• The lesions often become keratotic and show no tendency for spontaneous remission [ 2 ]. (cdlib.org)
  • Onychomycosis has no tendency for spontaneous remission and should be considered as a problem with serious medical, social, and emotional extensions, not solely a cosmetic problem. (hindawi.com)
  • You can expect a partial remission and then maybe a complete remission in the year or so following the disappearance of the antibody. (medscape.com)
  • Omalizumab is a monoclonal anti-IgE antibody that has been approved for the treatment of refractory chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) in many parts of the world since 2013 (1). (worldallergy.org)
  • Autoimmune disease caused by an antibody that acts as an agonist on the thryotropin receptor. (standardofcare.com)
  • Infliximab, an antibody to human tumor necrosis factor alpha, has proved successful in the treatment of severe refractory disease and generally causes only mild side effects. (aafp.org)
  • This case highlights the importance of careful follow up because spontaneous remission of pituitary hormone deficiencies and the emergence of other autoimmune diseases can occur. (lww.com)
  • Cushing's disease (CD) is a rare clinical condition that is due to ACTH-producing pituitary adenoma, and it is the most common etiology of endogenous Cushing's syndrome after 6 yrs of age (~70%) ( 2 2. (scielo.br)
  • Outcomes of therapy for Cushing's disease due to adrenocorticotropin-secreting pituitary macroadenomas. (scielo.br)
  • Symptoms progress over several days and last for 1-4 weeks before spontaneous remission occurs. (medscape.com)
  • The symptoms and physical findings associated with Rosai-Dorfman disease vary depending upon the specific areas of the body that are affected. (rarediseases.org)
  • The symptoms and physical findings associated with Rosai-Dorfman disease vary greatly from one person to another depending upon the extent of the disorder and the specific organ systems affected. (rarediseases.org)
  • Many individuals with Rosai-Dorfman disease do not develop any additional symptoms of the disorder (asymptomatic). (rarediseases.org)
  • [ 9 ] Hence, patients who keep having strictly ocular symptoms for 3 or more years are unlikely to revert to the generalized aspect of the disease. (medscape.com)
  • About 50% of patients present solely with ocular symptoms, and about 50-60% of these patients will progress to develop generalized disease. (medscape.com)
  • If you are ill from any disease or notice medical symptoms, you should consult your doctor. (family-health-information.com)
  • The symptoms of acute bacterial intestinal infection are usually mild to moderate, and spontaneous remission occurs ( 1 ) , but in some cases, the disease can cause rapid deterioration of a patient's condition. (cdc.gov)
  • 5 However, symptoms of Crohn's disease are often insidious, and diagnosis can be difficult. (aafp.org)
  • Patients may have intermittent symptoms with varying periods of remission. (aafp.org)
  • Development of progressively spontaneous symptoms remission. (isciii.es)
  • Other individuals have a multitude of the most severe symptoms of end-stage liver disease and a limited chance for survival. (medscape.com)
  • Specific medical therapies may be applied to many liver diseases in an effort to diminish symptoms and to prevent or forestall the development of cirrhosis. (medscape.com)
  • An imbalance in local mucosal production of pro-inflammatory cytokines over anti-inflammatory cytokines is theorized to cause the well-demarcated, discontinuous, transmural, ulcerative lesions characteristic of the disease. (aafp.org)
  • The differential diagnoses of early NLD include Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, granuloma annulare, and sarcoidosis. (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • Sarcoidosis development during ulcerative colitis remission in a patient with a susceptible human leukocyte antigen serotype. (cdc.gov)
  • The clinical manifestation of LGV depends on the site of entry of the infectious organism (the sex contact site) and the stage of disease progression. (wikipedia.org)
  • Assessing actual disease activity as well as disease activity states should constitute an integral part of clinical trial data reporting. (nih.gov)
  • The clinical remissions came after the antibodies disappeared. (medscape.com)
  • What are the clinical features of linear IgA bullous disease? (dermnetnz.org)
  • Critically important Graves disease occurs in 25% of patients, however sub clinical involvement with extreme ocular muscle enlargement is seen radiographically it up to 70% of patients. (standardofcare.com)
  • 4 Clinical features of Crohn's disease are listed in Table 1 . (aafp.org)
  • Patients with idiopathic MGN may experience spontaneous remission, persistent proteinuria of variable degree, or progression to kidney failure. (medscape.com)
  • Minimal change disease causes abrupt onset of edema and heavy proteinuria, mostly in children. (msdmanuals.com)
  • In 85% of AD-afflicted children, onset of disease occurs before the age of 5 years. (skintherapyletter.com)
