relapse

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relapse

the return of ill health after an apparent or partial recovery
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Relapse

 

a new exacerbation of a disease during remission after an apparent recovery. In the case of a latent chronic infection, for example, brucellosis, pneumonia, and erysipelas, a relapse may be caused by inadequate immunity, chilling, or the supervention of a secondary infection. It may also be caused by a faulty diet, for example, with colitis, or by the cyclical nature of the disease itself (malaria, relapsing fever). The pathogenic microflora of the body is usually activated as a result of a relapse. A repeated infection caused by the same microorganisms is called a reinfection.

The pathogenesis of a relapse of a noninfectious disease is caused by shock, for example, with eczema, by vascular disorders, by regular malignant growth, and by inadequate treatment, for example, by the incomplete removal of a tumor. The pathogenesis of a relapse is sometimes unknown, for example, with familial Mediterranean fever and schizophrenia.

The clinical symptoms of a relapse may resemble or differ from the onset of a disease as a result of both the nature of the disease and the prescribed treatment. A relapse is sometimes more severe than the first attack of a disease and is more difficult to treat, as in the case of a relapse of acute leukemia. A relapse may be accompanied by complications, for example, intestinal bleeding in typhoid. Relapses are common to some diseases, for example, chronic dysentery. Treatment and preventive methods for relapses are usually the same as for the original disease.

A. A. SMIRNOV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
Three children had onset of nephrotic syndrome at less than 1year of age, among whom two became frequent relapsers and one became an infrequent relapser.
Despite these limitations, the strengths of this study are the large sample size of relapsers. Moreover, few studies have examined the association between smoking and HRQoL by means of the EQ-5D scores and, to our knowledge, this is the first one that evaluates impairment of HRQoL in relapsers, providing information both at a global level and by dimensions.
After interferon therapy, 109 were sustained responders, 33 were relapsers and 33 non responders.
At 3 months follow-up, we found significant differences on NWS and craving assessment between abstainers and relapsers. Those participants who relapsed at 3 months follow-up presented higher NWS (M = 6.02, SD = 6.30 for abstainers, and M = 9.75, SD = 6.77 for relapsers; t = -3.46, p < .001), and higher craving (M = 0.81, SD = 1.05 for abstainers, and M = 2.66, SD = 1.08 for relapsers; t = -10.53, p < .001), than participants who remained abstinent at 3 months follow-up.
Pardini et al., "Using pegylated interferon alfa-2b and ribavirin to treat chronic hepatitis patients infected with hepatitis C virus genotype 1: are nonresponders and relapsers different populations?" Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases, vol.
These studies include treatment-naive patients (QUEST-1 and QUEST-2), and patients who have failed prior treatment with pegylated interferon and ribavirin; in PROMISE (prior relapsers) and ASPIRE (prior non-responders).
In my experience, most chronic relapsers have never worked all 12 Steps.
He noted that because of poor treatment policy in our country we are dealing with huge patient population who is so to speak "non-responders" and "relapsers".
Objective: To evaluate liver histology of chronic hepatitis C patients, who were relapsers or non-responders to previous conventional therapy.
Finally, we used a one-factor ANOVA for comparing the means of the three groups (abstainers, relapsers, and smokers) and Scheffe's post hoc test to identify the source of the differences.
Sullum, Clark and King (2000), in a study of exercise relapsers, determined that participants having higher self-efficacy scores at baseline were much less likely to suffer a relapse during an eight-week exercise program and had higher perceived negative views of exercise at initiation of the exercise program.