yes, symptoms are something the patient has to tell the doctor while a sign is something the doctor can see or measure (such as blood pressure, or temp.)
Fatigue is a symptom of disease rather than a sign. Symptoms are subjective experiences reported by the patient, such as pain or fatigue, while signs are objective observations by a healthcare provider, such as fever or elevated blood pressure.
Examples are: nausea, discomfort, headache, sign of fatigue.
A symptom is a clue or sign that you have a sickness or disease. For example a runny nose is a symptom for a cold.
Objective evidence of disease such as a fever is called a/an sign.
Peripheral cyanosis is a sign of carbon monoxide poisoning.
The doctor asked the man to describe the primary symptom. A symptom is not always a sign of chronic disease but could be an acute infection. My main symptom was dizziness.
Yes, it can be a sign of dystentery among others.
Yes. But it may be a sign of other diseases as well.
Yes sweating and nausea and dizziness can be a sign of a stroke or heart problem in people . Here are some sites that can help you out with this www.webmd.com/heart-disease/guide/heart-disease-symptoms
A sign of a disease is an observable indication that can be detected by a healthcare professional, such as a rash or elevated blood pressure. In contrast, a symptom is a subjective experience reported by the patient, like pain or fatigue. Essentially, signs are measurable and visible, while symptoms are personal and felt by the individual. Both are important for diagnosing and understanding a disease.
Tinnitus occurs in many disease states and circumstances, Meniere's Disease being only one of them. Less than 1% of all tinnitus occurs in Meniere's Disease.
Edema is a sign of an underlying problem, rather than a disease unto itself