrax affects animals
- hoof animals
- causes infection
* Some anthrax infects cattle.
* Some anthrax kills bison
- chimpanzees
* affects all mammals, including humans, though some species are more vulnerable than others
* also causes organ failure
- is relatively easy and safe to handle
- occurs in exotic wildlife such as hippos, elephants, and cape buffalo
* bacteria found in the environment which has appeared in animals in the past
- sometimes used in biological warfare
- that naturally infects sheep and other animals
* bacterial disease than can infect warm-blooded animals including humans
- that can infect all warm blooded animals including man
* can also enter the human body through broken skin
- be fatal even in microscopic amounts
- form spores and remain dormant for decades
- infect all warm-blooded animals, including man
- then go dormant for several days
* causes a type of pneumonia, which can kill a person
- pneumonia, and patients are treated with antibiotics
* comes out high on everyone's list because the spore form of the organism is so very stable.
* dangerous, infectious disease caused by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis.
* deadly biological weapon.
- contracted by warm-blooded animals
* disease normally associated with animals
- plant-eating animals such as sheep and cattle
* disease of grazing animals caused by bacteria that can infect humans
- humans as well as animals
* disease that most commonly appears as blood poisoning
- normally afflicts animals, especially cattle and sheep
- typically afflicts animals, especially sheep and cattle
- usually affects animals, but humans who inhale the spores can be infected
- which can kill people
* has a serious impact on the trade of animal products
- four separate clinical forms
* highly infectious animal disease which can be transmitted to humans on contact
- bacterial disease, capable of killing a person within a few days
- lethal biological weapon
* incubates silently in the body for three days to several weeks after exposure.
* is almost always deadly among unprotected people
- also the name of a grunge rock group
* is an acute bacterial disease which can be fatal for humans if untreated
- infectious disease carried by spore-forming bacteria
* is an acute infectious disease caused by bacteria
- by the spore forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis
- by the spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis
- ancient disease of livestock and humans known since biblical times
- example of a bacterial pathogen
- exception, it can remain in soil and contaminate areas for a long period
- extremely deadly bacterium used in biological warfare
* is an infectious bacterial disease that can be used in biological, or germ, warfare
- typically afflicts livestock
* is an infectious disease caused by the spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis
- the spores of Bacillus anthracis
- that is lethal if inhaled
* is an infectious disease that normally affects animals, especially cattle and sheep
- occurs naturally in livestock
- usually afflicts only animals, especially cattle and sheep
- infrequent and sporadic human infection in most industrialized countries
- international concern because it reproduces oddly
- occupational hazard in the three mainland countries
- often-fatal infectious disease due to ingestion of spores
- as deadly as nuclear weapons
- bacilluses
- bacterial infection
* is caused by Bacillus anthracis, a spore-forming bacteria
- a bacterium that can infect humans and animals
- direct skin inoculation by B anthracis
* is caused by the bacterium bacillus anthracis
- organism Bacillus anthracis
- colorles, odorless, inexpensive to make and easy to transport
- common in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran, where most of Europe's heroin originates
* is considered the easiest germ weapon to make and use
- most lethal of biological agents by the U.S. government
- to be an extremely dangerous infectious disease
- easy to produce, store and make into a weapon
* is extremely deadly but can be treated
- found around the globe
- indigenous in Zimbabwe
- insects
- located in post offices
- most common in agricultural regions where it occurs in animals
- odorless, tasteless and invisible
* is one of the deadliest and oldest diseases known to man
- gravest biological agents in use today
* is one of the most common biological threat agents
- effective and lethal bioweapons in existence
- likely agents to be used as a weapon
- present in the environment and can cause disease in livestock and wild animals
* is primarily a disease of domesticated and wild animals, particularly herbivorous animals
- an occupational disease
- produced by the bacteria Bacillus anthracis
* is spread by dustlike spores, which can be inhaled
- primarily by aerosol
- suspected of being responsible for a spate of deaths among heroin addicts in Europe
* is the greatest biological warfare threat faced by U.S. military personnel
- number one weapon of choice in biological weapons for germ warfare
- primary biological warfare threat faced by U.S. forces
- weapon of choice for germ warfare
- thought to be the most likely agent to be used in a bioterrorist event
- treated with penicillin G or tetracycline
- zoonotic, caused by horse, sheep and cattle
* is, by far, the easiest biological agent to produce and weaponize.
* kind of poster child for force health protection.
* lethal, biological gas weapon that often causes flu-like symptoms.
* livestock disease and man is the accidental host.
* looks like flour.
* naturally occurring bacteria found in domesticated animals
- that, when inhaled, can cause death within a few days
- bacterium in cattle, sheep and other hoofed animals
* naturally occurring disease caused by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis
- with worldwide distribution
- virus
* occurs where the environment is suitable to perpetuate the organism.
* potentially fatal disease that focuses on the skin, lungs and stomach and intestines.
* quarantinable disease because it can kill large numbers of animals in a short time.
* rapid and highly effective killer.
* rapidly spreads from the lungs to other organs, and is deadly if untreated.
* rare cause of death of animals in Victoria.
* remains the primary biological warfare threat to our forces.
* reportable disease in Minnesota
- Texas
* serious infectious disease caused by a bacteria called Bacillus anthracis
- threat under the biological warfare scenario
* silent killer that is extremely lethal, in both inhalational and intestinal anthrax.
* simply infests the body and destroys it ability to function.
* spore forming bacteria.
* spore-forming bacteria found in soil.
* spreads through airborne spores which are dormant microorganisms.
* unique bacterium that can form a spore.
* usually fatal disease with no symptoms observed
- is susceptible to penicillin, doxycycline, and fluoroquinolones
* very deadly weapon that is relatively cheap and easy to make
- rare disease in the United Kingdom
+ Reward:
* In 2001, the US government offered a big reward of 2.5 million dollars for help in capturing the person who had sent anthrax in letters to a newspaper journalist and 2 senators. Anthrax is a disease which can kill people. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | anthrax:
Anthrax spore
* are anthrax
- apparently one of the top choices of weapons for biological warfare
- bacterial spores
- hardies
- odorless, colorless, and tasteless
- one of the number one choice of weapons for biological warfare
- stable and remain viable in water and soil for years
* can lie dormant for decades, possibly for centuries
- live for years in carcasses buried in the ground
Cutaneous anthrax
* features a painless necrotic ulcer with a black eschar and local edema.
* is amenable to standard therapy and fatal only when septicemia intervenes
- cutaneous infection
- transmitted through a break in the skin
Inhalation anthrax
* is an extremely lethal disease, and almost everyone is immunologically na ve
- nearly always fatal
- often fatal
* is the disease that results from breathing anthrax spores
Inhalational anthrax
* can result from spore inhalation.
* is anthrax
- the disease that results from breathing in anthrax spores
- usually fatal
- virtually always fatal | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease:
Arthritis
* Most arthritis causes pain.
* Most arthritis causes severe pain
- symptoms
- disappears within several days to weeks with resolution of the viral illness
- responds very well to simple forms of treatment
- spreads to joints
* Some arthritis has positive tests
- occurs in lambs
* affects mainly older people
- more women than men
- only the wrist, ankle and knee joints
- people in different ways
* affects the student's joints
- the structure and function of connective tissue and joints
* afflicts a growing number of the population.
* also is sometimes scary.
* broad term covering many types of joint ailments
- for a number of conditions that destroy the workings of a normal joint
* can affect any one at any age at any time
- children as well as adults
- the physical, psychological, social and intellectual development of a child
- young people as well
- afflict any joint
* can also cause neck pain
- develop as a result of an infection
* can also lead to many different forefoot deformities, including hammer toes
- forefoot deformities, including mallet toes
* can also produce a progessive deformity in the knee with bowing or turning in of the knee
- loss of use of the arm due to pain and contracture
* can appear in young pets, but is most common in the middle age and geriatric pets
- suddenly or come on gradually
- attack joints, joint capsules, the surrounding tissue, or throughout the body
* can be an affliction in many older dogs
- devastating
- mild for some people, only slightly affecting their activities
- one of the most common causes
- part of a congenital autoimmune disease syndrome, of undetermined origin
- short-term or chronic
- bring anything from slight tightness to severe pain and lasting disability
* can cause neck pain
- pain, stiffness and swelling in joints and other connective tissues
- permanent crippling, non-reversible effects
- silent degenerative joint damage for years without pain
- similar pain
- come from many sources
- develop in that finger later in life
* can have a distinct impact on a persons work capabilities
- huge financial impact
- lead to loss of function in joints and muscles
* can make intercourse difficult
- lovemaking more difficult
- moving the knee joint very painful
* can occur in any joint, including the neck, shoulders, spine, hips, and even the paws
- males and females of all ages
* can occur in older cats, especially in cats who injured joints earlier in their life
- patients
- produce pain, loss of movement, and inflammation in the joints
* can result from injury
- traumatic events such as fractures or injuries to the ligaments
- in pain, loss of motion and limited ability to walk
- set in rapidly and cause many permanant health problems
* can strike any age group, even children
- the spine, inhibiting movement
* catagory disease.
* causes damage in and around the surfaces of a joint
- joint pain and stiffness, making it hard to sleep
- joints to become stiff and sometimes inflamed
* causes pain and loss of movement, affecting joints in any part of the body
* causes pain, stiffness and sometimes swelling in or around joints
- stiffness, a decrease in mobility, and activity limitations
* causes pain, stiffness, and in some cases swelling in or around the joints
- stiffness, swelling, soreness, or pain
* chronic condition requiring a life-long use of daily medication
- disease characterized by periods of flares and remissions
* chronic illness that causes joint pain, inflammation of the joints, and fever
- inflammation or redness of joints, and fever
* comes with many different faces.
* common malady among domestic animals
- part of scleroderma
- term meaning inflammation of a joint
* commonly occurs in the finger joints, base of the big toe, hips, knees, and spine.
* condition in which an animal's joints become inflamed.
* condition that causes pain and stiffness of one or more joints
- which is caused by accumulation of ama and aggravation of vata
* consists of much more than just minor aches and pains
- only minor aches and pains
* contains the prefix arth and the suffix itis.
* costs the U.S. economy per year in medical care and lost wages.
* crippling disease that affects people of ALL ages.
* debilitating disease that can leave a person wheelchair bound or bed ridden.
* degenerative joint disease that affects horses by causing lameness.
* develops as matrix proteins in the cartilage tissue break down.
* disables more people than stroke and heart disease.
* disease caused by poor circulation.
* disease of the elderly
* disease that affects the joints
- can affect one or more joints in our bodies
- leads to immobility of the joints
* disorder of the joints, the junctions between bones
* frequent and major complication of infection with Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto.
* frequently affects older pigs.
* general term for many rheumatological diseases
- meaning joint inflammation
* general term that describes inflammation in the joints
- refers to the degeneration or inflammation of a joint
* given in most dogs, and can be severe in some large breeds.
* gradual wearing down of the smooth gliding surfaces of the knee joint.
* happens when joints become painful and swollen.
* has few externally observable symptoms, especially in early stages
- no age barrier
* includes inflammation.
* involves the wearing away of the surface of a joint.
* involving the large joints is also common.
* is actually a symptom whose name means inflammation of the joints.
* is also a significant drain on the health care system and the overall economy
- an auto immune disorder
- the most common cause of long-term disability in Canada
* is an ailment often dealt with best at home
- auto immune disease that mostly affects the joints
* is an inflammation and swelling of the joints which can be caused by a number of diseases
- of the joints that is characterized by swelling, heat, and pain
- inflammatory disease
- old person's disease
* is another common malady of old age
- outcome, along with the inability to move normally
- condition most old dogs suffer from
- potential consequence of oxalate accumulation
- categorized as either acute or chronic
* is caused by a metabolic disorder in the body
- poor diet
- deterioration of the joint cartilage that lines the ends of the bones
- many different conditions
* is caused by the destruction of cartilage
- erosion of cartilage
- characterised by four major observable changes in the joints
* is characterized by a mix of good days and bad days
- pain and stiffening of the joints
- chronic conditions
- definitely diagnostically significant in diagnosing lupus
* is due to a weakened immune system
- illnesses
- in fact a far more complex disease than is generally known
- induced by a cold, wet climate
* is inflammation of a joint - the point where two or more bones meet
- or joints in the body
- one or more joints and is common in all sucking, growing pigs and sows
- the joints resulting in pain and swelling
* is joint inflammation and commonly occurs at the base of the thumb
* is manageable by a variety of natural and conventional treatments
- with proper care, caution and prevention
- marked by damage to cartilage, the tough, slippery material that cushions joints
- more common among women than men
* is more common in dairy farmers than non-farm controls
- prevalent in women than men
- naturally progressive and worsens with age
* is often a disease that lifetime diagnosis
- lifelong condition requiring long-term treatment
- present, and can be mild to severe
- on the rise because of the aging baby boomers
* is one chronic syndrome that can benefit from exercise
- of the major causes for many lost work days and it can be a serious disability
* is one of the most common ailments of the skeletal system in elderly people
- human health problems
- medical problems in the world
- of all disabling diseases
- reasons given for limiting physical activity
- reasons people give for limiting physical activity
* is one such ailment that can cause pain resulting in changes in behavior
- physical, but it also exacts a mental, emotional and economic toll
- possible in shoulders and elbows, but uncommon
- produced in the rats by injecting a special heat-killed bacteria
- projected to remain the most prevalent chronic condition in women
- reported in about three fourths of cases
- second only to heart disease as a cause of work disability
- seen as a localised swelling, occasionally with radiodense exostoses or deformities
- swelling or painful loss of motion in one or more joints
- the biggest cause of physical disability in Britain today
* is the inflammation caused by something else
* is the leading cause of disability in America
- in the United States
- in the state affecting about one in three adults
- long-term disability in the United States
- chronic condition reported by the elderly
* is the long term consequence of hip joint looseness
- undetected or untreated hip dysplasia
- main joint disease
- major cause of physical disability in the world
* is the most common cause of front lameness in dogs and the culprit is the elbow
- joint degeneration
- the breakdown of hip tissue
- chronic condition reported by men and, especially, women
- extraintestinal manifestation of ulcerative colitis
- reason for hip replacement surgery
- popular disease to be treated by bee stings
- name for irritation in a joint , which often becomes swollen, painful, and stiff
* is the number one cause of disability in America
- disability in Hawai'i and the nation
- disability in the nation
- severe pain and disability that limits physical activity
* is the number one crippler in America
- of all age groups
- debilitating disease in Missouri
- painful and irreversible deterioration of the ends of the two bones
- perfect complement to western medical treatments
- second most frequently reported chronic condition
* is the term doctors use when there is swelling and pain in a joint
- used to describe inflammation and swelling of the tissues in a joint
- word used to describe a painful joint or joints
- thought to be an allergic reaction amongst many other things
- treatable and manageable if it is detected early enough
- treated with anti-inflammatory drugs
- usually an old peoples disease, there is no known cure
* is usually chronic, meaning it can last for years
- occur over a long period of time
- what happens when the tissue that protects the bones wears away
* leading cause of disability, and a significant public health concern
* limits the mobility of farmers and ranchers during many farm tasks.
* mainly affects adults, but some children have it too.
* major cause of foot pain
- late manifestation of the illness
* makes living extremely difficult for some people.
* means disease of, or damage to, the joint surfaces
* means joint inflammation
- swelling, pain, and loss of motion
- that a person's joints and muscles hurt
* natural condition that affects the surface coating of bones in our joints.
* normally comes from joints that develop out of position.
* occurs commonly during active meningococcal infection.
* occurs in every climate and every continent inhabited by humans
- the spine or legs of some geriatric cats
- more than half of the time in the fingers, wrists, shoulders, knees, and ankles
* often appears in the big toe
- shows up in poor coordination in writing
* only strikes the elderly.
