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Symptom/symptomal

Patients with vulvovaginal candidiasis may present with vulvar and/or vaginal symptoms. Symptoms often develop the week before menses and resolve with the onset of menses. Symptoms include ... [Pg.1200]

The onset of symptoms may be delayed for several minutes after initial exposure (especially with DM) effective exposure may, therefore, occur before the presence of the smoke is suspected. The paranasal sinuses are irritated and fill with secretions and severe frontal headache results. Prolonged exposure may cause retrosternal pain, dyspnoea, and asthma-like symptoms. Symptoms reach their climax after 5-10 min and disappear 1-2 h after cessation of exposure. [Pg.153]

Signs and Symptoms Symptoms include pain in the lower-right abdominal area resembling appendicitis, as well as fever, headache, pharyngitis, anorexia, vomiting, and possibly watery diarrhea. May also produce arthritis, inflammation of the iris (iritis), cutaneous ulceration. Infection may also produce abscesses in the liver, bone infection (osteomyelitis), and septicemia. Carriers may be asymptomatic. May also cause infections of other sites such as wounds, joints, and the urinary tract. [Pg.521]

Signs and Symptoms Symptoms are acute and include fever, headache, encephalitis, vesicular skin lesions at site of the exposure, and variable neurological patterns. Involvement of the respiratory center and death usually occurs in 1-21 days after onset of symptoms. Survivors usually have considerable residual disability. May produce severe permanent neurologic impairment requiring lifelong institutionalization. [Pg.538]

Signs and Symptoms Symptoms include high fever, nausea, vomiting, arthritis in wrist, knee, ankle, and small joints of extremities. A rash may develop in 1-10 days. Recovery may be prolonged but immunity is long lasting. [Pg.539]

Signs and Symptoms Symptoms include self-limiting conjunctivitis with tearing and pain. May progress to a generalized illness with "flu-like" symptoms including elevated temperature, chills, and sore throat. [Pg.562]

Signs and Symptoms Symptoms include acute behavioral changes [anorexia, signs of apprehension or nervousness, irritability, hyperexcitability, incoordination (ataxia), altered phonation, aggression] and unexplained progressive paralysis (initially throat and masseter muscles, leading to profuse salivation and inability to swallow but progressing rapidly to all parts of the body). [Pg.571]

Signs and Symptoms Symptoms include sudden onset of intense headache, fever, nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to light (photophobia) followed by central nervous system abnormalities such as stupor, tremors, delirium, focal epilepsy and flaccid paralysis (especially in the shoulder), and coma. Recovery is prolonged. Sequelae may include paralysis of the upper extremities and back. [Pg.575]

Signs and Symptoms Symptoms include listlessness, stumbling, mild to severe incoordination (ataxia), and partial paralysis. Additionally, horses may exhibit weakness, muscle fasciculation, and cranial nerve deficits. Fever may or may not be present. [Pg.586]

Signs and Symptoms Symptoms include fever, severe headache, pain in the muscles (myalgia), cough, nervousness, nausea, and vomiting. A macular rash appears first on the trunk then spreads to the arms and legs. The rash does not appear on the palms of the hands, soles of the feet, or the face. Recovery may be prolonged. [Pg.601]

Signs and Symptoms Symptoms in immunocompromised individuals may include fever, difficulty breathing (dyspnea), nonproductive cough, bloody sputum (hemoptysis), bloody nose (epistaxis), a vague feeling of bodily discomfort (malaise), pneumonia, weakness, chest pain, and anorexia. May progress to inflammation of the eyes (endophthalmitis), sensitivity to light (photophobia), and/or inflammation of the heart (endocarditis). May also cause abscesses in the heart, kidneys, liver, spleen, other soft tissue, or the bone. If the central nervous system becomes involved, can cause altered mental states and seizures. [Pg.606]

Categories Symptoms Symptoms Signs/Symptoms Symptoms... [Pg.449]

Symptoms of a panic attack are shown in Table 68-2. During an attack, there must be at least four physical symptoms in addition to psychological symptoms. Symptoms reach a peak within 10 minutes and usually last no more than 20 or 30 minutes. [Pg.749]

Symptoms Symptoms appear about ten to twenty days after the Q fever rickettsia are inhaled. The symptoms resemble flu symptoms and include fever, chills, headache, fatigue and muscle aches. About one half of persons with symptoms will have pneumonia evident on chest X-ray and some of these will have a cough or chest pain. The complications of meningitis or and inflammation of the heart may arise, but these are uncommon. Normally, the duration of Q fever is two days to two weeks at which time the disease resolves without permanent effects on the individual. [Pg.158]

