degenerative disorder
Noun: A medical condition characterized by the progressive deterioration in the structure or function of tissues or organs over time. It involves a decline from a higher to a lower level of function, often due to the gradual breakdown of cells.
A "degenerative disorder" is a term used primarily in medical and clinical contexts to describe diseases that worsen progressively. It is typically used as a countable noun.
Examples: * Alzheimer's disease is a well-known degenerative disorder of the brain. * The patient was diagnosed with a degenerative disorder affecting the spinal cord. * Research aims to find treatments that can slow the progression of various degenerative disorders.
- "Progressive degenerative disorder": This phrase emphasizes the continuously worsening nature of the condition.
- Huntington's disease is a progressive degenerative disorder with neurological and motor symptoms.
- Degenerative disease: A very close synonym, often used interchangeably with "degenerative disorder."
- Neurodegenerative disorder: A specific type of degenerative disorder that affects neurons in the brain and spinal cord (e.g., Parkinson's disease, ALS).
- Progressive disease
- Degenerative disease
- Deteriorative condition
The term "degenerative disorder" is specific to medical pathology. It does not have common non-medical, idiomatic, or phrasal verb uses. Its meaning is consistently tied to the concept of progressive functional or structural decline in living tissues.
- condition leading to progressive loss of function