* painful and often life-altering disease
- sometimes debilitating disease that has no cure
- disorder that causes inflammation in the joints
- swelling of the joints between bones
* poses a three- to fourfold increased risk of diminished work productivity.
* refers to joint inflammation, nothing more, nothing less.
* responds to analgesics and rest.
* seems to be about as common in older dogs as it is in aging humans.
* serious disease that causes pain and loss of movement
- problem in many mature dogs
* significant problem for the individual and society.
* simply means joint inflammation.
* sometimes has fatigue associated with it.
* systemic disease which affects the whole body.
* tends to appear after epiphyseal plates are ossified
- worsen in cold, damp weather
* usually affects the hands especially the second and third metacarpophlangeal joints
- causes stiffness, pain, and fatigue
* very general term that simply means that a joint is inflamed
- serious disease and if left untreated, it can even be life threatening
* virus that actually feeds off our own immune systems.
* whole class of illnesses that comes in more than a hundred varieties.
+ Arthritis, Forms of diseases: Diseases
* The most common of these diseases is osteoarthritis. Osteoarthritis is caused by cartilage between the bones wearing down. The bones rub against each other. This causes severe pain in the affected area. Arthritis is more common in older people. Both osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis affect women more often than men. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | arthritis:
Gouty arthritis
* is arthritis
* occurs most commonly in men after the fourth decade of life.
Infectious arthritis
* can cause serious damage, but usually clears up completely with antibiotics.
* is caused by some infecting organism which has invaded the body
- treated with antibiotics and gout is treated with anti-gout medicines
* occurs from an infection that spreads to the joint from the blood.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | arthritis:
Juvenile arthritis
* general term for all types of arthritis that occur in children.
* is autoimmune.
* is the leading cause of disability in children
- name of a group of arthritis-related conditions that affect children
+ Juvenile idiopathic arthritis: Autoimmune diseases :: Children :: Diseases and disorders of joints
* The problem consists of excess swelling around joints in the knees, ankles, wrists, hands and feet. Symptoms consists of lethargy, strong pain and reduced physical activity. There is also stiffness in the morning which may improve later on during the day. Juvenile arthritis is autoimmune.
Osteoarthritis
* Most osteoarthritises have gradual onsets.
* Some osteoarthritises affect weight.
* includes inflammation.
Progressive arthritis
* Some progressive arthritis can develop from a badly damaged kneecap.
* can result, and when it does, it can be crippling.
Rheumatoid arthritis
* Some rheumatoid arthritis has positive tests
* causes pain
- severe symptoms
Septic arthritis
* is caused by joint infection
- infection within the joint
* means infection of the joint space with bacterial germs.
* medical emergency requiring hospital treatment.
* serious disease associated with significant morbidity and mortality.
Traumatic arthritis
* can follow a serious hip or knee injury
* is different from rheumatoid or osteoarthritis.
Asbestosis
* are diseases
- pneumoconiosis
* increases the risk of developing lung cancer.
* involves cancer and lung disease.
* kills annually roughly the same number of people each year in Finland as drug abuse.
* refers to fibrosis of the lung parenchyma itself.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease:
Asthma attack
* Most asthma attacks happen in the spring or fall.
* Some asthma attacks are mild and others can quickly become life threatening.
* are episodic which is the feature that separates asthma from other similar diseases
- episodic, but airway inflammation is chronically present
- illnesses
- more common in winter, especially among children
* are the most common cause of chronic emergency hospital visits by children
- hospitalizations of school age children
- when the bronchial tubes tighten and a lake of breath occurs
* can also result in a lack of sleep, which can also contribute to lethargy.
* can be frightening for parent and child alike
- mild or severe
- mild, moderate, or severe
- very frightening and there is often panic
- come suddenly or gradually, last for minutes or go on for days
- last a few minutes or a few days
* can occur quickly and vary in severity
- very suddenly and often involve gasping, wheezing and coughing
* can range from mild to life-threatening
- very mild to life-threatening
- strike without warning and last from minutes to days
- vary from mild symptoms to serious, life-threatening episodes
* come and go, with wide variation in the symptoms at different times.
### condition | illness | disease | asthma:
Cardiac asthma
* is an asthma-like attack that accompanies congestive heart failure
- one of the signs of congestive heart failure
* is the result of a heart malfunction
- term used to describe asthma-like symptoms due to heart failure
Chronic asthma
* occurs whenever sufferers are repeatedly exposed to a trigger.
* produces symptoms on a frequent basis, in some cases almost constantly. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | asthma:
Occupational asthma
* affects only a minority of workers.
* can result in severe and potentially fatal breathing problems
- take weeks, months or even years to develop
* is associated with repeated exposure to the work environment
- asthma contracted in the workplace
- one disease for which exposure is part of the case definition
- the most frequent occupation alrespiratory disease diagnosis
* notifiable disease in Western Australia and is compensable.
* type of asthma caused by exposure to inhaled irritants in the workplace.
* very real illness and can take months or years to manifest.
Severe asthma
* can result in death.
* requires no exposure to extreme cold or environmental pollutants.
* serious health concern that can lead to respiratory failure and death.
Uncontrolled asthma
* can be a threat to maternal well-being and fetal growth and survival
- cause lung damage
* can hinder a child's attendance, participation, and progress in school
- student's attendance, participation, and progress in school
- lead to depression and low self-esteem
- rob oxygen from the baby
* causes a decrease in the oxygen content of the mother s blood
- in the mother's blood
Autoimmune disease
* Many autoimmune diseases are associated with characteristic auto-antibodies
- rare
* Most autoimmune diseases affect ability
- organ tissue
- are fatal
- cause inflammation
* Some autoimmune diseases affect areas
- women
- young women
- are characterized by growth
- fall between the two types
- have molecular mimicry
- occur more frequently in certain minority populations
* are diseases
- illnesses
* attack tissue.
* have causes.
Autoimmune disorder
* Most autoimmune disorder prevents absorption.
* Some autoimmune disorder causes inflammation
- disorders are gene-based
* are among the major causes of lifelong disability in the community.
* are often difficult to diagnose
- long-term diseases with symptoms that can come and go over time
- one of the continuing mysteries of immunology
- rife with parasitic infections
### condition | illness | disease | autoimmune disorder:
Morphea
* is autoimmune disorder
* occurs as patches of thick and discolored skin.
Myasthenia
* can affect muscles anywhere in the body, including the respiratory muscles
- have a serious impact on the simple activities of daily living
* gravis involves fluctuating levels of weakness of commonly used muscles
- of commonly-used muscles
- with ocular involvement in older patients
* is often an invisible disability.
* often presents with ocular signs and symptoms.
Autosomal disease
* Most autosomal diseases affect people
- are caused by mutation
* Some autosomal diseases cause production.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease:
Bacterial disease
* Most bacterial diseases affect animals
- humans
- lab animals
- other animals
* Most bacterial diseases lead to damage
- nerve damage
* Some bacterial diseases affect chicks
- have distinctive odors
- kill plants
* are by far more well known
- uncommon in Colorado
* cause pain, distress and economic loss
- spots, soft spots, and wilts
* include pneumonia.
* is treated with medicines called antibiotics, for example penicillins.
* tends to have more purulent discharge.
Bad luck
* can make an animal with good genes look average or a genetically average animal look poor.
* is an asthmatic caught behind a bus in rush hour traffic
- luck
Black lung
* are pneumoconiosis.
* coal miner's disease caused by the frequent inhaling of coal dust.
* preventable lung disease caused by breathing coal dust.
* respiratory disease that can be caused by long-term exposure to coal dust. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | bronchitis:
Acute bronchitis
* brief episode that is brought on by a severe cold or viral infection.
* can cause fatigue, fevers, and chest pain
- last for a few days to two weeks, and is usually caused by a virus
* comes on suddenly and lasts a short time.
* is an acute inflammation which generally follows a respiratory infection
- inflammation of the mucous membrane of the bronchial tree
- caused by an infection and typically follows a cold or flu
- inflammation of the air passages of the lung
* is more common and lasts longer in people who smoke or have asthma
- in cigarette smokers and during fall and winter months
- spread from person to person by coughing
- the inflammation of mucous membranes of the bronchial tubes
- usually a short-lived illness caused by a viral infection
* spreads from person to person through cough droplets.
Infectious bronchitis
* is an acute respiratory infection caused by viruses and bacteria.
* is considered the most contagious of poultry diseases
- to be a highly contagious respiratory disease
- difficult to differentiate from many of the other respiratory diseases
- hard to differentiate from most of the other respiratory diseases
* occurs most often in winter. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease:
Cancer
* All cancer is genetic, in that it is triggered by altered genes
* All cancers are due to accumulated mutations that affect genes controlling cell division
- changes in the genes
- the second most common cause of death
* All cancers begin in cells, which are the fundamental unit of life
- when one or more genes in a cell are mutated, or changed
- caused by smoking are preventable
- develop because of genetic mutations
- occur as a result of damage or changes in the genes of a cell
- start at the bowel wall
* Every cancer begins with one cell
- is different with respect to the speed with which it grows and spreads
* Many cancer depend on the growth of blood vessels to transport the disease.
* Many cancers are a case of signal transduction gone wrong
- curable if detected early through routinely available screening tests
- diseases of prevention
- symptom-free in their early to mid stages
- treatable if detected early
* Many cancers can cause anemia, but bowel cancers most commonly cause iron deficiency anemia
- immunodeficiency
- develop and grow without producing symptoms, especially in the early stages
- cause a severe loss of weight in the person affected
- form where there are few cilia, emphasizing their importance
- have characteristic molecules or tumor antigens on their surface
- occur in tissues, which have undergone an abnormal change
- predominantly occur in one sex for no apparent reason
- produce too much growth factor
- require aggressive conventional therapies
- respond best to treatment when they are detected early
* More cancers occur on the skin than any other anatomic site.
* Most Cancers are very frigid.
* Most cancer affects ability
- adults
- happens by chance or is caused by an environmental factor such as tobacco smoke
* Most cancer has characteristics
- components
- distinct characteristics
* Most cancer has several characteristics
* Most cancer is man-caused
- sporadic, due to somatic mutation
- occurs as an acquired process
* Most cancer occurs in adults
- young adults
* Most cancer requires aggressive treatments
- surgery
* Most cancer spreads to nearby tissue
- sites
- surround tissue
* Most cancers affect adults in their middle years or older, but anyone can get cancer
- appear as single, hard, painless lumps
* Most cancers are believed to arise through a process called multistep carcinogenesis
- carcinomas or adenocarcinomas
- controllable with the correct treatment
- curable by surgery, and a few others by chemotherapy or radiation
- due to an accumulation of damage to the DNA in our cells
- methionine-dependent
- multifactorial, meaning they are due to both hereditary and environmental factors
- named after the organ or type of cell in which they originate
- of monoclonal origin, that is, they originate from damage to a single cell
- treatable at the time they are discovered
- treatable, and research is constantly improving treatment of all cancers
- visible on examination and can be biopsied as soon as they are seen
- arise from the accumulated damage done by years of exposure to external toxins
- become visible on mammograms only after they have been present for several years
* Most cancers begin in that part of the prostate easily accessed by way of a digital rectal exam
- with a primary tumor that can later metastasize to other parts of the body
- caused by cigarette smoke are at increased rates among regular cigar smokers as well
- develop slowly from a complex sequence of events
* Most cancers have a diversity of grades
- unique pattern of spread which is discussed in each individual cancer
- involve pancreatic enzyme deficiency and liver congestion and malfuction
* Most cancers occur by chance, as the result of damage to our genes
- on areas that are exposed to the sun
- sporadically
* Most cancers originate from damage to a single cell
- in the head of the pancreas, which the common bile duct runs through
* Most cancers result from environmental factors and thus can be prevented
- low level exposures in genetically susceptible individuals
- multiple defeects in cell-cycle regulation
- start as non-cancerous growths called polyps
* Some cancer affects glands
- mammary glands
- ovaries
- causes microbes
- causing agents react together to significantly worsen the risk of developing cancer
- comes from animals
* Some cancer is caused by exposure
- light
- secondhand smoke
- ultraviolet light
* Some cancer kills plants
- women
- leads to cancer
* Some cancer occurs in breasts
- colons
- stomachs
* Some cancer spreads to bones
- brains
- livers
- lungs
- regions
- spines
* Some cancers also have special grading systems
- appear to be incurable but a lucky few still survive
* Some cancers are clearly easier for individuals to detect, through touch or vision
- dependent on certain hormones for their growth, i.e., breast and prostate cancers
* Some cancers are easily curable
- cured, others are more difficult to treat
- fatal
- hormone dependent
* Some cancers are more common in aging skin
- certain populations than others
- now more aggressive and progress faster
- particular to men and women
- preventable and treatable
- resistant to drugs, however
- sexually transmitted diseases
- worse than others
* Some cancers can also have neutral or primary resistance to certain anticancer drugs
- cause a buildup of fluid within the chest or abdomen
- resemble cysts when they occur on the feet, as well
- cause no physical pain at all
- contain calcium
- depend upon sex hormones
- disrupt the body's functions with the production of hormonelike substances
* Some cancers do recur, most often within five years of the original diagnosis
- strike mainly young people
- exist quietly within the body for years without causing a problem
- form solid growths called tumors
- go into remission and reappear later
* Some cancers grow and spread rapidly, quickly leading to death
- more slowly than others, but can be very different from one person to the next
* Some cancers grow very fast
- quickly, while others progress over a number of years
* Some cancers have a negative estrogen receptor status
- higher incidences of recurrence
- occur because a growth factor is produced erratically
- resist treatment with standard doses of chemotherapy or radiation
- respond to treatment with hormones
* Some cancers respond very well to radiation, so radiation is given to the whole body
* Some cancers respond well and are curable, even if there are multiple metastases
- to chemotherapy
- result from uncorrected gene mutations, some of which are inherited
- run in families
- tend to involve the entire body or system from the start
* abnormal growth of cells in the body.
* accounts for about a quarter of all deaths in American adults.
- all levels of the person
- cells, the body's basic unit of life
- each person differently and usually in a lot of different ways at different times
- everyone, rich or poor, young or old
- many species besides mammals, including fish, reptiles, and birds
- men at a higher rate than women, both in incidence and in deaths
- millions of people each year
- more than the person with the diagnosis
* affects one in three individuals
- of the UK population
- of every four American families
- our cells , the body's basic unit of life
- people of all age, sex, race, geographical location, and social status
- the entire family
- thousands of families in our community every year
- three out of four families in America today
* always start small.
* appear to be unaffected
- when more cells proliferate than die in a given tissue
* are a group of diseases that cause the cells in the body to change and grow out of control
- almost always immediately visible and obvious
- an unfortunate consequence of chronic immunosuppression
* are caused by a series of mutations
- changes in the genome, the epigenome, or both
- imperfect cells
- multiple genetic mutations
- clones
- diseases in which there defect in the regulation of the cell cycle
* are due to changes in a person's genetic material, the genes
- the genes - changes that usually occur after birth
- extraordinarily sensitive, the purist reflective pools of the zodiac
- growths of abnormal cells
- hard to treat
- maternal, domestic and love to nurture others
- medical issues of paramount concern and research topics of extraordinary urgency
- more likely in tissue with higher rates of cell division
- most curable when they are localized
- much more complicated than infectious illnesses
* are named after the body organ they grow in, as well as the type of cell
- for the part of the body where they start
- new growths of the cells in our bodies
- often irregular in shape while benign lesions tend to be round or oval
- quite common in adults, but normally controlled by our immune systems
- sensitive, caring, kind, and have an active mind
- uncontrolled growths of abnormal cells
- usually quite nostalgic and attached to the past
* arises from a disorder in the regulation of cell growth
- sequence of mutational events of both oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes
- the accumulation of multiple mutations in a cell
- through a multistep process of accumulated damage to genes in a single cell
* arising from the head and neck region commonly are squamous cell carcinomas
- testicle are rare
- in another organ that spreads to the vagina is much more common
* become more common as one gets older.
