- Cachexia.
- Anorexia.
- Obesity.
- Edema.
No category found.
- Coagulative necrosis.
- Liquefactive necrosis.
- Caseous necrosis.
- Fat necrosis.
- Fluid moving from the interstitial space into the intravascular space.
- Fluid moving from the intravascular space into the interstitial space (third spacing).
- Intracellular fluid moving into the extracellular space.
- Fluid moving from the extracellular space into the intracellular space.
- Widespread vasodilation and hypotension.
- Uncontrolled sympathetic overactivity below the level of injury in response to noxious stimuli.
- Bradycardia and warm, dry skin.
- Hypoglycemia.
- Diagnosing cancer definitively.
- Screening healthy individuals for cancer.
- Monitoring response to cancer treatment or recurrence.
- Predicting the exact origin of cancer.
- Alarm stage.
- Resistance stage.
- Exhaustion stage.
- Recovery stage.
- Hypertrophy.
- Hyperplasia.
- Atrophy.
- Dysplasia.
- Joint.
- Bone.
- Muscle.
- Tendon.
- IgE-mediated mast cell degranulation.
- Antibody-mediated cell destruction or dysfunction.
- Formation of immune complexes.
- Delayed T-cell mediated response.
- Increased bicarbonate reabsorption.
- Impaired excretion of acid and decreased bicarbonate reabsorption by the kidneys.
- Increased carbonic acid levels.
- Hyperventilation.
- Decreased fluid volume.
- Ventricular stretching and volume overload.
- Hypoxia.
- Inflammation.
- Suppress tumor growth.
- Repair DNA damage.
- Promote cell growth and proliferation.
- Cause cell death.
- Metabolic acidosis.
- Metabolic alkalosis.
- Respiratory acidosis.
- Respiratory alkalosis.
- Physical agents.
- Chemical injury.
- Infectious agents.
- Genetic defects.
- Liquefactive necrosis.
- Caseous necrosis.
- Coagulative necrosis.
- Fat necrosis.
- Patchy, transmural inflammation.
- Continuous inflammation limited to the colon, primarily affecting the mucosa and submucosa.
- Involvement of the entire GI tract.
- Skip lesions.
- Permanent destruction of alveolar walls.
- Fibrosis, smooth muscle hypertrophy, and increased mucus glands in the bronchi.
- Reversible airway constriction only.
- Decreased collagen deposition.
- A large wound with tissue loss that heals by granulation.
- A wound with minimal tissue loss and edges that are approximated.
- A wound that is left open and then closed later.
- The formation of a large scar.
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