pathological state
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A pathological state is a physical condition of the body that is caused by, constitutes, or results from a disease. It describes an abnormal, diseased, or disordered condition, as opposed to a normal, healthy physiological state.
Usage
The term is used in medical, scientific, and clinical contexts to describe a condition resulting from illness. It is a formal and technical term. * It is typically used with verbs like be in, enter, cause, result in, diagnose, or treat. * It often follows prepositions like in a or into a.
Examples
- Chronic inflammation can lead to a pathological state in the affected tissues.
- The patient was diagnosed as being in a pathological state of extreme insulin resistance.
- The research aims to understand how the body transitions from a healthy to a pathological state.
Advanced Usage
- "State" vs. "Process": In medicine, a often refers to a relatively stable condition (e.g., a state of hypertension), whereas a refers to the ongoing mechanism of disease development (e.g., the process of atherosclerosis).
- Psychological Extension: While primarily describing physical conditions, the term can be applied analogously in psychology to describe a severe and dysfunctional mental condition caused by disorder, though "psychopathological state" is more precise.
Variants and Related Words
- Pathology (n): The scientific study of the nature of disease, its causes, processes, development, and consequences.
- Pathological (adj): 1. Relating to or caused by disease. (e.g., ). 2. (Informal) Compulsive and irrational (e.g., ).
- Pathogenesis (n): The manner of development of a disease.
- Morbid state: A near-synonymous, though less common, term for a diseased condition.
Synonyms
- Diseased condition
- Morbid state
- Disorder
- Affliction
- Malady
Antonyms
- Healthy state
- Normal state
- Physiological state
- Homeostasis
Noun
- a physical condition that is caused by disease