Decompensated vs Decompensate - What's the difference?
decompensated | decompensate |
(decompensate)
(medicine, psychology, of a bodily organ or mental state) To deteriorate in function due to an inability to invoke normal defensive mechanisms that compensate for ailments and other stresses.
* 1967 , Virginia Pidgeon, "The Infant with Congenital Heart Disease," The American Journal of Nursing , vol. 67, no. 2, p. 291:
* 1983 , Nancy Scheper-Hughes, "A Proposal for the Aftercare of Chronic Psychiatric Patients," Medical Anthropology Quarterly , vol. 14, no. 2, pp. 11-12:
(medicine, psychology, of a bodily organ or mental state) To deteriorate in function due to an inability to invoke normal defensive mechanisms that compensate for ailments and other stresses.
* 1967 , Virginia Pidgeon, "The Infant with Congenital Heart Disease," The American Journal of Nursing , vol. 67, no. 2, p. 291:
* 1983 , Nancy Scheper-Hughes, "A Proposal for the Aftercare of Chronic Psychiatric Patients," Medical Anthropology Quarterly , vol. 14, no. 2, pp. 11-12:
As verbs the difference between decompensated and decompensate
is that decompensated is (decompensate) while decompensate is (medicine|psychology|of a bodily organ or mental state) to deteriorate in function due to an inability to invoke normal defensive mechanisms that compensate for ailments and other stresses.decompensated
English
Verb
(head)decompensate
English
Verb
(decompensat)- The infant whose heart is decompensating has a rapid pulse, rapid respirations, and respiratory distress.
- In some cases, the fragile individual, overwhelmed by the implicit demands and expectations for sociability, coherence, and "constructive" behavior, rapidly decompensates , taking flight into psychosis or protective withdrawal.
decompensate
English
Verb
(decompensat)- The infant whose heart is decompensating has a rapid pulse, rapid respirations, and respiratory distress.
- In some cases, the fragile individual, overwhelmed by the implicit demands and expectations for sociability, coherence, and "constructive" behavior, rapidly decompensates , taking flight into psychosis or protective withdrawal.