* begin as a primary tumor
- in a single cell, and that cell is the site of the primary cancer
* begins as a single abnormal cell that begins to multiply out of control
- in the cell
* begins when a cell begins dividing uncontrollably
- single cell is transformed, or converted from a normal cell to a cancer cell
- one cell in the body becomes abnormal or 'mutates'
* begins with a series of mutations
- the transformation of a single cell
* behaves differently in different people, depending on the type of cancer involved.
* born can shine in the fields of health, sanitation, medicine, pharmacy and diet.
* breakdown in the viability of our being.
* can affect all body parts except the hair, nails and teeth
- any part of the body, particularly the skin, bone, and other major body organs
- anybody at any age
- anyone, though increasing age is often associated with increased risk
- the upper portion of the birth canal, especially the cervix
* can also grow directly outward
- from the liver
- metastasize through the bloodstream
- occur in the islet cells but is less common there
* can also spread to adjacent structures and penetrate body cavities by direct extension
- the area near spinal cord and vertebrae
- take a beating from nuts
- and often do show a very rapid onset of clinical signs
* can arise in almost any tissue or organ within the human body
- different parts of the body
* can attack all population groups, from rich to poor, underserved and minorities
- people of all ages - men, women, and children
* can be a big problem for a person
- complex, frightening disease that brings on a lot of very emotional reactions
- very costly disease
- benign polyps, which are removed during outpatient surgical procedures
* can be one of the most emotionally charged of all diseases afflicting humans and animals
- possible result of an infection
- temperature-dependent
* can become over protective or even over bearing in their desire to help and cherish others
- resistant to chemotherapeutic agents
* can begin in any organ or tissue of the body
- mystery and vanish just as mysteriously
- bring out the best in people
* can cause a cachexia wasting syndrome in some patients
- variety of symptoms
- different symptoms in different people because of where they are
- pain in several different ways
- premature death
* can develop anywhere in the body, and at any age
- at any time in any tissue or organ
* can develop from any normal part of the body
- tissue within any organ
* can develop in any body organ or tissue, with the exception of hair and nails
- of the four sections of the colon or in the rectum
- part of the colon or in the rectum
- the wall of the gallbladder
- on the outside of the anus or on the inside of the rectum
- develop, people can die
- find other routes other than the lymph system
- form in almost all tissues of the body
- get crabby without constant feeding
- greatly disrupt a child's life, and that of the entire family
* can grow either by an increase in proliferation, a decrease in apoptosis, or both
- in any part of the body
* can have a devastating impact on a person's financial well-being
- devastating emotional and physical effects on patients and their families
- hit anyone
- impact our personal thoughts and feelings as well
- invade any of the four sections of the colon, or the rectum
* can make a person stronger, and it can make life richer than ever
- people feel isolated from the rest of the world
- metastasize to the thyroid gland and present as a palpable nodule
* can occur at any age
- for reasons other than heredity
* can occur in all older animals
- the peritoneum even after the ovaries have been removed
- when there is no longer a balance between dividing and dying cells
- often involve bone marrow and can cause reoccurrence of disease from stem cell infusion
- only grow when the cells are acid, the blood is alkaline, and there is poor oxygenation
- ooze blood as well as fluid
- originate in almost any cell of the body
- put a strain on both close and distant relationships
* can result from a gene mutation that produces uncontrolled cell division
- transposon jumping into a regulatory gene controlling apoptosis
- excess cell division or deficient apoptosis
- mutations by an indirect, vaguely understood process
* can spread by way of the lymph vessels and clog up the lymph nodes and start to grow
- lymphatic system
- over to lungs, liver, bones and other organs
* can spread rapidly or take years to grow
* can spread to any area in the body, but most likely goes to lung, liver, bone brain
* can start in any of the four sections or where the colon ends in the rectum
- the eye or can spread to the eye
- strike any part of the mouth, including the lips and tongue
* can strike anyone at any time
- of any age, and the chances are greater for users of alcohol
- anyone, regardless of age, gender or race
- at any time, in any place
- the colon and the rectum
* can take over a vital organ in a matter of weeks, or it can take decades
- quite an emotional toll on the patient and their loved ones
- six or more years to develop
- years to decades to develop, depending on the type
- vary widely among types of cancer and among individuals
* cardinal, water sign represented by the mountain stream pool of water.
* cause problems because they grow and occupy space.
* causes death.
* causes more childhood deaths than any other disease
- deaths during childhood that any other disease
- the passing of time to accelerate
* change in the physical area.
* changes normal body cells so that they are unable to perform their normal functions
- one's life dramatically
- the DNA of a cell, making it grow and divide unstopably
* chronic illness, which means that it takes time for it to grow worse.
* clonal abnormality.
* colony of constantly dividing cells.
* come in all shapes and forms and can affect all parts of the body.
* common and often devastating disease
- serious disease
- illness in the United States
* communicable disease.
* complex disease often requiring complicated protocols
- with numerous treatment options
- issue, and breast cancer is especially so
* complicated disease and each individual's response to the experience is different
- to understand, even for adults
* condition in which cells from a tumor can escape and start new tumors in other tissues
- grow and divide inappropriately
* consequence of mutation and natural selection within a population of cells.
* contains more water-like material, so it can appear whiter than normal breast tissue.
* continues to be a major killer, second only to heart disease
- the second leading cause of death for both men and women
* crash course in coming to grips with mortality.
* creates a home and connects with the moon's healing cycles.
* crisis for the family and for the network of people around the patient.
* defect in regulation of the cell cycle.
* demonstrates selection favoring mutant cells at the expense of the organism.
* derangement in cell cycle control.
* derive satisfaction from helping others.
* destroys healthy tissues and organs.
* devastates the body and spirit until both have no fight remaining.
* devastating disease where current medical treatments are often inadequate.
- for many reasons, some known, some unknown
- when cells increasingly ignore or override such signals of chromosome impairment
* develops following the accumulation of genetic and epigenetic changes.
* develops in many places of the body such as, the lung, breast, bones, and other forms
- people of all ages but most often in the middle-aged and the elderly
- slowly in people
- through a series of sequential events
* develops when cells begin to multiply at an abnormal rate
- lose their ability to regulate their cell cycle
- no longer follow their normal pattern of controlled growth
- start to proliferate and escape that control
- that line the colon and rectum begin to grow out of control
- several mutations to such genes accumulate
* disease as much about appearance as reality
- associated with clonal evolution and cell competition within the body
- caused by an uncontrolled division of abnormal cells in a part of the body
- characterized by an abnormal growth of cells
- directly affected by lifestyle choices
- entity characterized by uncontrolled cell proliferation
- for a civilised people
* disease in which cells change and grow at a rate that is out of control
- grow and undergo mitosis at an abnormally high rate
- certain cells begin to divide too quickly and without any order
- healthy cells stop functioning and maturing properly
- marked by the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells
* disease of abnormal gene function
- deregulated cellular behaviour
* disease of genes gone awry, but only a small portion of cancer is inherited
- genetic and genomic instability
- inappropriate cell proliferation
- industrialization
- repressed emotion and life-energy
- the body's cells
* disease of the cell cycle in which cell division has gone haywire
- tissue, of cells interacting with other cells in an abnormal way
- uncontrolled cell growth
* disease of unregulated cell division
- growth of the body's own cells
* disease that affects the whole family
- can tear families and friends apart
- causes cells to multiply uncontrollably
- comes with a tremendous amount of emotional baggage
- develops over many years
* disease that is due to the uncontrolled and purposeless growth of cells in the body
- influenced by the stress response
- kills one out of every five peope in the world
- occurs much too frequently
* disease that occurs when cells in a person's body divide uncontrollably forming tumors
- the is no longer regulated
- still needs a lot of study
- takes a long time to develop
- where cell division has gone out of control
* disease which manages to defeat the immune system
- results from a malignant overgrowth, without control or purpose, of cells
- with many interlocking dimensions
* disrupts family life and causes confusion and distress.
* dissolve the proteins that hold cells together in order to spread....
* does occur in the prostate gland and is more common as men age
- that to people
- touch everyone in some way
- unpredictable things to the body and to the lives that it affects
* dreaded disease and is very difficult to fight.
* dreadful disease for both sufferers and their loved ones.
* emerge there and the same bacteria is found there in limited numbers.
* evokes powerful negative thoughts and emotions such as fear, anger and depression.
* exclude leukemia.
* fairly common disease that affects hedgehogs.
* falls to the weakest failing organs.
* family disease
- of diseases that is characterized by cells that replicate too rapidly
* feeds on stress.
* form and grow readily
- emotional bonds with everything that crosses their paths
- of abnormal cell growth in tissues of the body
* frightening and invasive disease
- word that brings many fears to our minds
* general term for uncontrolled cell growth.
* genetic disease at two different levels
- by definition
- disorder of somatic cells
* give new meaning to changeable hair.
* gives people an opportunity to look at life in a new way.
* group of diseases characterized by the uncontrolled growth and spread of abnormal cells
- in which cells in the body grow, change, and multiply out of control
* group of diseases that are characterized by uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells
- cause cells to alter and grow
* group of diseases which affect the cells of the body
- causes cells in the body to change and grow out of control
- many different diseases that have some important things in common
* group of many related diseases that begin in cells , the body's basic unit of life
* grow at different speeds.
* growing problem in the developing countries.
* grows from a systemic clogging of an area of the body
- out of normal cells
* growth industry
- of abnormal cells in the body
* hangs on longer than most to childhood wounds and past pain.
* happens to the entire social network
- when cells grow out of control
* harm health in a number of ways.
* has causes
- links to other disease processes
- long baffled medical science
- only one prime cause
- potential
- to do with home and family, patriotism and nurturing
* have a tendency to spread to other tissues and organs
- very high investment in family values and an appreciation of their historic roots
- latencies of decades for many adult cancers
- much emotional sensitivity
- the worst vascular appearance of all the changes that can occur on the cervix
* heritable disorder of somatic cells.
* highly powerful cell ager as well
- variable disease, and some forms are in fact curable
* hits suddenly - often causing loss of a job.
* human problem, as are other diseases, and death.
* immunotherapy with alloreactive lymphocytes.
* impacts many, many people
- more than just people - it affects families
* includes cancer cells
- cell membranes
- cytoplasm
- nuclei
- plasma membranes
- vacuoles
* involves many genes and people are different
- the loss of control over cell division
* involving the lymph system cells causes cells to grow rapidly and without order.
* is Japan's leading cause of death
- abnormal cells with uncontrolled cell growth
* is about saving someone's life
- the birth of the human soul into physical incarnation
- academic journals
* is actually a group of many related diseases
- many different diseases with many causes
* is also a side effect
- due in part to normal aging
- essentially a disease of the whole organism
- more common among senior citizens
- the sign of motherhood
* is among the leading causes of death worldwide
- most debilitating of all illnesses
- three leading causes of death in all age groups, except very young children
- an abnormal cell growth and development
* is an abnormal growth of cells
- that upsets the natural balance
- growth, caused by underlying disease involving the whole body
- proliferation of cells that divide uncontrollably
* is an abnormal, continuing multiplying of cells
- uncontrolled growth of cells
- area where it appears to have made a major contribution
- easily definable disease that affects a relatively large segment of the population
- emotional issue
- emotionally devastating disease
- environmental illness
- evil, frightening, and threatening disease that is emotionally overwhelming
* is an example of a conditional mutant condition that depends upon multiple loci
- delayed health effect
- disease that develops years after exposure
- mutation in cells
- extraordinarily complex disease
- extremely traumatic experience
- illness that can be more than a little frightening
* is an illness that is at least as old as man
- due to abnormal growth and development of cells
- increasingly prevalent disease
- incredibly complex disease
- interaction between a carcinogen and protective means mobilized by the organism
- internal pathogen
- old person s disease
* is an uncontrolled cell division
* is an uncontrolled growth and spread of abnormal cells
* is an uncontrolled growth of cells that can occur in any tissue in the body
- that disrupts body tissues and organs
- the cells in any part of the body
- unrestrained growth of cells that destroy normal tissue and body parts in that growth
* is another common disease in senior cats
- disease that demonstrates the danger that mutations can cause to organisms
- leading cause of childhood mortality
- major risk of smoking - but the risk drops every year after giving up
- of the major killers in today's society
- associated with pearls
- basically the uncontrolled growth of cells
* is believed to arise from as a result of DNA damage that is inadequately repaired
- be due, in part, to the loss of cell identity and unstable chromosomes
- blamed for nearly one in four deaths in the state, according to public health statistics
- by and large a disease of the elderly
* is capable of kill
* is characterized by dysregulated cell proliferation
- the loss of control of such cell growth mechanisms
* is characterized by uncontrolled cell division
- clonal in nature
* is common in pet animals such as the dog or cat and the rate increases with age
- the USA, but in China it is uncommon
- commonly a disease of old age
- commonly, and often ineffectively, treated with surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation
- connected with home, family, and parenting
* is considered a disease of repression, or inhibited passion
- genetic disorder
* is considered to be one of the most important causes of death in older dogs
- the critical effect for ethylene oxide
- constellations
- curable now, and so are many other life-threatening illnesses
* is currently the most common cause of illness and death of the ferret
- second leading cause of death in the United States
- diagnosed in the skin more often than anywhere else in the body
- discussed in terms of lack of cell death instead of uncontrolled cell division
- due to proliferation of abnormal cells, which develop from body's own cells
- epidemic in the United States
* is essentially a disease of industrialisation
- result of uncontrolled cell division
- the loss of normal controls on cell division
- excessively sensitive in regards to their emotions
- extremely rare in the hand
- far more common in adults than in children
- found in lymph node areas on both sides of the diaphragm
* is found in many lymph nodes under the arm
- places in the abdomen
- only one area or organ outside the lymph nodes and in the lymph nodes around it
* is found only in the first layer of cells in the lining of the esophagus
- innermost layer of the stomach wall
- top lining of the rectum
* is found to have started in the chest
- the digestive tract
- fundamentally a disease of tissue growth regulation
- growth and division of cells that is no longer regulated or well organized
- home to two open star clusters
- in all four layers of the stomach wall and has spread to nearby tissues
- infinitely easier to prevent than to cure
- known as the peacemaker of the zodiac
- largely a disease of old age
- life's cruel common denominator
- like most diseases
- made up of cells that divide rapidly
- mitosis that is no longer properly regulated with respect to starting and stopping
* is more common in men than in women
- older people than in younger people
- some parts of the body than others e.g. skin, lung, bowel and breast
- than most people realize
- concerned with expressing emotions than on superficial conversations
- curable when detected early
* is more likely to come back in a woman treated with cone biopsy
- when growth is rapid and size is greater than one inch
* is most common among older adults
- in dogs middle-aged and older, but it can occur at any age
- curable when detected at an early stage
- dangerous when it goes to other areas in the body
- mostly a preventable disease
- much more complex than polio, because polio single virus kind of disease
- multiple diseases - every tumor is different
- multiplication of the body cells in an abnormal manner
- neither hereditary nor familial
* is no respecter of person
- way to die
- nothing but an abnormal multiplication of body cells
- now common in developing countries
* is now the number one cause of death in dogs
- disease killer of children from late infancy through early adulthood
- public's most feared disease
- second greatest cause of death in the world today
* is now the second leading cause of childhood death
- of death in Ohio, second only to heart disease
* is on the increase across America
* is one common disease of our day
- consequence of mutations caused by faulty DNA repair systems
* is one example of a delayed health problem
- what happens when cells go their own way at the expense of the body
* is one of Ontario s most important health problems
- humanity's most feared scourges
* is one of the biggest and most researched causes of death in developed countries
- conditions in which there systemic predisposition to venous thrombosis