  • Minimal change disease is the most common cause of nephrotic syndrome in children 4 to 8 years (80 to 90% of childhood nephrotic syndrome), but it also occurs in adults (10 to 20% of adult nephrotic syndrome). (msdmanuals.com)
  • In the paper describing AAC , David Croteau, MD, and colleagues from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) explain that it is a necroinflammatory disease of the gallbladder that occurs in the absence of cholelithiasis or choledocholithiasis and has historically been associated with older male patients receiving care in the intensive care unit setting. (medscape.com)
  • citation needed] Over the course of the disease, lymph nodes enlarge, as may occur in any infection of the same areas as well. (wikipedia.org)
  • Spontaneous remissions occur in about 25% of patients. (family-health-information.com)
  • Graves' ophthalmopathy, also known as thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy or thyroid eye disease may sometimes occur in patients with euthyroid or hypothyroid chronic autoimmune thyroiditis. (standardofcare.com)
  • Cutaneous manifestations can occur and may be the only sign of the disease. (medicaljournals.se)
  • Spontaneous remissions occur in 40% of cases, but most patients are given corticosteroids. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Speculation about genetic, environmental, dietary, infectious, and immunologic etiologies has led to treatment modalities directed at each theoretic cause, but therapy guidelines are determined by the severity of disease. (aafp.org)
  • Dosing will necessarily vary depending on the severity of the disease or health condition. (undergroundhealthreporter.com)
  • There is evidence that sometimes medicine is not responsible when a patient's condition goes into remission. (healthtransformation.net)
  • [ 1 , 2 ] Ninety percent of patients with myasthenia gravis develop ophthalmologic manifestations of the disease, a disorder of neuromuscular transmission characterized by weakness and fatigability of skeletal muscles. (medscape.com)
  • Acute gastroenteritis is sometimes associated with disease manifestations from several organ systems that may require hospitalization of patients. (cdc.gov)
  • This observation illustrates the broad spectrum of the cutaneous manifestations of toxocariasis, showing that the disease may also cause febrile exanthema. (medicaljournals.se)
  • Manifestations of the disease cause considerable morbidity and social cost. (aafp.org)
  • Oral manifestations include spontaneous gingival bleeding, petechiae or hematomas of the mucosa, palate and tongue. (bvsalud.org)
  • Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a cancer of the white blood cells and is typically well treated with combination chemotherapy, with a remission state after 5 years of 94% in children and 30-40% in adults. (karger.com)
  • For inflammatory arthritis such as rheumatoid disease, chemotherapy drugs are often used in an effort to arrest the synovial proliferation. (mytpi.com)
  • Twenty years ago, Noetic scientists decided there needed to be a body of literature dedicated to collecting and organizing reports of patients' diseases mysteriously going into remission. (healthtransformation.net)
  • These were patients who chose not to receive drugs or surgical treatment for disease. (healthtransformation.net)
  • We compared levels of functional impairment and radiographic progression among patients meeting the ACR 50% or 70% improvement criteria (ACR50 and ACR70 responders, respectively) who attained remission of disease, low disease activity, or moderate disease activity after 1 year, as assessed by the Simplified Disease Activity Index and the Disease Activity Score in 28 joints. (nih.gov)
  • Within the ACR50 and ACR70 responder groups, functional disability and radiographic progression were lowest in patients who had attained disease remission at 1 year, compared with those who had attained low or moderate disease activity. (nih.gov)
  • When patients attained the same disease activity category, physical function and radiographic progression did not differ significantly with different response states. (nih.gov)
  • Functional and radiographic outcomes are different in patients depending on the disease activity category they attain, even if the same level of response (change from baseline) is achieved. (nih.gov)
  • Among patients who attain the same disease activity category, the degree of response they experience does not seem to matter. (nih.gov)
  • In two patients with celiac disease, Hartnup disease was found in treatment-refractory celiac disease. (medscape.com)
  • Of 1087 patients screened for the detection of inherited metabolic diseases from the Alexandra Institute for persons with mental retardation in Cape Town, Hartnup disease was found in only 1 patient. (medscape.com)
  • Patients who are positive for anti-THSD7A autoantibodies represent a distinct subgroup with this disease and make up approximately 2.5 to 5% of adultts with idiopathic membranous nephropathy. (medscape.com)
