Patho Health Dictionary

Patho-: From 2 Different Sources


A prefix denoting a relationship to disease.
Health Source: BMA Medical Dictionary
Author: The British Medical Association
A pre?x indicating relationship to a disease – for example, PATHOLOGY, a study of disease.
Health Source: Medical Dictionary
Author: Health Dictionary

Pathology

Disease, particularly one with clear and obvious changes in structure or function; the study of same.... pathology

Pathological

Indicative of, or caused by, a disease or condition.... pathological

Pathogen

An organism or substance which caused diseases.... pathogen

Pathogenic

This term means disease-producing, and is a term applied, for example, to bacteria capable of causing disease.... pathogenic

Pathognomonic

A term applied to signs or symptoms which are especially characteristic of certain diseases, and on the presence or absence of which the diagnosis depends. Thus the discovery of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the sputum is said to be pathognomonic of pulmonary tuberculosis.... pathognomonic

Pathogenesis

The ways in which a disease or disorder starts and develops. The term applies in particular to the physiological and cellular activities that are involved in the mode of origin and development of the condition.... pathogenesis

Pathogenicity

Ability to cause disease.... pathogenicity

Pathogens

Micro-organisms that cause diseases, parasitising plants, animals and humans (see PARASITE). Some organisms are frequently PATHOGENIC, whereas others rarely cause disease. Opportunistic pathogens are those which rarely cause serious infection in healthy people but can do so in patients with weakened immune systems (immunocompromised – see IMMUNITY). Pathogens include BACTERIA, viruses (see VIRUS), prions (see PRION), fungi (see FUNGUS), PROTOZOA and metazoa (multicellular microorganisms called HELMINTHS or worms). The pathogenicity of an organism is called its virulence, which is measured by the number of organisms required to cause disease. The 50 per cent of lethal dose (LD50) is the quantity of a particular pathogen needed to cause infection in half of the hosts invaded.... pathogens

Pathologist

A doctor that specialises in the interpretation of changes in tissues.... pathologist

Potentially Pathogenic Environmental Mycobacteria (ppem)

The atypical mycobacteria. The commonest PPEM to cause human disease is the Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare complex. PPEM differ from M. tuberculosis in their source (environmental or zoonotic), rate of growth, temperature of growth and ability to produce pigment on culture. Mostly infect immunologically compromised humans and the disease caused by some species may be clinicallyindistinguishable from true human tuberculosis.... potentially pathogenic environmental mycobacteria (ppem)

Gambling, Pathological

Chronic inability to resist impulses to gamble, resulting in personal or social problems.... gambling, pathological

Pathology, Cellular

Also called cytopathology, the branch of cytology concerned with the effects of disease on cells.... pathology, cellular

Pathology, Chemical

Another name for clinical biochemistry, the study of abnormalities in the chemistry of body tissues in disease.... pathology, chemical

Pathophysiology

The study of the effects of disease on body functions.... pathophysiology

Pathological Fracture

a fracture through diseased or abnormal bone, usually resulting from a force insufficient to fracture a normal bone. Tumour, infection, congenital bone defects, and osteoporosis are among the causes.... pathological fracture



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