G. IU Malis has written: 'Research on the etiology of schizophrenia' -- subject(s): Schizophrenia
Bradley D Pearce has written: 'Can a virus cause schizophrenia?' -- subject(s): Etiology, Schizophrenia, Complications, Neurovirology, Virus diseases
Typically characterized by delusions, paranoia, and auditory and/or visual hallucinations, not to be confused with autism. Difficult to diagnose because of a child's imagination, and differentiated from schizophrenia- which has an early adult-hood onset. May also have a separate etiology as psychosis in adulthood and adolescence. See the DSM-IV for more info.
Uncertain etiology means the cause is unknown.
Pseudomonas is a bacterium. It doesn't have an etiology; it is an etiology. It can cause skin infections, UTIs, and other illnesses.
Etiology is what causes a disease or how it occurs based on studies
Staphylococcus is a bacterium. It doesn't have an etiology, it is an etiology for infections including boils, folliculitis, some UTIs, and impetigo.
Adrian Raine has written: 'The psychopathology of crime' -- subject(s): Criminal behavior, Criminal psychology, Criminals, Etiology, Pathological Psychology, Physiology, Physiopathology, Social Behavior Disorders 'Crime And Schizophrenia'
Infective etiology (or infectious etiology) in chest x-ray is an detailed examination of how the disease has spread in the patient's chest.
Etiology refers to the course of a disease. What that means is that it is the history of the progression and development of it. Some conditions have a common etiology because they develop the same way. For example, a cold and a flu; they start out the same, but then change their etiology once they develop more.
The etiology of many diseases such as the cancer is still being researched.
etiology is the study of the origin of diseases.