blood dyscrasia
Noun: A general medical term for any disease or abnormal condition affecting the cellular or molecular components of the blood. It refers to a pathological state of the blood-forming organs or the blood itself, often involving an imbalance in the production, function, or destruction of blood cells (such as red cells, white cells, or platelets) or plasma constituents.
This is a formal, clinical term used primarily in medical contexts. It describes a broad category of hematologic disorders rather than a single specific disease. - It is typically used by healthcare professionals (doctors, nurses, researchers) in diagnosis, discussion, and literature. - It often appears in phrases like "diagnosed with a blood dyscrasia" or "suspected blood dyscrasia."
- The patient's persistent fatigue and bruising led the hematologist to suspect a blood dyscrasia.
- Certain medications can, in rare cases, cause a serious blood dyscrasia as a side effect.
- Laboratory tests are essential for identifying the specific type of blood dyscrasia.
- The term is often used when the exact nature of the blood disorder is initially unknown or when speaking about the general category. Further testing (like a bone marrow biopsy) is usually required to diagnose the specific condition (e.g., leukemia, aplastic anemia, polycythemia vera).
- Dyscrasia: (Noun) A more general term for an abnormal or disordered state of the body or a bodily part. "Blood dyscrasia" is its most common specific application.
- Hematologic disorder: A synonym often used interchangeably with "blood dyscrasia" in modern clinical language.
- Blood disorder: A less formal, more general synonym.
- Hematologic disease
- Blood disorder
- Hematopathy
- Eucrasia: (Noun, rare in modern usage) A normal state or balance of bodily fluids and functions; the opposite of dyscrasia.
- Normal hematopoiesis (the normal formation of blood cells).
- any abnormal condition of the blood