- muscle cachexia
- دنف عضلي
English-Arabic Medical Dictionary. 2013.
English-Arabic Medical Dictionary. 2013.
Muscle atrophy — Classification and external resources ICD 10 M62.5 ICD 9 728.2 … Wikipedia
Cachexia — SignSymptom infobox Name = Cachexia ICD10 = R64 ICD9 = ICD9|799.4 Cachexia (pronEng|kəˈkɛksiə) is loss of weight, muscle atrophy, fatigue, weakness and significant loss of appetite in someone who is not actively trying to lose weight. [cite web… … Wikipedia
Muscle — For other uses of Muscle , see Muscle (disambiguation). A top down view of skeletal muscle Muscle (from Latin … Wikipedia
cachexia — weight loss, muscle wasting, loss of appetite, and general debility, usually due to a chronic disease, or malnutrition … Dictionary of ichthyology
cachexia — noun A systemic wasting of muscle tissue, with or without loss of fat mass, that accompanies a chronic disease … Wiktionary
Cachexia — Physical wasting with loss of weight and muscle mass caused by disease. Patients with cancer, AIDS, or other major chronic diseases may appear cachetic. * * * A general weight loss and wasting occurring in the course of a chronic disease or… … Medical dictionary
cachexia — Loss of body weight and muscle mass, and weakness that may occur in patients with cancer, AIDS, or other chronic diseases … English dictionary of cancer terms
Josef E. Fischer — is a native of New York City and a 1957 graduate of Yeshiva College, New York, NY.He earned a M.D. degree from Harvard University (magna cum laude) (1961), Boston, Massachusetts before serving an internship and surgical residency at Massachusetts … Wikipedia
Tumorkachexie — Klassifikation nach ICD 10 C80 Kachexie durch bösartige Neubildung. Anmerkung:[1] … Deutsch Wikipedia
Medical cannabis — American Cannabis Indica purchased at a Medical Cannabis dispensary … Wikipedia
syndrome — The aggregate of symptoms and signs associated with any morbid process, and constituting together the picture of the disease. SEE ALSO: disease. [G. s., a running together, tumultuous concourse; (in med.) a concurrence of symptoms, fr. syn,… … Medical dictionary