* is one of the leading causes of death in dogs and cats today
- of death in modern society
- major causes of death in pet animals
* is one of the major diseases that is killing people around the world
- world wide
* is one of the most common ways the body responds to depression and cries out for help
- dangerous and deadly diseases today
- parental signs
- scariest things one can ever face
- top four causes of death in Nunavut
- phenotype of mutagenicity
- only in the breast
* is only one of several diseases of the prostate
- the toxic effects of pesticides
- second to heart disease as a leading cause of death in America
- the terminal stage of a long process
- opportunistic
- partly due to environmental factors, genetics and the normal aging process
- positive in a grandfather of the pancreas at an elderly age
- possibly the most significant health threat in our society today
- potentially a life-threatening disease
- predominantly a disease of aging but paradoxically also occurs in young children
* is primarily a disease of adults
- old age, and it affects men as much as women
- probably the most serious skin damage caused by free radicals
- quite rare among the so-called primitive people of the world
- rare in children, more common in middle-aged people and most common in old people
* is really a group of diseases
- number of diseases caused by the abnormal growth of cells
- many diseases
- relatively uncommon in younger age group and the risk increases with increasing age
- represented by the color silver
- ruled by the moon, symbolizing emotion and female energy
* is second only to heart disease as a cause of death in the United States
- as the leading cause of death in the United States
- simply the massive multiplication of 'normal' somatic cells
- slightly more frequent in men than women
- small and the stars are dim
- so common in family histories
- something many people have to face every day
* is something that everybody, somewhere along the way, is touched with
- strikes from without and there is no hope of controlling it
- touches all of our lives
- which spreads beyond control and devastates everything around it
- soothed by walking barefooted by the sea, collecting shells, or sailing
* is still a great risk for users of smokeless tobacco
- major threat in eastern Kentucky as well as the rest of the world
- the number one cause of death in people over fifty
- symbolized by the crab
- systemic disease manifested locally by a tumor
* is the abnormal growth, reproduction and spread of body cells
- body's response to being in a toxic state
- breakdown of cellular messaging and control
- caretaker of the Zodiac
* is the common name for a class of diseases characterized by uncontrolled cell division
- term for all malignant neoplasms
* is the direct invasion of bad cells into normal good cells
- result of genetic mutations
- disease that interrupts the normal workings of our meticulously timed bodies
- end result of approximately eight contributing mutations in the tumor cell
- first water sign and the second cardinal one
- greediest of diseases
- home of the moon, and it is the most feminine of the signs
- leader who inspires their neighbors to their own acts of greatness
- leading cause of childhood death by disease
* is the leading cause of death by disease in children in the United States
- for Vietnamese of both genders in the United States
- in British Columbia
- mortality in the USA, next only to cardiovascular diseases
- non-accidental death in dogs
- disease related cause of death in children after the newborn period
- illness related cause of death in children
- unaccidental death in cats and dogs
- main killer from radiation 'fallout'
- major cause of disease-related death in children
* is the major concern from exposure to coke oven emissions
- to polycyclic organic matter
- effect of concern from the radionuclides
- maternal body which generates sustenance for the new incarnation
- more familial, sensitized and protective sign within the zodiac
- most aggressive disease of a larger class known as neoplasms
* is the most common natural cause of death in dogs and cats in the United States
- non-accidental cause of death in children
* is the most curable of all chronic diseases
- favoured area for pharmaceutical research and development
- notable long-term somatic effect
- sensitive sign of the zodiac
- mothering, sustaining, nurturing sign of the zodiac
- mutation of cells through the process of radiation exposure or genetic makeup
- mythological homemaker
* is the name given to a group of diseases which start in the cells of the body
- describe a tumour that has become malignant
* is the number one cause of death by disease for children and adolescents
- disease-related death among children
- disease-related death of children
* is the number one disease that kills dogs and cats in the United States
- threat to child life
- two killer behind heart disease
* is the number two killer of American men and women
- adults and the leading cause of death from disease in children
- primary risk from chronic, long-term exposure to pesticides
- quintessential disease of late capitalism
- rapid and uncontrolled replication of cells, and it can occur in any part of the body
* is the result of an immune system dysfunction
- genetic alterations that lead to the uninterrupted growth of abnormal cells
- the abnormal and uncontrolled growth of tissue cells
- uninhibited cell division
- second biggest killer of children in the United States after accidents
* is the second leading cause of childhood deaths, second only to accidents
- death among adults
- death among women in their reproductive years
- death and fourth leading cause of hospitalization
- death in California, accounting for nearly one in four deaths
- death in Canada and around the world
- death in Georgia, accounting for one in four deaths each year
- death in North Dakota and in the United States
- death in alcoholics
- death in our country, exceeded only by heart disease
- death in southeast Michigan
- death in the U.S. behind heart attack
- death in the U.S., exceeded only by heart disease
- death in the United States and Europe
- death in the United States, exceeded only by heart disease
- death in the United States, second only to heart disease
- death in the United States, surpassed only by heart disease
- death in the country, exceeded only by heart disease
- death in the islands
- death in women
- mortality in developed countries
- mortality in the industrialized world
- major cause of death
* is the second most common cause of death in the UK - it causes about a quarter of all deaths
- frequent cause of death among Ohio women
- second-leading cause of death, second only to cardiovascular disease
* is the sign of emotional sensitivity and sympathy
- emotions and feelings
- family and children
* is the third leading cause of death among men and women of the Bahamas
* is the top cause of death for African-American women in their middle years
- in Japan, followed by stroke and heart disease
* is the uncontrolled growth and proliferation of cells
- spread of abnormal cells in the body
* is the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells derived from normal tissues
* is the uncontrolled growth of cells which results in damage to healthy cells
- unrestrained growth of cells that destroy normal tissues and body parts
- thought to arise in a single cell
* is thought to be a stochastic effect
- prompted by genetic damage
- develop after a cell has accumulated several cancer-causing lesions
- too complex a disease to be explained by a single cause
- treatable, and many cancers are curable
* is treated virtually the same in animals as it is in people
- way in animals as it is in people
* is treated with surgery, radiation therapy , and sometimes chemotherapy
- therapy, chemotherapy, hormone therapy or immunotherapy
- triggered by changes in the genetic material of cells
* is typified by unregulated cell signaling causing cell growth
- signalling leading to explosive cell growth
* is uncontrolled cell division and growth
* is unregulated cell division
- growth of the cells in the body
- usually less painful, studies show, than people expect, but the pain can still be severe
- very common, but usually controlled by the human body
- viral in nature
- when mutations cause cells to behave in a selfish manner, much as single cells do
- without a doubt one of the most well known and feared diseases on earth
* is, after all, a disease of unregulated cell division
- by definition, cells that are growing out of control
- however, more predominant in males
* kills by getting in the way of normal bodily processes
- more children age one to fourteen in the U.S. than any other disease
- mostly through blood-borne metastasis
- primarily when tumors grow so large that they interfere with organ and tissue function
- thousands of women each year
* knows no age limits and is stealing the lives of our children.
* leading cause of death in cats and dogs
- most industrialized countries
* legislatively mandated, reportable disease in the state of Florida.
* life-transforming experience.
* likely develops only after a series of different mutations has occurred
- involves multiple gene mutations
* live for their homes and families
- in their feelings
* love food, children.
* major cause of death in the United States
- issue in health care
- killer of people all around the globe
* make good pimps or piano players in brothels.
* malfunction of the body's normal growth process.
* malignant growth that can affect any part of the body
- tumor, which invades tissues aggressively
* mass of toxins that attack the immune system
* means individual survival or fear of starvation.
* metabolic deficiency.
* metastatic tumor
* modern day epidemic.
* much more complex disease than, say, a bacterial infection.
* multi-parameter phenomenon and is elusive target in terms of drug therapy.
* multifactorial disease, caused by both genetic and environmental factors.
* multistep process, the genetic basis for which has been only partly elucidated
* mutation in the information part of the cell, the DNA itself.
* needs a low oxygen acidic pH environment to survive
- specific environment in which to grow
* now can be a disease of the past.
* occur when signaling pathways are perturbed.
* occurs as a loss of control of cell growth.
* occurs at a young age
- all ages, but most often in middle-aged and older people
- because of mutations in the genes responsible for cell multiplication and repair
- if the immune system has been compromised
- most species of animals and in many kinds of plant, as well as in human beings
- several generations
- the human body when cells divide out of control
- more often as people grow older
- primarily in the respiratory tract
- to a family, regardless of the type of cancer
* occurs when cell division occurs unnecessarily, without order
- runs amok
* occurs when cell growth becomes uncontrollable and tumors develop
- can no longer be regulated
* occurs when cells become abnormal and divide and grow without control or order
- divide without control or order
- abnormal, divide and form more cells without control or order
- begin to divide out of control, which often causes a noticeable lump
- develop abnormally and grow in an uncontrolled way
- grow abnormally and keep forming without control or order
* occurs when cells in the body grow out of control
- reproduce and divide at an abnormal rate
- lose the ability to control their own growth
- damaged cells multiply uncontrollably and form tumors
* occurs when some normal cells in the body transform into abnormal or malignant cells
- of the cells start to divide and spread in an uncontrolled manner
* occurs when the damage causes changes that make the cell grow and divide uncontrollably
- genes that control the healthy division of cells mutate or are damaged
* occurs when, for unknown reasons, cells become abnormal and divide without control or order
* often arises in areas that have been inflamed for long periods
- causes lower hemoglobin readings
- form lumps or sores that can be felt or seen
- gives children or teens their first glimpse of the medical world
- introduces a level of absurdity into people's lives
- leaves one feeling powerless
- means death
- results in one extreme or the other, at least for a time
- results, and the effects can even include genetic damage
* often takes a long time to develop
- many years to develop
* originating in the breast can metastasize and infect the skin, bone, lung and liver
- epithelial tissue is called a carcinoma
* overproduce their own angiogenic agents.
* pervasive problem in America.
* places many demands on the normal functioning of the body
- people at risk for herpes zoster
* population of the body s cells that divides without control.
* potentially serious disease.
* presents in a specific internal environment which promotes malignant growth.
* preventable disease that requires major lifestyle changes
* problem of public health proportions.
* process that indicates out of control thinking
- with many steps
* produces great quantities of free radicals.
* product of cells replicating out of control because of malfunctioning genes.
* progresses because there lack of cancer-digesting enzymes in the body.
* progressive disease.
* ranks second as a cause of death.
* redefines the meaning of things.
* refers to any type of malignant neoplasm
- the uncontrolled growth of a specific body tissue
* relatively rare problem of guinea pigs.
* releases irritants that lead to the itching.
* remains one of the leading causes of death in the western world
* remains one of the most common causes of death in children and adolescents
- causes of death in our society
- the big bad wolf of childhood illnesses
* reportable disease under the Iowa Code.
* represents a loss of control over the rate of cell division within the cell cycle.
* require energy to grow and rob the body of the energy it needs for normal function.
- an accumulation of mutations
- extensive surgery
* result from accumulated mutations within tissues
- of multiple mutations in the DNA of the tumor cells
* result when key control genes are hit
- the normal, orderly pattern of growth of individual cells goes haywire
* results from alterations in normal cell behaviors
- an abnormal, rapid growth of cells
- loss of control of division of cells
- mutant genes
- smoking, for example, but the disease usually takes years to appear
- too much spontaneity in nature
- when a gene mutation occurs that stomps on the accelerator or removes the breaks
* results when cells divide out of control
- without restraint
* rules silver, and the ruby as well as the pearl are considered Cancerian birthstones.
* rules the breast, stomach, and the solar plexus
- breasts and stomach
* rules the stomach, breasts, body fluids and mucus membranes
- diaphragm, upper liver and breasts
* scourge that afflicts hundreds of millions of people.
* second important target for germline engineering.
* seem to grow slower, the older one becomes.
* seems to be motivated by activities that satisfy their moods and emotional needs.
* serious affliction
- concern for a patient of any age
* shows both geographic and temporal variability
- up in new moles when the cells begin to multiply
* sign associated with strong nationalistic tendencies and trends.
* silent but deadly disease.
* small but important zodiacal constellation.
* sometimes develop increased vascularity which yields a net increase in absorption.
* species, class, or ordinal character.
* spontaneously remit all the time.
* spreads silently in the body.
* start when one cell begins to grow and divide, rapidly and out of control.
* starting at the head of the pancreas is most likely to cause jaundice.
* starts as a genetic change in one cell
- systemic disease without clinical manifestations
- in a normal cell when genes have become damaged
* starts in a single cell which has become abnormal
- cell, when it starts dividing out of control
- single, abnormal cell unable to control it's division processes
* starts when a cell is somehow altered so that it multiplies out of control
- cells in the body begin to grow out of control
* starts with a single cell going bad
- one or a small group of cells that have gone wrong
* state of uncontrolled cell growth.
* still has a stigma.
* strikes one in three people and kills one in four
- people of all ages but especially middle-aged persons and the elderly
* subject that can make anyone uncomfortable.
* symptom of improper diet, lifestyle and toxic exposure
- or expression of abnormal cellular metabolism
* systemic disease that needs to be dealt with in a holistic manner.
* take a long time to grow big enough to cause symptoms or be seen on a scan
- years to grow to the point where they are detectable
- an economic and emotional toll on survivors and their families
- lives every minute of everyday
* tend to grow quickly, but unfortunately, so do cells in bone marrow, gut and other areas
- metastasize to specific organs or sites in the body
* tends to spread and destroy the healthy tissues and organs of the body
* term describing a large variety of disorders of proliferation.
* thousand diseases.
* touches many lives, whether directly or indirectly
- one-third of Florida s population
- virtually every aspect of a survivor's life
* transformational piano composition to help release pain and anger.
* traumatic experience in a family.
* treatments themselves can cause pain.
* tremendously complex disease with factors such as genetics, environment and lifestyle.
* tumor, or an overgrowth of abnormal cells.
* typically have irregular shapes and grow without pain.
* universal illness, while music transcends national boundaries.
* very common disease
- problem in the world
* very complex disease characterized by a disruption of normal organized cell growth
- disease, arising from a combination of many different factors
- nasty, painful, and horrible way to die
* very serious disease that grows exponentially
- geometrically
- subject and effects many people everyday
* water sign known for being loyal.
* water sign, and the psychological opposite is air, the thinking function
- passive, cardinal and angular
- thus the involuntary shedding of tears
* word that is used to describe a group of diseases
- strikes fear
+ Cancer (constellation): Constellations :: Constellations listed by Ptolemy
* The name is Latin for crab. Cancer is small and the stars are dim. It is between Gemini to the west and Leo to the east, Lynx to the north and Canis Minor and Hydra to the south.
* Cancer can affect anybody at any age. Most types of cancer are more likely to affect people as they get older. This is because as a person's DNA gets older, their DNA may become damaged, or damage that happened in the past may get worse.
+ Liver, Liver diseases, Types of liver disease: Anatomy of the digestive system
* You can also get cancer of your liver. This can be metastatic cancer that came from some other place in your body. The liver is a common place to get metastases because it takes bad things out of the blood. So it takes cancer cells out of the blood and they grow in the liver. Cancer can also grow from the liver. Most hepatocellular carcinoma is from cirrhosis. If it is from the cells that line the bile ducts in the liver, it is called 'cholangiocarcinoma'. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Bladder cancer
* Most bladder cancers are carcinomas of the transitional epithelium of the bladder's mucosal lining
* accounts for two to four percent of all cancers.
* affects men three times as often as women.
* becomes more common with age and is more common in men than women.
* begins in the bladder, the organ that stores urine.
* can be quite painful
- present in many ways
* develop from the lining of the bladder, which is called urothelium.
* disease in which cancerous cells are found in the bladder.
* has different origins.
