The disease progresses so that the individual becomes increasingly dependent, ultimately becoming bedridden and unaware of his or her surroundings.
Initial symptoms include a change in behavior, irritability, memory loss, and difficulty in forming thoughts and solving problems.
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a long-lasting (chronic) infection of the central nervous system that causes inflammation of the brain. The infection is caused by an altered form of the measles virus.
Symptoms include changes in personality, decreased intelligence with accompanying school problems, decreased coordination, involuntary jerks and movements of the body.
The disease is caused by the reactivated form of a mutated measles virus. The inactive form of the virus can be present in the body for up to 10 years following the initial bout of measles before the symptoms of SSPE develop.
SSPE develops when the measles virus, which is still present but is in an inactive (or latent) form, is reactivated. The appearance of symptoms typically leads to a disease that last from one to three years.
People who have subacute thyroiditis feel feverish, weak, and tired. The thyroid is sore to the touch. They may be nervous, sweat, and have trouble tolerating heat or swallowing
The disease primary sclerosing cholangitis damages to a person's liver. Many people do not experience symptoms. It causes inflammation of the bile ducts both inside and outside the liver.
Subacute refers to a stage of a disease or condition that is intermediate between acute and chronic. It typically describes symptoms or processes that are not as severe or sudden as acute conditions but are also not as long-lasting as chronic ones. In medical contexts, subacute can indicate a duration of a few days to several weeks.
A transfusion reaction is typically an acute hypersensitivity reaction to foreign red blood cells, which can occur immediately or within a few hours of the transfusion. Subacute hypersensitivity reactions usually take days to develop after exposure to the antigen, unlike the immediate onset of symptoms seen in transfusion reactions.
Drugs and alcohol affect mood by altering brain chemistry, specifically the production of neurotransmitters.
patients will continue to have extremely high fevers and their symptoms will get worse. In these cases, coma and then death occur in 7-14 days.
The primary symptoms of pancreatic cancer are abdominal pain, bloating, nausea, diarrhea and pale colored stools. However most of these symptoms don't occur until the disease is in the advanced stages.