Symptoms Symptoms include acute onset of fever, chest tightness, cough, dyspnea, nausea, and arthralgias which occur four to eight hours after inhalational exposure. Airway necrosis and pulmonary capillary leak resulting in pulmonary edema would likely occur within eighteen to twenty-four hours, followed by severe respiratory distress and death from hypoxemia in thirty-six to seventy-two hours. [Pg.166]

Onset Time of Symptoms Symptoms appear much more slowly from skin dosage than from respiratory dosage. Although skin absorption great enough to cause death may occur in 1 to 2 minutes, death may be delayed for 1 to 2 hours. Respiratory lethal dosages kill in 1 to 10 minutes, and liquid in the eye kills almost as rapidly. [Pg.453]

Ness J, Floth A, Barnett MJ et al. (2006) Anticholinergic medications in community-dwelling older veterans prevalence of anticholinergic symptoms, symptom burden, and adverse drug events. Am J Geriatr Pharmacother 4(1) 42-51... [Pg.46]

Paxillus syndrome is a food allergy, not a true poisoning. As a consequence, some who eat the mushrooms will not develop symptoms. Symptoms may include colic, vomiting, diarrhea, oliguria or anuria, kidney pain, hemoglobinuria, and renal failure. A hemagglutination test has been used for confirmation (Bresinsky and Besl, 1990). [Pg.87]

In the context of allergies, sensitization is the process by which a person becomes, over time, increasingly allergic to a substance (sensitizer) through repeated exposure to that substance. Allergies are inappropriate or exaggerated reactions of the immune system to substances that, in the majority of people, cause no symptoms. Symptoms of the allergic diseases may be caused by exposure of the skin, the respiratory tract, or of the stomach and intestines to a protein or a chemical substance. [Pg.118]

For each targeted symptom, symptom-rating scales can be utilized before treatment and at appropriate intervals after treatment is initiated. Whenever possible, it is helpful to combine self-report measure(s) with observer report measure(s). [Pg.400]

Generic Name Available) Symptoms Symptoms Sedation Symptoms Reactions Potency (Usual Depot Dose IM)... [Pg.550]

Patients who are prescribed opioids for a period of time may develop a physical dependence on them, which is not the same as addiction. Repeated exposure to opioids causes the body to adapt, sometimes resulting in tolerance (that is, more of the drug is needed to achieve the desired effect compared with when it was first prescribed) and in withdrawal symptoms upon abrupt cessation of drug use. Thus, individuals taking prescribed opioid medications should not only be given these medications under appropriate medical supervision, but they should also be medically supervised when stopping use in order to reduce or avoid withdrawal symptoms. Symptoms of withdrawal can include restlessness, muscle and bone pain, insomnia,... [Pg.235]

Case Conclusion GM began thyroid hormone therapy with T4. Her dose was initiated at the lower-than-recom-mended dose because GM has a history of AF, which may increase her sensitivity to the cardiac effects of T4. GM will return to the clinic in 4 to 6 weeks to assess her thyroid function and symptoms. Symptoms should begin to resolve in 2 to 3 weeks and should disappear by 6 weeks. [Pg.59]

Nutrient deficiency, if minor, may have barely noticeable symptoms. As a deficiency becomes more severe, the crop yield may decrease and the plant may show other symptoms. Symptoms common to several kinds of deficiencies include abnormal leaf color, curled leaves, dead growing tips, or smaller-than-normal leaves. [Pg.355]

Symptoms Symptoms of cold injury can be similar to sunscald symptoms blotchy, water-soaked areas on leaves. Shoot tips often die back (see stem damage photograph on page 396). [Pg.380]

Symptoms Symptoms include stunted growth and wilting and death of older leaves or whole plants. Infected plants bear little or... [Pg.400]

Symptoms Symptoms include leaves that are small, yellow or brown, and wilted. Decline may be gradual, over years, or rapid. [Pg.401]

The onset of symptoms of Salmonella gastroenteritis is usually 6-72 h. Acute symptoms may last for 1-2 days or may be prolonged depending on host factors, ingested dose, and strain. Arthritic symptoms may occur 3 weeks after onset of acute symptoms. Symptoms are more severe in the elderly, infants, and immunocompromised individuals. S. typhi and S. paratyphi A, B, and C produce typhoid and typhoid-like symptoms in humans. Enteric fever (typhoid fever) may develop other symptoms include anorexia, abdominal pain, malaise, myalgias, headache, cough, diarrhea or constipation, and... [Pg.2349]


See other pages where Symptom/symptomal is mentioned: [Pg.14]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.551]    [Pg.561]    [Pg.568]    [Pg.576]    [Pg.576]    [Pg.588]    [Pg.610]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.549]    [Pg.138]    [Pg.649]    [Pg.287]    [Pg.290]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.1932]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.93 , Pg.94 , Pg.104 , Pg.109 , Pg.211 ]




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