* is also a frequent cancer for older men
- leading site of cancer worldwide
- cancer of the urinary bladder
- diagnosed by a biopsy done during a cystoscopy
- generally fatal
* is more common in men than in women
- likely when there is repeated irritation to the bladder
- now the fifth most common cancer in the United States
- one of the more common diseases treated by urologists
* is one of the most common cancers in both men and women
- forms of cancer in the United States
- highly curable types of cancer, if detected early
- primarily a disease of advanced age
* is the fifth most common cancer in men, and the tenth most common in women
- fourth leading type of cancer among men in the United States
* is the fourth most common cancer among men, and ninth among women
- frequent form of cancer among men
- ninth leading cause of cancer death in the United States
- second most common malignancy of the genito-urinary system
- sixth most common cancer in the United States
- very treatable if detected early and if patients receive appropriate care
* occurs more frequently in the United States and England.
* strikes far more men than women.
Bowel cancer
* can develop in any part of the large bowel, including the colon and rectum.
* is cancer
- curable, especially when detected at an early stage
- one of the most frequently occurring cancers in the United States
- second only to lung cancer for men and breast cancer for women as a cause of death
* is the second commonest cause of cancer death in the country
- most common overall cancer
* major public health problem.
Brain cancer
* are always serious because as they grow they press on and destroy brain tissue
- notoriously invasive, sending out tentacle-like columns of cells
* can occur at any age, but is most common among young and middle-aged adults.
* disease where abnormal cells begin to grow in the brain tissue.
* is cancer
- the second leading cause of cancer death in children
* starts in just one cell.
* very devastating and debilitating form of cancer. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Breast cancer
* All breast cancers originate in the layer of cells that line the milk ducts.
* Many breast cancers are curable through a variety of treatments
- estrogen dependent
- hormone dependent very similar to prostate cancer
- contain estrogen receptors within their cells
- depend on the female hormone estrogen to stimulate their growth
* Many breast cancers rely on supplies of the hormone oestrogen to grow
- the presence of estrogen to continue growing
* Most breast cancer has characteristics.
* Most breast cancer is curable if diagnosed and treated early
- detected at a late stage
- found by women themselves while doing breast self-exams
* Most breast cancer occurs in adults
- women with no family history
- young adults
- starts out in the duct of the breast
* Most breast cancers arise from the ducts, or more specifically, the terminal ductal lobular unit
- begin in the milk ducts
* Most breast cancers depend on estrogen for growth
- for their growth
- form in the milk ducts or lobes of the breast
* Most breast cancers have estrogen receptors on the cell surface
- moderate or poor differentiation
* Most breast cancers occur centrally and laterally in the breasts
- in the upper outer area of the breast
- start out in the milk ducts
* Some breast cancer affects men
- occurs in women
* Some breast cancer spreads to bones
- livers
* Some breast cancers get their names from the cells of the breast that turned into cancer
- occur in families and are probably hereditary
* accounts for about one-third of all cancer in American women, and is on the increase
- one out of every three cancer diagnoses in the United States
- the greatest number of new cases of cancer in Saskatchewan women
* affecting elderly women major health problem.
* affects a small percentage of men
- all women differently
- more than one in eight women
- persons of any race, age, or religion
- the lives of families every day
* appear as a lump on the breast, but there are many different types of breast lump.
* appears as a dense area within the mammogram
- stellate, hard tumor which infiltrates the surrounding breast tissue
- more likely to occur in women whose diet is high in fat
* appears to be more frequently in women whose diet is very high in fat
- likely to develop in women whose diet is very high in fat
- progress differently in women of color than in white women
* are almost always painless
- more often irregular in shape
* are usually hard on palpation
* arise from cells that line the milk ducts.
* arises from estrogen-responsive breast epithelial cells
- over many years
* becomes more common with increasing age.
* begins as changes in some of the cells in the breast.
* begins in the breast tissue
- tissues that make up the breast
* can affect men as well as women.
* can also affect men, but to a lesser degree
- cause a yellow, bloody, or clear discharge from the nipple
- have very different growth rates and tendencies to spread
* can also occur in men, although it is rare
- vary quite dramatically in their growth rate and propensity to spread
* can be a confusing and overwhelming disease
- tremendous challenge in a woman's life
- very hard to see on a mammogram
- become a condition women can live with rather than a life-threatening one
- develop in one of several different breast areas
- happen to women with disabilities
- metastasize via the blood or via the lymphatic system
- occasionally present as an inflammatory mass
* can occur at any age, but it becomes more common as a woman gets older
- it is far more common in older women than younger women
- in any woman at any age but is most common in older women
- without any warning signs
* can recur any time
- anytime
* can spread to almost any area of the body
- bones and cause complications, such as fractures , etc
- the lymph nodes, lungs, liver, bone and brain
* can strike any woman
- anyone at anytime
- take a number of forms
* cancerous tumor that develops in the breast.
* case in point where self-diagnosis produces the optimal outcome
* causes the second highest number of deaths in women, after lung cancer.
* changes a woman's life.
* common disease, affecting one in nine women during their lifetime
- so it can happen within a family in that way
- type of cancer among woman
* complex disease.
* condition marked by the growth of abnormal cells in glandular breast tissue.
* continues to afflict women of all ages in frightening numbers.
* continues to be a disease that disproportionately strikes older women
- significant public health problem
- the most diagnosed cancer in U.S. and Canadian women
- impact women and their families at an alarming rate
* cultural disease.
* deadly disease.
* devastating illness striking women often in the prime of life.
* develops in the milk ducts
- through a series of changes in the cells lining the ducts or the lobules
* disease in which cancer cells are found in breast tissue.
* disease that affects women of all ages
- can be considered gender-specific
- knows no ethnic, socioeconomic, age, gender or cultural boundaries
- where a mutant cell in the breast forms a tumor
- with a very long memory
* does cause symptoms if it returns
- respond to treatment
* effects everyone.
* evolves through a series of stages.
* facts Breast cancer is the number one cause of cancer deaths in women today.
* family issue.
* feels different than the breast tissue of gynecomastia.
* form of cancer that begins in the breast tissue.
* goes to the bones first, because the mold of breast cancer feeds on calcium.
* grows rather slowly.
* happens only in older women.
* has a high cure rate if detected and treated when the tumor is small
- survival rate that is increasing
- few physical signs
- four stages
- strong genetic components as well as environmental components
- the potential to spread to almost any region of the body
* have a decreased ability to undergo cell death
- the same clinical characteristics in elderly women as in younger women
* increases initiation of angiogenesis without accelerating neovessel growth rate
- with age
* involves malignant tumors.
* is THE leading type of cancer in women.
* is abnormal cell growth originating in glandular breast tissue
- that originates in the breast tissue
* is almost equal to myocardial infarction in litigation prevalence
- totally curable when detected early
* is also a disease replete with mythology
- an area of intense interest for alternative treatments
- less common in certain parts of the world, and among certain ethnic groups
- the leading form of cancer diagnosed in New Hampshire
- always fatal
- among the conditions being studied
* is among the most treatable cancers if detected early
- of solid tumors
- treated of all cancers
* is an abnormal cell growth originating in glandular tissue
- growth of cells that lines the ducts and the lobules
- epidemic and is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in women today
- important health problem in New Zealand
- increasingly prevalent killer in the United States
- incredibly common disease, and in fact, is an epidemic
- indiscriminate killer
- oestrogen-dependent cancer
- uncontrolled growth of breast cells
* is another common cancer
- key indicator of contaminants in the workplace
- as seen the most common form of cancer among Finnish women
- associated with high socioeconomic status
- asymptomatic for years
- believed to originate in undifferentiated or primitive cells
- by far the most common type of cancer among women
* is caused by excess estrogen, the female sex hormone
- several environmental and genetic factors
- certainly more than one disease
- classified into several types, listed below
- common and on the increase
- confirmed by biopsy
- considered a woman's disease, but men can also develop breast cancer
- contagious
- curable if detected and dealt with early
* is currently the most common cancer in women
- second leading cause of cancer death in women
- everywhere
- far the most frequently diagnosed neoplasm in women
- fatal if left untreated
- frequently hormone independent
- highly curable for women who are diagnosed early
- hormonally based
- hormone-dependent
- influenced by estrogens, and exercise appears to affect levels of sex hormones
- just one of the many physical effects
- known to be affected by the hormone
- less common in younger women, but it is more likely to be aggressive
- more common among older women
* is more common in middle-aged and older women
- women, although it can also develop in men
- than ovarian cancer
* is more prevalent in older age groups
- women eating high fat, low fibre diets
- likely to spread to the liver, lungs and bones
* is no longer a death sentence, but a life sentence
- secret
- now the leading cause of cancer among Brazilian women
- often called the disease women fear most
- on every woman's mind, and all women are at risk
* is on the increase because of environmental pollution
- rise in California
* is one of the important cancers for which obesity risk factor
- largest leading killers in women today
* is one of the leading cancer killers of women
- causes of cancer-related death in women
- health risks for women
- killers of women in the United States
- more curable forms of cancer if it is caught early
* is one of the most common cancers among women in industrialized countries
- cancers in women
- forms of cancer in women in the United States
- malignancies among women
- malignancies in females
- dynamic areas of oncologic research
* is one of the most feared and serious diseases that affects women
- diseases among women
- poorly understood malignancies
- terrifying and devastating experiences for a woman
- treatable and easily controlled types of cancer there is
- primary causes of premature female mortality in both countries
- top five causes of death for women
- which comes immediately to mind
- present as a spectrum of neoplasms
- preventable
* is primarily a disease of older women
- women's disease
- probably the disease most feared by Canadian women
* is rare in pediatrics and adolescents
- young women
- related to calcifications in the breast
* is second only to lung cancer as a cause of cancer death among women
- as the leading cause of death in women
- as the most common cause of cancer death in women
- in cancer-related deaths
- staged according to size of the tumor, and lymph nodes and other organ involvement
* is still the most common cancer among women, excluding skin cancers
- type of cancer diagnosed in women living in North America
- th leading cause of cancer deaths among African American women
- the biggest killer of women in Australia today
* is the commonest cancer among ethnic minority groups
* is the development of abnormal cells in the breast
- within the breast tissue
* is the leading cancer among women in Singapore today
- diagnosed among Pennsylvanian women
* is the leading cancer diagnosed in Pennsylvania women
- women in America
* is the leading cause of cancer death for African American women
- death for African-American women
- deaths among Canadian women
- deaths among women
- deaths for women in their forties to midfifties
- deaths in Illinois women
- in women, and represents a major health problem
* is the leading cause of death among women in the United States
- for women in their thirties and forties
- malignancy in Serbia
* is the most common cancer among African American women
- women and the second most deadly
- women, accounting for one in three cancers diagnosed
- women, affecting one in eight females
- women, other than skin cancer
* is the most common cancer diagnosed among women in the metro Detroit area
- in Black American women
- in women in Canada
- diagnosis in women
- for women in British Columbia
- found in women
* is the most common cancer in African American women
- Australian women
- European women
- Hispanic women
- women in many developed countries
- women worldwide
- women, aside from non-melanoma skin cancers
- women, aside from skin cancer
- cancer, and the second leading cause of cancer death, in women
* is the most common cause of cancer among women
- cancer death in Australian women
- death from cancer in Australian women
- death from cancer in women
* is the most common form of cancer among American women
- cancer among women in the United States
- cancer and the leading cause of death in American women
- cancer in woman in the United States
- cancer in women in Maryland and in the United States
- cancer in women in industrialized countries
- cancer on women, so it is worth attention and discussion
- cancer to strike American women
- cancer to strike women in Canada
- malignant tumors affecting women throughout the world
- malignancy among women in the United States
- malignant cancer of women in the western world
- neoplasm in women, with an increase in incidence with age
* is the most common type of cancer among American women
- cancer in North American women
* is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among American women
- among U.S. women
- in American women today
- in women in America and worldwide
- in women next to skin cancer
* is the most commonly occurring cancer among women in Israel
- female cancer
- form of cancer in women
- seen malignancy in women in developed countries
- frequent cancer striking women worldwide
* is the most frequently diagnosed cancer among Canadian women
- malignancy in the United States
- non-skin cancer in American women
- diagnosed-cancer for North American women
- occurring cancer in American women
- reported cancer
- important differential diagnosis
* is the most prevalent cancer among women
- significant health and death threat to women
* is the number one cancer in women
- incidence site in women regardless of race or ethnicity
- diagnosis for which stem cell transplant is performed today
- type of cancer diagnosed in intact or un-spayed female cats
- two cause of cancer related deaths in women
- predominant type of cancer in women
* is the primary diagnosis, followed by fibrocystic mastopathy, fat necrosis, and cyst
- second leading cause of cancer deaths in women
- second leading cancer killer of women
* is the second leading cause of cancer death for all women
- cancer death in Canada after lung cancer
- cancer death in women, after lung cancer
- cancer death in women, exceeded only by lung cancer
- cancer death in women, exceeding lung cancer
- cancer death in women, second only to lung cancer
- cancer deaths among American women
- cancer deaths among women
- cancer deaths in American women
- cancer deaths in women in the United States
- cancer in women, surpassed only by lung cancer
- death by cancer among American women
- death for women in Missouri
* is the second major cause of cancer death among women
* is the second most common cancer among women, second to skin cancer
* is the second most common cause of cancer death in women
- form of cancer in women, after skin cancers
- deadly cancer for women
- second-deadliest cancer in women
* is the second-leading cause of cancer death among women behind lung cancer
* is the third leading cause of death in women
- most common cancer in the world
- uncommon in pregnancy but it does occur
- unique in many ways
- usually curable if it is found and treated early enough
* is very complicated and affects different people in different ways
- rare in males
- uncommon in teenage years
* kills more women in Britain than any other type of cancer.
* kills thousands of women a year
* knows no boundaries of races for attacking women with the disease.
* leading concern of women, and therefore it has a prominent place in our media
- killer of women in the United States and around the world
* lumps usually aren t painful.
* major cause of morbidity and mortality in elderly women.
* major health concern of women, dogs and cats
- problem with incidence increasing with age
* malignancy of breast cells that manifests itself in uncontrolled tumor growth.
* malignant form of cancer that develops in breast tissue.
* malignant tumor that develops from breast cells
* malignant tumor that has developed from cells at that site
- tumour which starts in breast tissue
* metastases masquerading as primary gastric carcinoma.
* occurs among both women and men, but is quite rare among men.
- all kinds of women
- both sporadic and inherited forms
- females in four generations
- men also, but the number of new cases is small
* occurs in men as well as women, but is much less common
- women, but is much more common in women
- one out of every nine women
- primarily in females but is also common enough in men
* occurs when abnormal cells in the breast tissue grow out of control
- breast cells become abnormal and divide without control or order
- cells in the breast become abnormal and grow out of control
- there change in the way cells grow in the breast
* poses significant risks.
* predates antiperspirants by many centuries.
* problem of pressing national importance.
* ranks second after lung cancer as a cause of cancer deaths among women.
* ranks second among cancer deaths in women, after lung cancer
- only to lung cancer in terms of cancer deaths among women
* really difficult thing to study.
* remains the leading cause of cancer-related death in women today
- second leading cause of cancer death for all American women
* results from a complex interaction of genetic and environmental factors
- malignant tumors which invade and destroy normal tissue
* risks in relatives of male breast cancer patients.
* runs in the family of women.
* screening among Cambodian American women lags behind the general U.S. population.
* seems to be associated with a lifetime accumulation of estrogen.
* specific cancer that occurs in one in eight women.
* spreads most often to the bone, liver, lungs or brain.
* starts as a tiny, unusual growth inside the body
- from the mutation of a single cell in the breast
* strikes both women and men, but mostly women
- indiscriminately, heedless of race, religion, nationality or social status
* strikes one out of every eight American women
- or nine women
- nine American women
- ten American women
- regardless of age
- without regard to age, race or gender
* survival, treatable disease.
* tends to be quite aggressive in younger women
- strike women earlier than osteoporosis or heart disease
* terrible struggle for women.
* threat to every woman.
* threatens women of every race, every color and every age.
* touches all types of people all over the world each day
- almost every American family in some way
* touches the lives of both women and men
- thousands of women and families in the United States each year
* tumor that can have serious consequences.
* type of adenocarcinoma.
