Someone with dysphagia has difficulty swallowing. Some drugs or medicines can cause dysphagia. Anti-psychotic drugs are notorious for inducing dysphagia and many other harmful side-effects.
Dysphagia (difficulty or discomfort in swallowing, as a symptom of disease) has no plural form.
Dysphagia is the medical term for difficulty swallowing.
The word root for dysphagia is "dys-" which means difficult or impaired, and "phag-" which relates to eating or swallowing. Dysphagia is a medical term that refers to difficulty in swallowing.
dysphagia or difficulty swallowing
The medical suffix for eating is -phagia. For example, dysphagia means difficulty swallowing, polyphagia means excessive eating, and dysphagia means painful swallowing.
Dysphagia in hyperpituitarism may result from the enlargement of the pituitary gland, which can compress nearby structures such as the esophagus, leading to difficulty swallowing. Additionally, hyperpituitarism can cause hormonal imbalances that affect the muscles involved in swallowing, contributing to dysphagia.
difficulty with swallowing (dysphagia); heartburn; and chest pain
Dysphagia is the clinical term for difficulty in swallowing. There are three different types: oropharyngeal, esophageal, and functional. Failure to diagnose dysphagia can result in malnutrition, dehydration, and renal failure.
Dysphagia basically means disordered eating. It's a condition where a person has difficulty chewing or swallowing foods or liquids. People with this condition have a pureed diet to help manage their problem and make it easier to eat.
Difficulty breathing
Intermittent difficulty swallowing solid food is the primary symptom of this condition. The degree of difficulty in swallowing is directly related to the degree the esophagus is narrowed.
Not necessarily. Both the inability to swallow and difficulty swallowing are called dysphagia in medical terminology. dys- means difficult, bad, abnormal, painful. -phagia refers to eating or swallowing. Sometimes the dysphagia, or difficulty swallowing can be bad enough to prevent someone from swallowing without aspirating(choking). That would appropriately be called dysphagia even though this makes for a virtual inability to swallow, but that is due to danger of choking, not due to actual emotional or physical inability to do the act of swallowing. But there can be situations with a total actual inability to swallow due to obstruction, emotional block, injury, congenital deformity, or surgical procedures that prevent swallowing such as radical surgery for cancer. These may be referred to as either dysphagia, or more correctly, as aphagia. a- means absent, without, not, away In this example, difficulty swallowing would not be called aphagia. But the inability to swallow might appropriately be called dysphagia.