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The Nature of Disease

The Nature of Disease. Definitions. Physiology Function of the Body in the healthy state Pathology = From the Greek for Pathos meaning Disease Deals with the study of the structural and functional changes in cells, tissues and organs of the body that cause or are caused by disease

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The Nature of Disease

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  1. The Nature of Disease

  2. Definitions • Physiology • Function of the Body in the healthy state • Pathology = From the Greek for Pathos meaning Disease • Deals with the study of the structural and functional changes in cells, tissues and organs of the body that cause or are caused by disease • Pathophysiology • Focuses on the mechanisms of the underlying disease and provides the background for preventive as well as therapeutic health care measures and practices

  3. The Nature of Disease • Disease = an unhealthy state caused by the effect of injury • Acute Disease = arises rapidly, lasts a short time • Chronic Disease = usually begins slowly • Has signs and symptoms • Persists for a long time • Can’t be cured by medication

  4. Sign versus Symptom • Symptom • A subjective complaint that is noted by the person with a disorder • Sign • A manifestation that is noted by an observer • Syndrome • A collection of clinical signs, symptoms and data

  5. Etiology • The causeor set of causesof a disease or condition.

  6. Etiologic Factors • Biological Agents • Bacteria, viruses • Physical Forces • Trauma, burns, radiation • Chemical Agents • Poisons, alcohol • Nutritional Excesses of Deficits • Most diseases are multi-factorial in origins • Risk Factors • For example, heart disease or cancer

  7. Idiopathic versus Iatrogenic • Idiopathic • If etiology is unknown the disease is said to be idiopathic • Iatrogenic • If the disease is a byproduct of medical diagnosis or treatment • Iatros = for physician

  8. Diagnosis versus Differential • Diagnosis • The designation as the the nature or cause of a health problem • Requires history and physical examination • Differential Diagnosis • A systematic method used to identify unknowns. This method, essentially a process of elimination

  9. Diagnosis • Normality • An important factor when interpreting diagnostic test results is the determination of whether they are normal or abnormal • Within normal Range • Reliability • The extent to which an observation is repeatable • Validity • The extent to which a measurement tool measures what is intended to measure

  10. Diagnosis • Sensitivity • The proportion of people with a disease who are positive for that disease on a given test or observation (e.g.,Patient is 99% positive for the disease) • Specificity • The proportion of people without the disease who are negative on a given test or observation • 95% accurate v. 100%

  11. Prevalence on Tests • Prevalence • The number of persons who have the disease at any given time • Incidence • The number of new cases per year

  12. Mortality versus Morbidity • Mortality • Death statistics • Morbidity • The effects of an illness has on a person’s life • Concerned not only with the occurrence and incidence of the diseases but also the long-term impact of the disease

  13. Prognosis Prognosis is the probable outcome and prospect of recovery from a disease

  14. Levels of Prevention • Primary • Keeping disease from occurring by removing risk factors • Secondary • Detect disease early when it is still asymptomatic • Pap smears • Tertiary • Clinical interventions that prevent further deterioration or reduces the complication of a disease once it is diagnosed

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