  • Patients with thymomas require thymectomy, which leads to remission in adult-onset myasthenia in about 40% of patients if done in the first 2 years after diagnosis. (family-health-information.com)
  • Expert opinion: defining response to omalizumab in patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria. (worldallergy.org)
  • 5. Weller K, Zuberbier T, Maurer M. Clinically relevant outcome measures for assessing disease activity, disease control and quality of life impairment in patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria and recurrent angioedema. (worldallergy.org)
  • Graves' ophthalmopathy is potentially sight threatening eye disease generally occurring in patients with hyperthyroidism or a history of hyperthyroidism due to Graves' disease . (standardofcare.com)
  • A family history of thyroid dysfunction is found in approximately half the patients with Graves' disease and the pathogenesis is strongly influenced by genetics. (standardofcare.com)
  • Approximately 3-5% of patients have severe disease with pain, inflammation, corneal ulceration or compressive optic neuropathy. (standardofcare.com)
  • We present a retrospective cohort study of these patients to investigate the association between exposure to a bacterial pathogen and the risk for autoimmune illness, gastrointestinal complications, and extraintestinal infectious disease. (cdc.gov)
  • The aetiology of autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is uncertain but the disease can be triggered in susceptible patients by external factors such as viruses or drugs. (wjgnet.com)
  • Therapy for Crohn's disease must involve treating comorbid conditions to improve the quality of life of patients. (aafp.org)
  • One research study of cancer patients who had a spontaneous remission found only one factor common to each person they examined. (hepcchallenge.org)
  • The aim of this article is to provide information on the early detection and establishment of a proper diagnosis of Cushing's disease, recommending follow-up of these patients at experienced referral centers. (scielo.br)
  • Biochemical assessment of Cushing's disease in patients with corticotroph macroadenomas. (scielo.br)
  • 3 Spontaneous remission is reported in approximately 20% of patients. (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • Does intensive management improve remission rates in patients with intermediate rheumatoid arthritis? (kcl.ac.uk)
  • Although exorbitantly expensive, not targeted at the root cause of the disease (which remains unknown), and of help to only a portion of the MS population, the approved drugs have been shown to reduce the rate of relapses in some RRMS patients, though there is much question over whether they actually slow the insidious progression of the disease. (wheelchairkamikaze.com)
  • For the patients in whom they work, though, a significant drop in relapse rates can substantially lessen the impact of the disease on their lives. (wheelchairkamikaze.com)
  • Certainly, they do nothing to cure the disease, and I do doubt their ability to significantly impact the progression of MS, but I know of enough patients whose lives have remained relatively productive in large part due to these medications that I can't help recognize their value. (wheelchairkamikaze.com)
  • Albumin is lost in the urine of patients with minimal change disease more so than larger serum proteins, probably because the disease causes changes in the charge barrier that affect albumin selectively. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Patients mostly had intermediate-risk disease with a median PSA value of 7.97â ¯ng/ml and Gleason score of 7a and 7b in 43.5% and 25.9% of patients, respectively. (bvsalud.org)
  • This search yielded eight spontaneous adverse event reports of AAC associated with alemtuzumab in patients with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS). (medscape.com)
  • Some systemic diseases, such as uncontrolled diabetes, can increase their risk of development and progression. (mdpi.com)
  • Quality of life was negatively impacted by the presence of Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, Mushin Local systemic diseases as wel as cheek biting habit. (who.int)
  • A persistent feature of AD is dry skin that is caused by a combination of intrinsic disease mechanisms and hyperreactivity to exogenous factors. (skintherapyletter.com)
  • Use of salicylates and/or antibiotics can be effective in mild to moderate disease, while steroids are the accepted therapy for more severe active disease. (aafp.org)
  • may allow for spontaneous regression of the disease. (healingcancernaturally.com)
  • A spontaneous regression of their hernia was appreciated as follow: 33 cases of lumbar hernia (29 male, 4 female), 3 cervical hernia (1 male, 2 female) and 1 dorsal hernia (male). (isciii.es)
  • Conclusion: Parathyroid apoplexy can lead to spontaneous remission of the PHPT but the remission is usually temporary and finally recurrence of the disease could be seen. (endocrine-abstracts.org)
  • Rarely, the haemorrhage in the lesion may cause the spontaneous remission of the disease. (endocrine-abstracts.org)
