Sentences with phrase «syndrome symptoms describe»

Parental Alienation Syndrome symptoms describe the child's behaviours and attitude towards the targeted parent after the child has been effectively programmed and severely alienated from the targeted parent.

Not exact matches

I regularly see people with the symptoms described who have been diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome or other digestive disorders that research suggests benefit from a strict low FODMAP diet trial.
Each of them had been diagnosed before the age of 18 and had had the relapsing - remitting form of MS or clinically isolated syndrome, which describes the first episode of neurological symptoms associated with the disease, for under four years.
The illness was later renamed progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) to describe the weakness or paralysis (palsy) patients develop when brain areas that control eye movements are affected by the syndrome — which produces the classic symptom of motionless eyes described by Dickens.
The paper suggests renaming the wasting disease to Asteroid Idiopathic Wasting Syndrome because the term correlates with an array of symptoms, «which is more correct for describing this situation, as there are likely multiple diseases present,» Hewson said.
The disabling illness described as either Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) or Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) results in a wide spectrum of symptoms, the most disabling often being a profound lack of energy, muscle pain, headache, and cognitive issues.
Premenstrual syndrome, known more commonly as PMS, can be used to describe a broad range of symptoms related to the menstrual cycle.
Physicians sometimes describe patients who have non-specific symptoms (like fatigue, pain, and joint and muscle aches) after the treatment of Lyme disease as having post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS) or post Lyme disease syndrome (PLDS).
What you describe is classic symptom of Cushings Syndrome / disease in dogs.
Laforet says he is concerned about «wind turbine syndrome,» the term some use to describe the symptoms of people who say they have been sickened by the noise.
[3] And a forthcoming peer - reviewed epidemiological study by Dr. Nina Pierpont of Malone, New York, describes the effect on people as «wind turbine syndrome», a common and consistent set of symptoms that include tinnitus, nausea, and depression.
While most experts would agree that the symptoms within the child, first described by Gardner, do meet the criteria for a «Syndrome,» most have elected to eliminate the use of the word in an effort to eliminate the distractive qualities that characterized the debate.
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