pathophysiology
the study of functional changes in the body caused by injury, disorder, or disease
disease
functional impairment of cells, tissues, organs, or organ systems
includes:
injuries
disorders
illness
syndromes
pathogenesis
the origination and development of illness or disease; from when the disease process begins to when the disease presents itself
goal of pathogenesis study
to prevent disease and facilitate early diagnosis and intervention
etiology
precise cause of disease
types of etiology
pathogen
multifactoral
idiopathic
nosocomial
iatrogenic
pathogen
disease causing microorganism
multifactoral
having more than one cause
example of multifactoral
a predisposition (i.e family history) to a disease and environmental factors
idiopathic
no known cause; as high as 80% of cases
nosocomial
caused by an infection received in a healthcare environment
example of nosocomial
improper staff hand washing causing transmission of CDIFF
iatrogenic
inadvertently caused by medical treatment
example of iatrogenic
a UTI after foley catheterization
clinical manifestations
presenting signs and symptoms of disease
signs
objective, measurable data
examples of signs
lab results
vitals
symptoms
subjective, pt. reported (feelings)
local
manifestations found directly at the site of disease and confined to a certain area
example of localized
swelling or bruising
systemic
manifestations present throughout the body, not confined to one area
example of systemic
fever or high BP
acute
begin abruptly and lasts a few days to months
example of acute
the common cold
chronic
gradual (insidious) onset and lasts longer than 6 months
remission
symptom-free period; condition still exists but is under control
examples of chronic
DM
cancer
HTN
exacerbation
flaring of symptoms
asymptomatic
no noticeable symptoms despite diagnostic testing indicating disease presence
diagnosis
label for the disease; based on clinical manifestations, lab results, and diagnostic tests
prognosis
the “forecast” or prediction of how the individual will proceed through the disease process, dependent on the diagnosis and the pt.’s ability to stick to treatment
excellent prognosis
complete recovery
poor prognosis’s
morbidity
mortality
morbidity
a negative outcome with disease complications that impacts the quality or life
mortality
death
treatment
dependent on the etiology and manifestations; aimed at eliminating or reducing the cause of disease
continuum of health and wellness
perception of being anywhere along the line of ‘extremely healthy’ to ‘extremely ill’
health
perceived wholeness of body, mind, and spirit
illness
a state resulting in suffering or distress
homeostasis
a dynamic balance in the body marked by appropriate and effective responses to stimuli, thereby keeping the body in a steady state
epidemiology
the study of disease in populations
incidence
the number of NEW cases within a given time; represents the probability that a disease will occur in a certain population
prevalence
the number or percentage of a population living with a specific disease at a given time; TOTAL
endemic
incidence and prevalence are predictable and stable; within a certain area
epidemic
dramatic increase in incidence (within a certain area)
pandemic
an epidemic that spreads across continents
primary prevention
prevention of a disease from occuring; primary = PREVENTION
secondary prevention
early detection of disease by screening; secondary = SCREENING
tertiary prevention
rehabilitation of a pt. to prevent complication or progression of disease; tertiary = TREATMENT
evidence based practice
a way of caring for others that is cognizant of the most current research and knowledge in the health professions
characteristics of evidence based practice
goes beyond one piece of research
encompasses all of what is known through research
respects human health variations
factors affecting pathogenesis
gender
age
race
locale
socioeconomic status
ethnicity
concept
a general idea that can be applied to similar situations
a conceptual approach in pathophysiology clusters current knowledge about human health and disease and organizes that knowledge into meaningful and useful ideas