GBK glossarySearch the glossaries created from glossary-building KudoZ (GBK) questions. | To see the desired glossary, please select the language and then the field of expertise. |
Home - Persian (Farsi)
- Medical (general)
- Search
- Term
- Additional fields of expertise
- Definition(s)
- از ویکیپدیا، دانشنامهٔ آزاد
حضور یک یا چند اختلال (یا بیماری) علاوه بر بیماری یا اختلال اولیه؛
اثر اینگونه اختلالها یا بیماریهای افزوده؛
برای اشاره به حضور همایندیهای اختلال روانی و ناتوانی رشدی، بیشتر از گزارهٔ تشخیص دوگانه استفاده میشود.
Wikipedia - by Salman Rostami
- Example sentence(s)
- تحقيقات نشان مي دهند كه به ندرت مي توان اضطراب را به تنهايي تشخيص داد. همايندي اضطراب با ديگر اختلال هاي رواني درطي زندگي، 90 در صد تخمين زده مي شود. تحقيق حاضر با هدف بررسي چگونگي همايندي مرضي comorbidity اختلال هاي اضطرابي و افسردگي انجام شد. - Irandoc by Salman Rostami
- بررسي چگونگي همايندي مرضي Comorbidity اختلال هاي افسردگي و اضطرابي انجام شد - پايگاه مجلات علمي by Salman Rostami
- Related KudoZ question
Compare [close] - English
- Medical (general)
- Search
- Term
- Additional fields of expertise
- Definition(s)
- concomitant but unrelated pathologic or disease process,usually used to indicate coexistence of two or more disease processes. Medical University of South Carolina - by Enrique Cavalitto
- Example sentence(s)
- Many efforts are underway to develop chronic disease management programs, but the majority of them focus on single chronic diseases and do not recognize the presence of co-morbidity (suffering from more than one condition) for many individuals with chronic disease. - University of British Columbia by Enrique Cavalitto
- Identifying preventable risk factors may allow clinicians to decrease these unfortunate events. In order to perform appropriate statistical analyses, measures of important environmental exposures are needed because these are known to substantially increase exacerbation risk, including co-morbidity, medication use, tobacco smoking history and smoking status. - BioMed Central Ltd by Enrique Cavalitto
- While the data in some areas of co-morbidity are stronger than in others, relatively little is known about the risk factors that increase the probability of co-morbidity or the protective factors that decrease its probability. - National Institute of Mental Health by Enrique Cavalitto
Compare [close] - Compare this term in: Serbian, Croatian, Albanian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Czech, Chinese, Danish, German, Dutch, Greek, Spanish, Finnish, French, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese
| | The glossary compiled from Glossary-building KudoZ is made available openly under the Creative Commons "By" license (v3.0). By submitting this form, you agree to make your contribution available to others under the terms of that license. | | | | X Sign in to your ProZ.com account... | | | | | | |