* very complex disease caused by changes or mutations in many different genes
- complicated disease
+ Cancer, Kinds
* There are many different kinds of cancers. Breast cancer begins in the breast. It can be found in anybody at anytime, even in men. Testicular cancer starts in the testicles, and is most common in young men. Mesothelioma and lung cancer start in the lungs. Mesothelioma is usually caused by exposure to asbestos. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Cancer research
* is academic journals
- possibly the most important reason for embryo cloning
- typically a collaborative and interdisciplinary effort
* subject that brings back a flash of the old fire.
* vitally important and growing field of research.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Carcinoma
* All carcinomas can spread to the lungs.
* Most carcinomas have a prolonged dysplasia-carcinoma in situ phase.
* affect the skin, mucous membranes, glands, and internal organs.
* are cancers of epithelia
- that arise in epithelial cells
- more common in adults and they are probably linked to age, diet and lifestyle
- much more likely to metastasize to bone than sarcomas
- the cancer of the epithelial tissue
* are the most common cause
- frequent lid malignant pathology whose presence increases with age
- three times as frequent in women as in men
- tumors derived from epithelial tissue
* arise from the epithelial covering or epithelial lining of structures
- in many different sites within the body
* arising in areas of chronic inflammation have the highest risk of metastasizing
- pre-existing sinonasal papillomas of the nasal septum are rare
- on the vocal fold itself often produce hoarseness as an early symptom
* have a propensity to spread via lymphatics.
* is cancer
- diseases
* like to spread via lymphatics, first to local nodes and then to distant sites.
* often metastasize to lymphatics
* start in cells that cover external and internal body surfaces.
* typically have few, short, non-branched microvilli.
* usually arise in a single site and spread by metastasizing.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | cancer | carcinoma:
Adenocarcinoma
* Most adenocarcinomas arise in the outer, or peripheral, areas of the lungs
- form hard, nodular areas that grow irregularly
- grow endophytically and are less likely to be detected
- occur in the rectum or sigmoid colon
* also affect the pancreas, lungs, ovaries in women, and prostate in men.
* are cancer cells that appear to form glands.
* are carcinomas derived from glandular tissue
- of glandular tissues
- highly metastatic and often move to the lymph nodes, kidney, spleen, brain
- malignant tumors of glandular tissue
- proportionally less common in non-smokers
* are the most common tumor in the intestines and stomach of dogs
- type of extrahepatic bile duct cancers
* arise from the glandular lining of the endocervical canal.
* is carcinoma
* originate in glandular cells.
* tend to be more peripherally located
- well circumscribed and contain central necrotic cores
* usually develop in the glandular tissue in the lower part of the esophagus.
### condition | illness | disease | cancer | carcinoma | adenocarcinoma:
Endometrial adenocarcinoma
* are cancers that originate in the epithelium of the uterine lining.
* is the most common invasive gynecologic malignancy.
Uterine adenocarcinoma
* is the most commonly encountered spontaneous neoplasm in rabbits.
* malignant cancer that can affect female rabbits over two years of age.
Adrenocortical carcinoma
* is diseases
- illnesses
* manifesting pure hyperaldosteronism is extremely rare.
* rare tumor afflicting only one or two percent in million
- associated with a commonly poor prognosis
- with a poor prognosis
* very rare malignancy with poor prognosis.
Bronchioloalveolar carcinoma
* Some bronchioloalveolar carcinomas produce abundant mucus.
* specific type of adenocarcinoma.
Bronchogenic carcinoma
* is an occasional underlying cause in older smokers
- divided into small cell and non-small cell types
* is the leading cause of death from cancer in both men and women
- most common type of tumor causing death in both men and women
* is, by far, the most common malignant lesion in surgical series of SPNs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer | carcinoma:
Cervical carcinoma
* is the most common malignant tumor among woman in Paraguay.
* major health care problem in industrialised countries.
* malignant tumor that poses a serious threat to women's health and survival.
Colorectal carcinoma
* carries a uniformly poor prognosis due to advanced stage at presentation.
* is the second leading cause of cancer death in the United States.
* presenting during pregnancy is uncommon.
Embryonal carcinoma
* is carcinoma
- more aggressive than seminoma
* metastasizes early and widely via both lymphatic and hematogenous routes.
* tend to show gross necrosis and hemorrhage.
Endometrial carcinoma
* is carcinoma
- diagnosed
- linked to prolonged estrogenic stimulation
- the most common female pelvic genital malignancy
* occurs almost exclusively after the menopause.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | cancer | carcinoma:
Hepatocellular carcinoma
* Most hepatocellular carcinoma is from cirrhosis.
* has a variable macroscopic appearance.
* is cancer that arises from hepatocytes, the major cell type of the liver
- liver cancer
- much more common in males than in females
- one of the leading causes of cancer death in the world
* is one of the most common cancers worldwide
- prevalent malignant diseases in the world
- ten most common carcinoma in the world
- the most common primary hepatic cancer
* is the most common type of liver cancer
- primary liver cancer
- frequent tumor worldwide
- predominant primary malignancy of the liver
- technical term for liver cancer
* refers to a primary malignant tumor or tumors found in the liver.
+ Liver, Liver diseases, Types of liver disease: Anatomy of the digestive system
* You can also get cancer of your liver. This can be metastatic cancer that came from some other place in your body. The liver is a common place to get metastases because it takes bad things out of the blood. So it takes cancer cells out of the blood and they grow in the liver. Cancer can also grow from the liver. Most hepatocellular carcinoma is from cirrhosis. If it is from the cells that line the bile ducts in the liver, it is called 'cholangiocarcinoma'.
Hepatoma
* is carcinoma
* occur with increased frequency in patients with long standing hemochromatosis.
Lobular carcinoma
* are very unusual, because lobules are normally absent from the male breast.
* involves both breasts more frequently than other histologic types.
* is another type, which begins in the lobules where breast milk is produced.
* originate in the small sacs in the breast that produce milk.
Medullary carcinoma
* can be sporadic or familial.
* carries a poorer prognosis than the well-differentiated carcinomas.
* is characterized by a prominent lymphocyte infiltrate.
* occur less frequently, and generally follow an indolent course.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | cancer | carcinoma | mesothelioma:
Malignant mesothelioma
* appears as an irregular or nodular pleural thickening surrounding the lung.
* continues to be a public health problem in rural parts of Anatolia, Turkey.
* diffuse tumor that affects men more frequently than women.
* disease that is refractory to chemotherapy.
* form of cancer.
* has a latency period of fifteen to forty years.
* is an aggressive cancer that spreads quickly
- caused by asbestos exposure
- the most serious of all asbestos-related diseases
- uncommon and often difficult to diagnose
* rare form of cancer that can be difficult to diagnose
- pleural tumour associated with asbestos exposure
* serious disease caused by asbestos
- health condition
* type of cancer that is caused by exposure to asbestos.
* very rare form of cancer. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer | carcinoma | mesothelioma:
Peritoneal mesothelioma
* is an infrequently encountered tumor that has a poor prognosis
- cancer of the peritoneum, which is the lining of the abdomen
* rare, either benign or malignant tumor of the peritoneum.
* tumor of the abdominal mesothelium.
Pancreatic carcinoma
* arises in the head twice as often as in the body and tail.
* occur most commonly in the head of the pancreas.
Papillary carcinoma
* are indolent tumors that have a long survival, even with metastases.
* can often spread from the thyroid to lymph nodes in the neck or upper chest.
* is rare in children.
* is the most common and least aggressive thyroid malignancy
- usually affects women of child-bearing age
Seminoma
* is rare before puberty and is managed as in the adult.
* occur most frequently in the fourth and fifth decade of life.
Thymic carcinoma
* rare mediastinal neoplasm with poor prognosis.
* recently described rare neoplasm that occurs in adult patients.
Tubular carcinoma
* have an excellent prognosis and are ideally suited for conservative therapy.
* is composed of small glands or tubules that take variable shapes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Cervical cancer
* Most cervical cancers are squamous cell carcinomas and adenocarcinomas
- grow slowly over several years and often are preceded by abnormal cells
* appears to be connected with sexual activity, particularly penetrative sex with men.
* are generally of stratified squamous origin.
* arises from cells on the opening of the womb and usually preventable disease.
* begins in the lining of the cervix.
* can affect any woman who is or has been sexually active
- is, or has been, sexually active
- develop any woman who is or who has been sexually active
- spread by way of the lymphatic system
* cancer affecting the cervix.
* common cancer among Chinese women and most cases are incurable
- in women
* develops at the mouth or neck of the womb
- in the neck of the uterus
- once the abnormal cells extend beyond the full thickness of the skin
- slowly and begins with the appearance of abnormal cervical cells
* disease in which cancer cells are found in the tissue of the cervix
- that develops only after a number of years in the pre-cancer stage
* has epidemiologic similarities to venereal disease.
* is also prevalent among women who live on the reservation
- an extremely common disease
- another of the main killers of women in South Africa
- caused by a virus, the human papaloma virus
- common in Zambia among the sexually active young women
- curable when treated early
- diseases
- even harder to study than breast cancer
- highly curable if it is found at an early stage
- increased in the partners of uncircumcised men
- known to be related to human papilloma virus, a sexually transmitted agent
- mainly a concern among younger women
- now preventable, treatable and curable
* is one of the few cancers that can be treated before it develops
- where screening detects pre-cancerous lesions
- leading causes of cancer deaths worldwide
* is one of the most common cancers affecting women
- cancers among women
- cancers in women
- female cancers in the United States
- forms of cancer in America
- lethal malignancies of young women
- types of cancer worldwide, and one of the most treatable
- preventable cancers there is
- only types of cancer that is preventable
- present more often in contraceptive pill users than nonusers
- probably one of the most common cancers to affect the female reproduction organs
- second to breast cancer as the most common malignancy
* is still the leading cause of cancer deaths in women in many third world countries
* is the eleventh most common cancer among Canadian women
- fifth leading cause of death from cancer in women
- leading cancer killer of women in developing countries
* is the leading cause of cancer deaths among women in the developing world
- morbidity and mortality in women globally
- mortality in the developing world
* is the most common cancer diagnosed in women
- female cancer worldwide
- malignancy causing tissue invasion by eosinophils
- number one malignancy, now closely followed by breast cancer
- only gynecologic malignancy that can be prevented by regular screening
- presence of malignant cancer cells in the cervix of the uterus
* is the second leading cause of cancer death world wide in women
- cancer-related deaths in women worldwide
* is the second most common cancer among women after breast cancer
- of the female reproductive system
- cause of cancer-related deaths in women worldwide
* is the second most common form of cancer among women on a world-wide basis
- of cancer for women worldwide
- of cancer in women
- malignancy found in women
- reproductive cancer in women
- type of cancer in women worldwide, after breast cancer
- diagnosed cancer in women worldwide
- important cancer in women after breast cancer
- sixth most common type of female cancer in the United States
- tenth leading cause of death from cancer in women
* is the third most common gynecological cancer
- malignancy of the pelvis
- three times more common in poor women than in the most affluent
- treatable and often curable, especially when diagnosed in the early stages
* is, in the main, easy to diagnose and early treatment is almost always successful.
* malignant growth of the cervix.
* presents epidemiological similarities to venereal diseases.
* preventable cancer through early detection.
* ranks as the second-most common cancer in women worldwide.
* remains a major public health concern
- and important cause of cancer morbidity and mortality among women
* sexually transmitted disease caused by the human papillomavirus
* start as an abnormality of the cells on the surface of the cervix.
* starts out in a few cells, but gradually grows in size.
* takes about a decade to spread to life-threatening levels
- ten years to go from the early stages to full-blown disease
- time to develop into a deadly disease
* tumour of the cervix.
* very preventable form of cancer in women
- slow growing cancer | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Childhood cancer
* are cancers that primarily affect children, teens and young adults
- six times higher than the national average
* creates conflicting emotions in siblings.
* cuts across all social, economic and ethnic differences.
* has a devastating effect on the entire family
- long-lasting effects on siblings
* is different from adult cancer
- extremely rare
- far more treatable than adult cancers
- often difficult to recognize
- perhaps one of the saddest situations that a child can be in
- the leading cause of death from disease in children in the United States today
- thought to be due to inheriting one mutant gene from one of the parents
* strike different parts of the body in different ways.
Chronic leukemia
* are cancers of blood cells, and are one of two basic types.
* can progress slowly and with few symptoms.
* develop very gradually.
* have a slower onset and progression than acute leukemias.
* is cancer
* occurs most frequently in adults and progresses slowly
- often in adults, but can occur at any age
* progresses more slowly and involves greater numbers of more mature cells
- than does acute leukemia | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Colon cancer
* Most colon cancer starts out as a colon polyp, a benign mushroom-shaped growth.
* Most colon cancers are adenocarcinomas that develop from the glandular cells
- asymptomatic in the early or, at times, even the later stages of development
- non-hereditary, however
- arise from adenomatous polyps
* Most colon cancers begin as benign polyps, and cancer can be prevented by removal of the polyps
- polyps, precursor growths for cancer
* Most colon cancers develop from benign non-cancerous growths called polyps
- tiny growths known as adenomatous polyps, or adenomas
- have no symptoms
- start as polyps precancerous overgrowths of colon tissue
* Most colon cancers start as polyps, pre-cancerous overgrowths of colon tissue
- which can usually be removed through a colonoscopic exam
* affects both men and women about equally.
* appears to occur in families more often than any other cancer.
* are usually curable if caught early.
* begin as harmless polyps that can be found and removed
- polyps, which can be found and removed
* begins at a microscopic level but then progresses to what is called an early adenoma
- when small growths, called polyps, develop in the colon
* can be completely asymptomatic
- develop because of the changes in the cells of the lining
- occur for other reasons
- present with many different symptoms
* comes from precancerous growths in the colon called polyps.
* common disease.
* complication of ulcerative colitis.
* develop from premalignant neoplastic growths known as adenomatous polyps.
* develops and grows slowly
- from growths like polyps within the intestinal wall
- more frequently in cases that present early
* disease in which cancer cells are found in the tissues of the colon or rectum
- of the entire colon mucosa
- that benefits greatly from effective screening
* disorder uniquely suitable for screening.
* good example of a cancer readily treatable if detected in time.
* has a very good prognosis if it is caught early
- high cure rate if it is caught in the early stages
- four main symptom complexes
- the colonoscopy
* is an abnormal growth of cells in the large intestine , or colon
- equal opportunity disease and is severe in both males and females
- associated with a diet that is high in fat and calories and low in fiber
- caused by a weak immune system
* is curable when caught early
- detected early
- currently the second leading cancer killer, surpassed only by lung cancer
* is highly curable when caught in the earliest stages
- treatable and is often considered to be curable
- nearly always curable when discovered early
- now the leading cause of cancer deaths in nonsmokers
- on the right side of the colon
* is one of the commonest cancers affecting both man and women
- few malignancies that can be prevented before it starts
- greatest cancer killers of non-smokers
* is one of the most common malignancies in the United States
- resistant cancers in man
- preventable if polyps are removed at an early stage
- rare in countries where red meat is less common on the menu
- responsible for approximately as many deaths as breast or prostate cancer
- second only to lung cancer as a cause of cancer death in humans
- slightly more common in women than men
- slow growing
* is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States
- cancer-related deaths among older people
* is the second leading cause of cancer death in America
- cancer death in the country
- cancer death, but it's highly treatable is caught early
- cancer deaths in the United States today
- death each year
- death from cancer in the United States today
* is the second most common cancer diagnosed in the United States
- in the United States, after lung cancer
* is the second most common cause of cancer death in the United States
- of cancer death, and men and women are equally at risk
* is the second most common form of cancer, and has the second highest cancer death rate
- frequent type of cancer in the United States
* is the third leading cause of cancer death in both men and women
- cancer deaths among women
* is the third most common cancer diagnosed in both men and women
- cause of cancer deaths in women
- prevalent form of cancer in the United States
- usually curable when discovered early
* major cause of death in the United States.