  • Although it is known to be an autoimmune disease, the exact mechanism of lesion development is not well understood. (dermnetnz.org)
  • Quality Of Life (OHRQOL) to serve as adjuncts for Researchers have defined an oral mucosal lesion measuring outcomes associated with (OML) as any abnormal alteration in colour, surface diseases/conditions. (who.int)
  • For how long should we use omalizumab in chronic spontaneous urticaria? (worldallergy.org)
  • The urticaria activity score (UAS) and urticaria control test (UCT) are disease measurement tools that can be used for defining response (4). (worldallergy.org)
  • 2. Giménez-Arnau AM. Omalizumab for treating chronic spontaneous urticaria: an expert review on efficacy and safety. (worldallergy.org)
  • Doctors around the world are stymied when an individual's cancer or other disease seems to enter a period of decline in spite of the patient receiving no care or care that would otherwise seem insufficient to affect such dramatic results. (healthtransformation.net)
  • It was charted by the patient's hematologist/oncologist that the patient 'suffers from terminal malignant disease. (karger.com)
  • When there is a response, the patient should continue treatment "until the disease is gone" (7). (worldallergy.org)
  • Since the patient was making a spontaneous recovery, no anti-parasitic treatment was given. (medicaljournals.se)
  • A diagnosis of Crohn's disease should be considered in any patient who presents with chronic or nocturnal diarrhea, abdominal pain, bowel obstruction, weight loss, fever, or night sweats. (aafp.org)
  • Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease of the neuromuscular junction in which circulating antibodies cause fluctuant skeletal muscle weakness. (medscape.com)
  • Myasthenia gravis follows an unpredictable course of recurring exacerbations and periodic remissions. (family-health-information.com)
  • [ 6 ] Detection of anti-PLA2R antibodies in glomeruli but not in liver parenchyma is a common finding in phatients with membranous nephropathy associated with autoimmune liver disease, suggesting that these autoantibodies are not exclusive to idiopathic membranous nephropathy. (medscape.com)
  • Darier-Roussy disease Sarcoidosis List of cutaneous conditions Rapini, Ronald P. (wikipedia.org)
  • Sarcoidosis, vasculitis, and diffuse lung diseases : official journal of WASOG 2021 7 38 (2): e2021007. (cdc.gov)
  • Sarcoidosis, vasculitis, and diffuse lung diseases : official journal of WASOG 2021 4 38 (1): e2021010. (cdc.gov)
  • Hundreds of individuals have experienced recovery from tissue damage, breast cancer, sexually transmitted diseases, and lymphatic conditions. (healthtransformation.net)
  • While it is not statistically typical for someone to experience healing from late-stage cancer or a serious disease without medical intervention, there are numerous cases of illness going into remission after a period of focused prayer or deliberate transcendental practices. (healthtransformation.net)
  • That book is entitled N-of-1: One man's Harvard-documented remission of incurable cancer using only natural methods . (scienceblogs.com)
  • It is claimed that the regular Ushapaan prevents you from up to 30 diseases from headache to cancer and from obesity to diabetes. (pearltrees.com)
  • Anti-aging proteins in the sirtuin family have long been shown to protect against age-related diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, and neurodegeneration. (pearltrees.com)
  • Dr. Hardin Jones, prominent cancer researcher & former physiology professor at the University of California Department of Medical Physics, who has been studying cancer for more than 23 years, travelling the world to collect data on the dreaded disease. (healingcancernaturally.com)
  • To establish how aggressive the disease is, further chromosome testing is required to determine whether the cancer is myeloblastic and involves neutrophils, eosinophils or basophils, or lymphoblastic involving B or T lymphocytes. (karger.com)
  • Based on this new model, Epigeneticists are of the view that diseases such as cancer are not caused by defective genes, as claimed by mainstream geneticists, but rather by non-genetic factors that alter the expression of genes without changing the DNA sequence. (learninggnm.com)
  • Hundreds of these units have been built, and numerous 'spontaneous remissions' of many conditions, including cancer, have been reported. (electroherbalism.com)
  • In the past we have characterized cancer as a disease of deficiency - a slow-motion starving of vital nutrients resulting from the wholesale industrialization of food - or of the environment - a slow-motion poisoning from our chronic exposure to some 20,000 chemicals present in our air, food, water and homes. (healthy.net)
  • Nevertheless, the identification of novel additional molecular alterations is of great interest, opening to new prognostic and therapeutic strategies for such heterogeneous hematological disease. (cancerindex.org)
  • Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP) is a hematological disease characterized by decreased number of blood platelets. (bvsalud.org)
