focal infection
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A focal infection is a localized bacterial infection that is confined to a specific area or organ within the body. Crucially, this localized infection is the source or focus that causes symptoms or disease in other, distant parts of the body.
Usage
The term is used primarily in medical contexts to describe the relationship between a localized site of infection and systemic illness. * The dentist suspected that the abscessed tooth was a focal infection responsible for the patient's unexplained joint inflammation. * Before the era of antibiotics, focal infection theory was a major concept in medicine, leading to procedures like tonsillectomies to treat conditions thought to originate from these sites.
Advanced Usage
- Theory of Focal Infection: This is a historical medical theory which posited that localized, often chronic, infections (e.g., in teeth, tonsils, or sinuses) were the primary cause of many systemic diseases (e.g., arthritis, nephritis). While its prominence has waned with modern microbiology, the core concept remains valid for specific conditions.
- Primary Focus: In diagnosis, identifying the focal infection is key to treating the secondary, systemic symptoms effectively.
Variants and Related Words
- Focus (n): In medicine, the specific site of a disease or infection. A focal infection has a primary .
- Focal (adj): Relating to a focus. Used in terms like or .
- Septic Focus: A synonymous term sometimes used in medical literature.
Synonyms
- Septic focus
- Primary infection site
- Nidus of infection
Related Concepts (Not Phrasal Verbs or Idioms)
- Metastatic Infection: An infection that spreads from a primary site to a distant one via the bloodstream or lymphatic system, which can be a consequence of a focal infection.
- Systemic Infection: An infection that affects the entire body, which may be triggered or perpetuated by a focal infection.
Noun
- bacterial infection limited to a specific organ or region especially one causing symptoms elsewhere