Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Acute pain, subacute pain, and chronic pain are defined by units of time, but the concepts on which they are based are more fundamentally related to causation and prognosis. This entry discusses what the definitions imply and the clinical significance of classifying pain into these categories. Acute pain was first defined by Bonica, in his ...

  2. Acute care is short-term health care that involves treatment and care that are active but not over a long period of time. This type of care is typically used for injuries, illnesses, urgent and emergency needs, and for recovery or rehabilitation after surgery. Acute care is in contrast to long-term care, sometimes called chronic care, for ...

  3. An acute angle is an angle-- well, let me just draw them first. Then it might start to make sense. So an acute angle will look something like that. I draw two rays that are coming from a common point. So the acute angle will be this angle right over here. I could also draw an acute angle, maybe an angle that's formed from the intersection of ...

  4. Acute Illness. (1) Any illness that develops quickly, is intense or severe and lasts a relatively short period of time. (2) Any condition—e.g., infection, trauma, fracture—with a short (often less than 1 month) clinical course. Acute illnesses usually respond to therapy; a return to a state of complete—pre-morbid—health is the norm.

  5. Jan 17, 2023 · Acute means sudden. Acute symptoms appear, change, or worsen rapidly. It is the opposite of chronic.

  6. Causes of acute pain include: Surgery. Broken bones. Dental work. Burns or cuts. Labor and childbirth. After acute pain goes away, you can go on with life as usual. Chronic pain is pain that is ongoing and usually lasts longer than six months. This type of pain can continue even after the injury or illness that caused it has healed or gone away.

  7. acute illness: any illness characterized by signs and symptoms of rapid onset and short duration. It may be severe and impair normal functioning.

  1. People also search for