  • In adults, disease onset is more common in the sixth decade. (dermnetnz.org)
  • In children, disease onset is more common during preschool age (~4.5 years old). (dermnetnz.org)
  • Although Graves' disease may affect anyone, it is more common among women and has an onset before the age of 40 years. (standardofcare.com)
  • or enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli [EHEC]) reported to the Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control during 1997-2004. (cdc.gov)
  • 1 Tropical and Infectious Diseases and 3 Parasitology-Mycology Departments, Pitie-Salpetriere Hospital, 47-83 Boulevard de l'Hôpital, FR-75013 Paris, and 2 Department of Dermatology, Hôpital Tenon, Université Pierre et Marie Curie-Paris 6, Paris, France. (medicaljournals.se)
  • 2 The etiology of Crohn's disease is unknown, but suggested possibilities include genetic, environmental, immunologic, and infectious causes. (aafp.org)
  • In his book titled Olive Leaf Extract, Dr. Morton Walker recommends using olive leaf extract for its miraculous effects on more than 125 infectious and chronic diseases. (undergroundhealthreporter.com)
  • Many have reported 'spontaneous remissions' of cancers. (electroherbalism.com)
  • Severe chronic neutropenia (SCN) is a rare blood disorder characterized by abnormally low levels of certain white blood cells (neutrophils) in the bloodstream (neutropenia) not explained by medication use, infections or another underlying health condition like blood cancers or systemic autoimmune diseases associated with neutropenia. (rarediseases.org)
  • This idea is based on observations that "the paternal (but not maternal) grandsons of Swedish boys who were exposed during preadolescence to famine in the 19th century were less likely to die of cardiovascular disease. (learninggnm.com)
  • The Spontaneous Remission Bibliography Project was born to show there is plenty to be learned and studied about the way one's consciousness contributes to recovery from physical or mental illness. (healthtransformation.net)
  • One such disease in children is immune thrombocytopenia (also called immune thrombocytopenic purpura or ITP), which is the most common acquired bleeding illness in children [3]. (who.int)
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (cdc.gov)
  • We congratulate the Centers for Disease Control in its efforts to update this guide and wish it the same success as the previous edition. (cdc.gov)
  • The etiology of Riedel thyroiditis (RT) is unknown, but it may be related to a relatively new group of rare disorders, IgG4-related systemic disease (IgG4-RSD). (medscape.com)
  • Currently, IPT is considered an autoimmune disease and its etiology is related to immunological mechanisms such as antibodies and antiplatelet immunoglobulin in the blood 16 . (bvsalud.org)
  • Oral and periodontal diseases can determine severe functional, phonatory and aesthetic impairments and are the main cause of adult tooth loss. (mdpi.com)
  • Health-Related Quality caries and other oral diseases. (who.int)
  • INTRODUCTION focus on diseases only (such as caries, periodontitis, Oral health is important to the quality of life of al gingivitis et cetera. (who.int)
  • Now we know the paradigm is that you can monitor anti-PLA2R antibodies with treatment or by watching for a spontaneous remission. (medscape.com)
  • In 1991, Glenn Sabin was a 28-year-old newlywed diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)-a disease doctors called "uniformly fatal. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Linear IgA bullous disease may present as toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) - a severe cutaneous adverse drug reaction with widespread blistering and painful loss of skin. (dermnetnz.org)
  • Purpura is a disease included in the large group of hemorrhagic disorders and is distinguished by cutaneous hemorrhage and blood loss from mucous membranes and internal organs, which is always related to vascular or platelet alterations 2 . (bvsalud.org)
  • Extremely rarely, severe IgA bullous disease develops in the neonatal period, and may progress to produce severe mucosal , aerodigestive lesions , and corneal scarring. (dermnetnz.org)
  • It results in the remodeling of the orbit and upper face resulting in: dry eyes, increased lacrimation, local irritation, and eyelid retraction in mild cases, but can also manifest with pronounced proptosis, diplopia, and optic nerve compression, with potential vision loss in with severe disease. (standardofcare.com)
  • Hence, "freedom from the Ancestor Syndrome" (Ancelin Schutzenberger) is the prime objective of the "therapy", which aims to release the descendant from the genetic programming, so that he, in turn, is spared from inflicting diseases upon future generations. (learninggnm.com)
  • spontaneous remission occurred after therapy suspension. (cdlib.org)
  • Azathioprine and other immunosuppresant drugs can be used as adjunctive therapy for active Crohn's disease and may help to maintain remission. (aafp.org)