* malignant tumor in the lining of the large intestine.
* occurs most commonly in people over the age of forty
- with equal frequency in men and women
* preventable disease.
* progressive disease that occurs in several stages.
* serious health problem in the United States.
* spreads first to the liver.
* starts as a precancerous growth called a polyp
- in the form of polyps
- with the formation of small, noncancerous growths called polyps
* strikes both men and women
- only older, white men
* type of cancer that grows in the colon, or large intestine.
* very common cancer second only to lung cancer | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Colorectal cancer
* Most colorectal cancers are in the colon.
* Most colorectal cancers begin as a growth on the inner lining of the colon or rectum called a polyp
- benign tumors called polyps
- polyps which later develop into cancer
- first as small growths, called polyps, inside the colon or rectum
- in the form of a polyp
- with polyps that, unless removed, can become cancerous over time
* Most colorectal cancers develop from adenomatous polyps
- in certain types of polyps or tissue growths
- slowly over several years
- occur in the segment closest to the rectum
- start out as small benign growths that are known as polyps
* affects all races
* affects men and women equally and has a mortality rate second only to lung cancer
- with nearly equal frequency
* affects women and men of all races
- just as often as men
* are highly treatable when diagnosed in the earliest stages
- the second largest cause of cancer deaths in the United States
* are the third most common cancers among men and women
* arise from pre-malignant polyps
- in the lower portions of the digestive tract
* begins as polyps in the bowel
- in the colon or rectum
- with no symptoms at all
* can affect anyone
- also recur at a site distant to the original tumor
- be a death sentence if diagnosed in the late stages
* can cause a variety of nonspecific symptoms
- different symptoms based on the location of the tumor
- develop with few if any symptoms at first
- have all the features that are present in other cancers
- lead to blood-borne metastases in vital organs such as liver and lung
- originate anywhere in the large intestines
- present with a variety of symptoms
- start with noncancerous growths called polyps
- strike men and women at any age
* cancer that starts in the colon or the rectum.
* common type of cancer.
* constitutes a major public health problem.
* continues to be a major problem.
* develops from non-cancer polyps called adenomatous polyps
- in the colon or rectum, which are both parts of the digestive tract
* differs from other major cancers in another important way.
* disease no man has to die from
- woman has to die from
- strongly influenced by diet
* disease that can be prevented
- works covertly and quietly
* has the distinction of being the only completely preventable cancer.
* includes cancers of the colon, rectum, anus and appendix
- appendix, and anus
- appendix, and some anal cancers
* is an equal opportunity disease, affecting both men and women
- equal-opportunity killer
* is cancer of the colon or rectum
- that occurs in the colon or in the lower colon near the rectum
- common in both males and females in Virginia
- diseases
- fatal
* is highly preventable and, if detected early, can be treated very effectively
- when detected early, eminently curable
- treatable and curable when detected early
* is largely preventable - most colorectal cancers develop from benign polyps
- and curable if detected early
- malignant cells found in the colon or rectum
* is more common in older people
- with increasing age
- easily treatable when the cancer is confined to the intestine
- likely to occur as people get older
- most curable when found before it causes symptoms
* is much more common among men than women
- treatable when diagnosed early
- no exception
* is one of the cancers that can be prevented through screening
- few cancers that can be prevented through a screening test
- four most prevalent cancers worldwide
- leading causes of cancer death worldwide
* is one of the most common cancers in North America
- cancers in the world
- forms of cancer affecting the colon and rectum
- types of cancer in the United States
* is one of the most preventable and curable types of cancer
- preventable in many cases
* is preventable, and is easy to treat and often curable when detected early
- treatable, and often curable when it is found early
- rare in less developed areas such as Africa, most of Asia, and Latin America
- second only to cancer of the lung in frequency as a killer
* is second only to lung cancer as a cause of death by malignancy
- as a cause of death from cancer
- in causing cancer deaths
* is the growth of abnormal cells in the colon or rectum
- most preventable cancer but the least prevented
- number two cancer killer in the United States
- one of the most preventable cancers that exist
* is the second biggest cancer killer, behind lung cancer
- highest cause of death from cancer in the United States
* is the second leading cancer killer in the United States
- killer, second only to lung cancer
* is the second leading cause of cancer death for men and women combined
- cancer death in men and women in the United States
- cancer death in the United States each year
- cancer deaths in North America
- cancer-related deaths in the United States
- most common cancer in developed countries
* is the second most common cause of cancer death among American men and women
- of cancer death in the Western world
- form of cancer
- visceral malignancy in the United States
* is the second most deadly cancer
- tumor in human beings
- prevalent cancer in the western world
* is the second-leading cancer killer in America
* is the third leading cause of cancer death in the U.S. in both men and women
- cancer death in women
* is the third most common cancer among women
- cause of cancer-related death in the United States
- malignant neoplasm worldwide
- commonly diagnosed cancer in America
- prevalent cancer in North America
- therefore the second leading cause of cancer death in the United States
- usually curable when it is detected early
- virtually nonexistent at the equator
* leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States
- illness and death in the Western world
* major cause of cancer related death in Ireland
- morbidity and mortality in the United States
- health problem in Australia
* occurs from the presence of cancerous cells in the colon, rectum, or cecum
- in the colon and rectum, the last parts of the digestive system
- most often in the rectosigmoid region
- throughout the world
* preventable and very curable disease if caught early.
* ranks second in cancer incidence for the combined U.S. population.
* refers to cancer that involves both the colon and rectum
- cancers of the colon or rectum
- malignant growths that occur in the colon and the rectum
* remains the nation's number-two cancer killer, despite being highly preventable
- third most common cancer in incidence and mortality for men and women
* requires surgery in nearly all cases for complete cure.
* starts because of polyps.
* starts with a single cell that mutates and grows into a visible polyp
- just as hard in both men and women
- men and women in almost equal numbers
* strikes men and women with almost equal frequency often with no symptoms
- the colon and the rectum, both parts of the large intestine
- women nearly as often as men, and frequently begins without symptoms
* tends to develop within certain families
- run in families | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Different cancer
* can be very different from each other with a few common characteristics
- develop from each kind of cell
* have different causes for any individual
- risk factors
- signs, all of which depend upon the extent of the cancer
* respond differently to radiotherapy.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Endometrial cancer
* Most endometrial cancer presents at an early stage and is highly curable.
* can result if estrogen replacement is taken alone, without progesterone.
* develops in the tissue lining the uterus
- inside the uterus and is the most curable form of gynecological cancer
* is cancer of the lining of the uterus
- carcinoma
* is caused by too much estrogen
- in the lining of the uterus and Ovarian cancer in the ovaries
- considered an estrogen-dependent disease
- curable if it's detected at an early enough stage
- diseases
- increased two to three fold in nulliparous women
- more common in white women when compared to black women
- primarily a disease of postmenopausal women
- seen mostly in women between the ages of fifty and seventy
* is the most common gynecologic malignancy
- gynecological cancer in the United States
- frequent gynecologic cancer in Canada
- thought to be caused by hormone imbalances
* occurs more often in patients with increased female hormone
- most often in the two decades after the menopause and is rare before it
Esophageal cancer
* affects the tube connecting the throat to the stomach.
* can also spread to the lungs, liver, stomach, and other parts of the body.
* is diseases
- more common in men
* is one of the cancers whose incidence is rising in North America
- deadliest cancers
- treated with surgery, radiation therapy or chemotherapy
* major cause of suffering and death in China.
Follicular cancer
* have a poorer prognosis than papillary tumours and occur in an older age group.
* is the second most common form of thyroid cancer.
Gastrointestinal cancer
* general term for several different cancers of the digestive system.
* remains a significant public health threat in developed countries.
Gynecologic cancer
* Gynecologic Cancers Learn all about the cancers that affect women exclusively.
* are cancers of a woman's reproductive organs
- the fourth most common cancers in American women today
* is cancer of the cervix, ovaries, uterus, fallopian tubes, vagina or vulva.
* refers to all cancers of the female genital tract
- any malignancy arising in a woman's reproductive organs
* study in contrasts.
Gynecological cancer
* are a major concern
- cancers located in a woman's pelvis or reproductive system
* is cancer that afflicts the reproductive organs of a woman.
Invasive cancer
* is treated entirely differently than dysplasia
- very rare
* relies on the ducts within the secretory cells.
Kidney cancer
* can be difficult to diagnose
- sometimes cause a mass in the abdomen
* is resistant to traditional chemotherapy, hormonal therapy and radiation therapy.
Laryngeal cancer
* Most laryngeal cancers are squamous cell carcinomas, and the most common site is the glottis.
* can occur in numerous locations in the throat.
* is four times more common in men than women
- the term given to a malignant tumor of the larynx, or voice box | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Leukemia
* Many leukemias are very sensitive to traditional cytotoxic chemotherapy.
* Most leukemias arise from non-inherited mutations in the genes of growing blood cells
- originate in the bone marrow
* affect the blood forming tissues of the body, such as bone marrow and the spleen.
* are cancers of the blood-forming tissues
- blood-making bone marrow
- white blood cells
- that develop in lymphocytes or hematopoietic cells
- malignant neoplasms of either lymphoid or hematopoietic cell origin
- primary disorders of bone marrow
- the leading malignancies among children
* arise when immature white blood cells become abnormal and grow and divide rapidly.
* associated with nucleoporin gene rearrangements tend to be refractory to treatment.
* involve blood-forming tissues and blood cells.<|endoftext|>### condition | illness | disease | cancer | leukemia:
Acute leukemia
* accounts for nearly half of all neoplasms in children.
* affects immature white blood cells and is most often seen in children.
* are cancers of blood cells, and are one of two basic types.
* can develop over time and, when it occurs, progresses rapidly.
* can occur at any age, but it is most often seen in children
- in all age groups
- over a short period of days to weeks
* gets worse quickly, with fast multiplication of abnormal, immature blood cells.
* is cancer
* is characterized by a rapid increase in the number of immature blood cells
- byproliferation of immature cells or blasts
* is the most common form of cancer in children
- malignancy in children
- type most often found in children
* occurs in two main types of white blood cells.
* progresses in a quick and severe manner
- short time, compared to other forms of the disease
- more quickly than the chronic form and has more immature blasts
- quickly, resulting in a buildup of functionless, diseased cells
* rapidly progressing disease that affects mostly immature cells.
* refers to a leukemia that is very aggressive and worsens over a brief period.
Childhood leukemia
* are mostly acute, with the lymphocytic form predominating.
* is no longer a death sentence.
* occurs broadly and evenly across many populations.
Feline leukemia
* begins with infection of the mouth tissues.
* is caused by a retrovirus that only infects members of the feline family
- highly contagious
- incurable, contagious from cat to cat and usually fatal
- transmitted by direct contact with another cat
- viral infection
* serious viral disease transmitted by exchange of bodily fluids between cats.
Lobular cancer
* is more likely to appear in both breasts.
* occurs in the milk-producing lobules.
Lymphoma
* Most lymphomas are of B-cell origin.
* affect the lymphatic system.
* are blood tumors
- rare in the usual practice, while benign enlargement of lymph nodes is common
* begin in the lymph nodes and tissues of the body's immune system.
* have many different appearances.
- diseases
* originate in the lymphatic system, itself.
* take years, even decades to develop.
* tends to present with large lesions, which are enhanced by gadolinium.
### condition | illness | disease | cancer | lymphoma:
Malignant lymphoma
* affects primarily the lymph nodes.
* are also cancers of lymphocytes.
* invade bone marrow and can cause a myelophthisic myelopathy.
* is notorious for presentation with an epidural mass
- one of the most common hematological diseases of children
Male cancer
* is an issue about which the general public's awareness is worringly low.
* occur, but are much less common.
Malignant cancer
* are fatal in the vast majority of cases.
* is much more aggressive.
Metastatic cancer
* can spread from their original location to other parts of the body.
* is cancer that has spread
- treated with chemotherapy or hormone therapy | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Oral cancer
* Many oral cancers begin as changes in the mucous membrane, the lining of the mouth
- leukoplakia or mouth ulcers
* Most oral cancer occurs in people who use tobacco.
* Most oral cancers are treatable if detected early
- look very similar under a microscope and are called squamous-cell carcinoma
* Some oral cancers present white patches inside the mouth or white spots on the tongue.
* ' is any cancerous tissue in the mouth. It can present as a primary lesion in any of the tissues, by metastasis from a distant site of origin, or by extension from a neighboring anatomic structure, such as the nasal cavity. Oral or mouth cancer most commonly involves the tongue. Most oral cancers look very similar under a microscope and are called squamous-cell carcinoma.
* account for significant mortality but their prevalence is relatively low.
* are a huge problem in cats over ten years of age
- about six times more common in drinkers than in nondrinkers
- twice as common in men as in women
* can be deadly
- grow outwardly like a tumor or inwardly like an ulcer
- initially have the appearance of ulcers or other normal mouth problems
- metastasize to distant tissue and vital organs and can be fatal
* can spread to other parts of the body quickly
* claims the life of one American every hour.
* develops much more frequently in users of smokeless tobacco products than in non-users.
* has one of the lowest survival rates of all cancers.
* includes cancers of the mouth, tongue, tonsils and pharynx.
* is also a major concern among adults
- cancer of the lining of the mouth, the tongue, or other structures around the mouth
- hard to cure because it spreads fast
* is the fourth most common cancer among African American men in the United States
- sixth most common cancer
- treated with surgery, radiation, or both
- uncommon, except among tobacco users and heavy drinkers of alcohol
- unusual in that it carries a high risk of second primary tumors
* kills one in three who develop the disease but survivors can be severely disfigured.
* life-threatening disease that can be directly linked to the use of chewing tobacco.
* occurs on the lip, tongue, or floor of the mouth
- several times more frequently among snuff dippers than among non-tobacco users
- twice as frequently in men as women
* serious disease of the mouth.
* term that refers to cancer of the mouth, lip, tongue and pharynx.
Pancreas cancer
* begins in a single cell.
* is the fourth leading cause of cancer death in the United States.
* represents an abnormal growth of cells that arise from the tissues of the pancreas. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Pancreatic cancer
* Most pancreatic cancers are adenocarcinomas arising from the pancreatic ductal system
- begin in the ducts that carry pancreatic juices to the small intestine
* are the fifth-deadliest form of cancer.
* can be difficult to diagnose
- cause symptoms and signs similar to chronic pancreatitis
- present as diabetes in older adults
* has the worst prognosis of all the types of cancer.
* is an uncommon cause of steatorrhea
- difficult to control and can be cured only when it is found at an early stage
- diseases
- especially resistant to treatment, thus is in most cases incurable
- fairly rare
- generally asymptomatic until late in the course of the disease
* is more common in men than women
- people with diabetes
- one of the more discouraging tumors in medicine
* is one of the most deadly of all types of cancer
- difficult cancers to diagnose early and treat curatively
- particularly difficult to treat since it often presents at an advanced stage
- recognized as one of the most difficult cancers to treat
- said to be the most painful, with no chance of recovery
* is the fifth leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States
- killer among cancers in the United States
- fifth-leading cause of cancer death in the United States
* is the fourth leading cause of cancer death for both men and women
- cancer death in men and women in the United States
- most common cause of cancer-related death in the United States
- treated with surgery, radiation therapy or chemotherapy
- very difficult to diagnose
* major cause of death from cancer in both men and women in the USA and Europe.
* occurs almost equally in both men and women.
* seems to run in some families.
* terrible disease that is nearly always fatal.
Papillary cancer
* develops in the cells that produce thyroid hormones containing iodine.
* has cells that stick out in finger-like projections called papules.
Penile cancer
* are usually skin cancers and as such they start with skin lesions.
* can occur anywhere on the penis but usually occur on the glands.
* is an extremely rare form of cancer.
* is rare but is curable if caught early before invasion to the deeper tissues
- in circumcised men
* occur most commonly in uncircumcised men.