  • Although it is a rare condition, the accurate diagnosis and treatment of Cushing's disease is important due to its higher morbidity and mortality compared to the general population, which is attributed to cardiovascular diseases, diabetes mellitus and infections. (scielo.br)
  • The intervertebral disc disease (IDD) is one of the most common muscle-skeletic disorders, causing both high work disability and elevated healthcare costs. (isciii.es)
  • Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the gastrointestinal tract that affects up to 480,000 persons in the United States. (aafp.org)
  • Crohn's disease is a chronic, relapsing inflammatory disorder of the alimentary canal with involvement anywhere from the mouth to the anus. (aafp.org)
  • This article will focus on the evaluation and management of Crohn's disease by the family physician. (aafp.org)
  • Crohn's disease affects approximately 380,000 to 480,000 persons in the United States. (aafp.org)
  • The incidence of Crohn's disease differs across racial and ethnic boundaries. (aafp.org)
  • 3 Environmental factors must play a role in the development of Crohn's disease, because while the disease is uncommon in African blacks, U.S. blacks have an incidence similar to that of whites. (aafp.org)
  • While etiologic evidence suggests a complex interplay between many factors, pathophysiologically, Crohn's disease involves an immune system dysfunction. (aafp.org)
  • Crampy, intermittent pain is the most common symptom of Crohn's disease. (aafp.org)
  • S2 Episode 6: Rare Disease: Is It Membranous Nephropathy? (medscape.com)
  • 1 An improved understanding of crucial skin barrier defenses and the inflammatory cascade that drives the disease has led clinicians to reassess conventional approaches to treatment and recognize emollients for their therapeutic potential. (skintherapyletter.com)
  • Cannabinoid resin extract is used as an effective treatment for ALL with a positive Philadelphia chromosome mutation and indications of dose-dependent disease control. (karger.com)
  • There are three different situations where we should consider stop omalizumab treatment: side effects, lack of efficacy and disease remission. (worldallergy.org)
  • In this way, stopping treatment before three months may be too early and we would miss an opportunity to control the disease. (worldallergy.org)
  • On the other hand, in countries where there is no pre-determined treatment schedule, recommendations are to reduce the doses and/or increase the dose intervals to assess for spontaneous remission at regular intervals (4). (worldallergy.org)
  • On the other hand, I have seen these units destroy diseases like herpes quickly, and take care of mononucleosis in one treatment so that a very sick child was fine the next morning and ready for school. (electroherbalism.com)
  • In some cases of Rosai-Dorfman disease, the accumulation of histiocytes into masses may cause compression of vital organs potentially resulting in serious complications. (rarediseases.org)
  • These cases may be known as isolated Rosai-Dorfman disease. (rarediseases.org)
  • In Sweden, there is no active follow-up on reported cases of bacterial enteric infection in terms of disease outcome or long-term complications. (cdc.gov)
  • Person-years were then compared with a Swedish standard population of 5-year age groups to calculate the expected number of cases for each disease. (cdc.gov)
  • In some cases, people who have or have been treated for another blood disease called aplastic anemia may develop PNH. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Turner syndrome (TS) is a genetic disease with an incidence rate of between 1:2000 and 1:5000 live female births. (cdlib.org)
  • a possible pathogenesis of CTP and suggests promising therapeutic strategies for the disease. (itpsupport.org.uk)
  • Riedel thyroiditis, or Riedel's thyroiditis (RT), is a rare, chronic inflammatory disease of the thyroid gland characterized by a dense fibrosis that replaces normal thyroid parenchyma. (medscape.com)
  • The medical consensus on the genetic origin of diseases also serves as justification for the screening of embryos for "abnormal" genes. (learninggnm.com)
  • Many genes associated with increased risk of GD overlap with those associated with other autoimmune diseases. (standardofcare.com)
  • Nineteen of the 83 (or 23%) experienced spontaneous remission lasting four months to six years. (healingcancernaturally.com)
  • The disease course changes from an active progressive period characterized by inflammation to a stable and fibrotic, inactive period after 1-3 years. (standardofcare.com)
  • The disease is chronic and may go on for years although occasional examples of spontaneous remissions have been recorded. (itpsupport.org.uk)
  • Theories of a genetic basis for the disease are supported by family history and prevalence information, but no clear-cut pattern of inheritance has been established. (aafp.org)
  • They affect al age groups to varying degrees and METHODOLOGY sociodemographic factors are wel known to STUDY DESIGN AND LOCATION contribute to the prevalence of diseases. (who.int)