* occurs almost exclusively in the uncircumcised male at a rate of eight per million
- usually in older men | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Prostate cancer
* Many prostate cancers are curable if detected early
- slow growing
- small and grow slowly
* Many prostate cancers grow very slowly and never cause symptoms
- remain dormant and undiagnosed for years without causing symptoms
* Most prostate cancer develops late in life and grows slowly
- grows very slowly
* Most prostate cancers are hormone-dependent and use the male hormone testosterone to grow
- begin in the outer part of the prostate
- depend on androgens, or male steroid hormones, to grow
- develop in older men and grow very slowly
* Most prostate cancers grow very slowly, but some can spread quickly to other parts of the body
- especially in older men
- spread and become incurable before they are found without screening
* Some prostate cancer is familial
- cancers can grow and spread quickly, especially in younger men
* Some prostate cancers grow rapidly and spread
- rapidly, metastasize, and quickly lead to death
* accounts for one of every three cancers among American men
- one-fourth of all new cancer cases
* affects and kills almost as many men annually as breast cancer does women
- more men than any other cancer except skin cancer
- one in five men in their lifetimes
- thousands of men each year
* are relative rare in young patients.
* becomes more common in aged men.
* can also be deadly
- serious and fatal
- form in the tissue of the central zone
- spread to the bones, liver, bladder, rectum, and other organs
* can be an insidious disease
- either slow growing or extremely aggressive
- life-threatening
- cause similar problems
* can cause symptoms in two main ways
- do that to a person
- grow differently in different men
- run in families
- spread from the prostate to nearby lymphs nodes, bones, or other organs
* common cancer, with rapid increase in rates after age fifty
- tumour in men, the incidence of which appears to be increasing
* condition that is rising.
* depends on testosterone in order to grow.
* develops from cells of the prostate gland
- the growth of cancerous cells within the prostate gland
* difficult experience to go through.
* disease of aging
- older men, increasing faster with age than any other major cancer
- with high incidence among African-American males
* does run in families.
* feeds on male hormones.
* form of carcinoma.
* growing problem in men
- is elderly men
* grows and spreads at different rates
- more slowly in older men than in younger
- under the influence of testosterone
- very slowly and most often, early prostate cancer causes no symptoms
* has a better prognosis than many other cancers that are in the population
- great predilection for metastasizing to bone
- particularly severe impact on minority populations in the United States
- no symptoms in the early stages
- the third highest mortality rate of all cancers for men
* hormone-dependent cancer in which tumour growth is stimulated by sex hormones.
* involves an interdisciplinary approach.
* is adenocarcinoma.
* is almost twice as common among black men as it is among white men
- universal
- also much more common in certain ethnic groups
* is also the most common form of cancer in American men
- second leading cause of cancer death in American men
- under study in chemoprevention trials
- an abnormal growth of cells in the outer zone of the prostate
* is an important health care problem
- public health problem
- insidious disease, quietly progressing with few symptoms
- old man's disease
- another major killer of African-American men
* is as seen the most common form of cancer among Finnish men
- serious a concern for men as breast cancer is for women
- beatable
- cancer in the prostate gland, a gland in the male reproduction system
* is cancer of the prostate gland
- prostate, a male sex gland
- categorized in four stages
- caused by a change in the cells that make up the prostate
- characterized by both grade and stage
- chief among the diseases of concern
- common in North America and northwestern Europe
- curable when caught early
- currently the second-leading cause of cancer death in men
- dependent on the presence of male hormones called androgens
- diagnosed by examination of prostate gland tissue under a microscope
- different in different men
- easily curable when caught early
- felt by all who know it to be one of the cruelest ways to die
* is felt on exam and is confined within the prostate
- to extend beyond the prostate
- found mainly in older men, although it is found on occasion at an earlier age
- in some ways the male version of breast cancer
- increasingly more common, particularly among Arizona men
- just one serious health risk
- largely a disease of older men, many of whom have other serious diseases
- more common among African-American men than among white men
* is more common in men with high testosterone levels
- overweight men, so weight control is considered important
- most common among elderly men
* is most common in North America and northwestern Europe
- northwestern Europe, especially in Sweden and Denmark
- curable when it is detected early
- much more common than testicular cancer
* is now the leading cause of cancer in men in the United States
- most common type of cancer among men
* is now the most commonly diagnosed cancer in men in the United States
- type of cancer among men in the United States
* is now the second leading cause of cancer deaths in American men
- of cancer deaths in men
- second-leading cause of cancer death among men
- one example
* is one of the leading cancers among men in the United States
- malignancies and the second cause of cancer deaths among men
- major malignancies of men in the Western World
- more curable forms of the disease because it tends to grow slowly
* is one of the most common cancer among men in the United States
- cancers for men in North America
- cancers found in men today
- cancers in men
- types cancer affecting men
- types of cancer found in men
* is one of the most commonly diagnosed cancers among Canadian men
- diagnosed cancers in men
- curable cancers if caught early
- particularly deadly to Tar Heel men
- predominantly a disease of older men
- presently the number one site of cancer in men over the age of sixty-five
- primarily a disease of older men
* is second only to lung cancer among men
- as a cancer-related killer of men
- as a leading cause of cancer deaths in men
- as the leading cause of cancer death among men
- as the leading cause of death among men
- in causing death from cancer
- skin cancer as the most common cause of cancer diagnosis in men
- still the second-leading cause of cancer deaths in men, behind lung cancer
- suspected if any part of the gland feels hard
* is the abnormal growth of cells in the prostate
- biggest cancer killer of men in the Western world after lung cancer
- cancer that originates in the prostate gland
- fourth most common cancer of men world-wide
- growth of abnormal cells in the prostate
- leading cancer that affects males
* is the leading cause of cancer deaths among men, overall
- form of cancer among American men and the second most fatal
- main cancer target for phenoxodiol
- malignant enlargement of the prostate gland in men
* is the most common among men
- cancer affecting American men
* is the most common cancer among American males, second only to skin cancer
- American men and is second only to lung cancer
- U.S. men
- men and the second most deadly
* is the most common cancer and second leading cause of death in American men
- the second leading cause of cancer death for men
- the second leading cause of cancer deaths in men
* is the most common cancer found in men in the United States
- in men, surpassing even lung cancer
* is the most common cancer in American men - especially older men
- American men, excluding nonmelanoma skin cancers
- American men, excluding skin cancer
- elderly males
- men and all men are at risk
- the world
* is the most common cancer occurring among men
- other than skin cancer in men in the United States
- to affect men
* is the most common cancer, excluding non-melanoma skin cancers, in American men
- nonmelanoma skin cancers, in American men
* is the most common cause of cancer deaths among men
- cancer in males
* is the most common form of cancer among American men
- cancer diagnosed in American men
- cancer in men mid-life and older
- non-skin cancers in men in the United States
- malignancy among American men
- malignant cancer in American men
* is the most common non-skin cancer among men in the United States
- for males in western countries
- organ cancer in men, and is the source of much confusion
- solid tumor and second leading cause of cancer deaths in men
- tumour found in men
* is the most common type of cancer among American men
- cancer found in American men of any sexual orientation
- cancer found in American men, other than skin cancer
- cancer occurring in the male segment of population
- common, yet most ignored cancer in American men
* is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among American men
- among U.S. men
- in American men and the second deadliest
- invasive cancer among American men
- male cancer
- malignancy in American men
- occurring tumor in U.S. men
* is the most diagnosed cancer for Canadian men, striking one in eight
- form of cancer in men
- malignancy in men
- frequent cancer in men
* is the most frequently diagnosed cancer among American men, other than skin cancer
* is the number one cancer among men and second in cancer deaths by site
- incidence site in men for all racial and ethnic groups
- cause of cancer in men and the second- leading cause death in men
- number-one cancer diagnosis in men
- only cancer which has a sensitive blood test to detect the cancer
* is the second biggest cancer killer of men after lung cancer
- deadliest cancer among men
- greatest cause of cancer deaths among men, after lung cancer
- highest cause of cancer deaths among men after lung cancer
- leading cancer cause of death in American men
* is the second leading cancer killer in men
- of American men, exceeded only by lung cancer
* is the second leading cause of cancer death after lung cancer
- cancer death among American men
- cancer death in U.S. men
- cancer death in men in the United States
- cancer death in men, after lung cancer
- cancer death in men, exceeded only by lung cancer
- cancer deaths among older men
- cancer deaths in American men after lung cancer
- cancer related deaths among men
- death for men after lung cancer
- death from cancer in men after lung cancer
- male cancer deaths
- cause, after lung cancer, of cancer deaths in men
* is the second most common cancer affecting Canadian men
- among men, after skin cancer
- in British men
- in men in the United States, after skin cancer
* is the second most common cause of cancer death in men
* is the second most common type of cancer found in American men, after skin cancer
- of cancer in American men, behind skin cancer
- of cancer in men, second only to skin cancer
- prevalent cancer in men
- widespread cancer in men, after lung cancer
- only to lung cancer in cancer deaths among American men
- second-leading cancer killer of men, behind lung cancer
* is the second-leading cause of cancer death in men in the United States
* is the second-leading cause of death among U.S. men, after lung cancer
- second-most common type of cancer found in American men, after skin cancer
- single most common cancer in men
- standout among U.S. and Canadian men
- third leading cause of cancer death among men in New Jersey
- treated using radioactive permanent seed implants
* is twice as common among African-American men as it is among white American men
- in African-American men
- typically a disease of aging
- unpredictable
- usually asymptomatic in early stages
* is usually curable if it's found in the early stages
- when caught and treated early
- very, very common, especially in older men
* kill almost as many men as all other forms of cancer put together.
* life-threatening tumor that develops in the prostate.
* little like getting grey hair.
* malignancy that develops from cells of the prostate gland
* malignant tumor that develops in the prostate gland
- grows in the gland
- most often begins in the outer part of the prostate
- usually starts in the outer part of the prostate
* means that cells in the prostate gland are growing out of control.
* occurs commonly in men as they age
- most often in African and northern European ethnic groups
* occurs when a group of cells begins to grow abnormally inside the prostate gland
- cells in the prostate gland grow and change in an uncontrolled manner
- malignant cells develop and form a tumor in the prostate gland
* occurs when the cells of the prostate grow abnormally
- growth of cells within the prostate become uncontrolled
* primary cancer.
* progressive disease.
* ranks second in deaths among men, but first in new cases.
* relatively radiosensitive target
- slow-growing type of cancer
* remains a baffling, slow-growing malignancy
- major cause of death in men in most Western countries
- the most common cancer in men and the second-leading cause of death in men
* seems to become higher grade with time
- have a genetic component
* shortens life expectancy dramatically.
* significant health problem.
* slow-developing cancer that can be successfully treated if detected early.
* slow-growing cancer.
* starts in a single cell which has become abnormal
* tends to arise from the peripheral zone of the prostate.
* tumor that grows in the prostate gland in men.
* very real concern for men in all walks of life today. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Prostatic cancer
* can metastasize in a number of ways.
* is the most common male cancer in the United States
- prevalent cancer in men and the second leading cause of cancer death
Prostrate cancer
* feeds on testosterone and the hormone treatments decrease testosterone levels.
* killer but when diagnosed early it is treatable.
Rectal cancer
* appears to be decreasing.
* can then invade nearby organs and spread through the lymph and blood systems.
* condition often employing multimodality therapy.
* has a marked tendency to recur locally.
* is also prevalent among men and suffers from the same lack of early detection
- rare in young people, with incidence rising sharply after age fifty
* occurs in half as many people as colon cancer.
Recurrent cancer
* cancer that returns after treatment.
* is cancer that has come back after treatment.
* means the cancer has come back after treatment.
* means the disease has come back in spite of the initial treatment
- recurred despite initial treatment
Rent control
* create shortages and decrease the quality of housing.
* is blatant discrimination against the landlord
- described as keeping housing affordable for the poor
* local phenomenon.
### condition | illness | disease | cancer | sarcoma:
Chondrosarcoma
* Most chondrosarcomas are slow growing, indolent tumors.
* are almost always symptomatic
- tumors composed of cancerous cartilage cells
* can occur over a wide age range, and there slight male predominance.
* is sarcoma
Leiomyosarcoma
* are malignant tumors which develop from smooth muscle tissue
- much less common
* is sarcoma
Osteosarcoma
* Most osteosarcomas develop on the limbs of dogs below the elbow or near the knee.
* are diseases
- sarcomas of bone tissue
- the most common primary malignant bone tumors in children
* arise from abnormal bone-producing cells.
Rhabdomyosarcoma
* are highly aggressive tumors that predominantly affect children.
* is sarcoma.
### condition | illness | disease | cancer | sarcoma | rhabdomyosarcoma:
Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma
* is considered the most treatable form of the disease
- the cellular subtype in slightly more than half of patients
+ Rhabdomyosarcoma: Cancer
* It has different cellular subtypes, including embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma and aveolar rhabdomyosarcoma. Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma is the cellular subtype in slightly more than half of patients.
Secondary cancer
* are generally more difficult to treat and are resistant to standard treatment.
* have a high incidence among survivors of retinoblastoma.
Sporadic cancer
* begin with two normal copies of a cancer susceptibility gene.
* can occur in young adults but is unusual. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | illness | disease | cancer:
Sprawl
* accelerates the decline of cities and towns.
* affects the environment in other ways as well.
* also harms our native plant species.
* also has a negative impact on the natural environment
- serious environmental consequences
- wreaks havoc on an area's water quality
* can and does occur where only one force increases
- happen in urban, suburban or rural settings
* comes in many forms other than residential development.
* continues to eat up open space and rich farmland worldwide.
* contributes significantly to the pollution of both our air and water.
* creates crowded schools in the suburbs and empty, crumbling schools in center cities
- more air and water pollution
* degrades air quality through increased driving.
* destroys more than one million acres of parks, farms and open space each year
- one million acres of farmland every two years
* devours wetlands and flood plains and destroys wildlife habitats.
* eats away at the urban fringes, and devours the rural landscape and open spaces near cities.
* encompasses varied circumstances that have been widely covered in the media.
* focuses solely on suburban expansion.
* has many causes.
* increases costs by making automobile travel a necessity
- the risk of flooding
- traffic on our neighborhood streets and highways
- unemployment and concentrates poverty in urban centers
* inevitably follows the major investment of public spending for new roads.
* involves the movement of populations from city centers to outlying areas.
* is actually a way to keep communities alive.
* is an everyday problem throughout the United States
- issue that hits people close to home
- devastating communities in every region of the state
- growth that happens outside of existing infrastructure
- like cholesterol
- more a problem of maintaining communities than it problem of wanton development
* is one of the biggest environmental problems facing most communities in America
- main causes of traffic congestion
- reasons there are so many traffic jams
- particularly damaging because it often eats up land faster than the population grows
- stories about places that used to be
- the direct result of accommodating the automobile
* is the result of bad land use and transportation planning
- over five decades of subsidies paid for by the American taxpayer
- uncontained bleeding edge of urban development
* is, overall, more than a phenomenon of road and building development.
* isolates people in their own homes in the suburbs.
* leads to urban decline while threatening rural community character.
* limits the feasibility of getting around without a motorized vehicle.
* makes life easier for people tired of high-energy city life
- public transportation systems less efficient and less available to more people
* means greater reliance on automobiles
- roads, driveways, parking lots and roofs
- spacious houses with yards and flexible drives to work
* often means that people have to drive greater distances to do their daily shopping.
* pattern of development.
* pollutes our air and water.
* produces traffic congestion and more air pollution.
* refers to a particular type of suburban peripheral growth.
* reflects social progress more than decline.
* represents the rural acres lost as urban areas spread outward over time.
* serious threat to the environment andthe resources of the entire planet.
* symptom of cumulative behavior with chronically negative effects.
* tends to create problems in our community that take away form our quality of life.
* threatens wildlife by chopping up habitat. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subsets and Splits