Emaciated vs Cachexia - What's the difference?
emaciated | cachexia |
Thin or haggard, especially from hunger or disease.
(emaciate)
(medicine, pathology) A systemic wasting of muscle tissue, with or without loss of fat mass, that accompanies a chronic disease.
* 2007 , Lawrence E. Harrison, 84: Nutritional Support for the Cancer Patient'', Alfred E. Chang, Patricia A. Ganz, Daniel F. Hayes, Timothy Kinsella, Harvey I. Pass, Joan H. Schiller, Richard M. Stone, Victor Strecher (editors), ''Oncology: An Evidence-Based Approach ,
* 2007 , Toby C. Campbell, Jamie H. Von Roenn, Chapter 11: Anorexia/Weight Loss'', Ann M. Berger, John L. Shuster, Jamie H. Von Roenn (editors), ''Principles and Practice of Palliative Care and Supportive Oncology ,
* 2008 , Mary Marian, Scott A. Shikora, Mary Russell, Clinical Nutrition for Surgical Patients ,
* 2009 , Connie W. Bales, Christine S. Ritchie, Handbook of Clinical Nutrition and Aging ,
As an adjective emaciated
is thin or haggard, especially from hunger or disease.As a verb emaciated
is past tense of emaciate.As a noun cachexia is
a systemic wasting of muscle tissue, with or without loss of fat mass, that accompanies a chronic disease.emaciated
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- The emaciated prisoners in the death camps were weak and sickly.
Synonyms
* See alsoVerb
(head)Anagrams
*cachexia
English
(wikipedia cachexia)Noun
page 1488,
- Cancer cachexia is a complex syndrome clinically manifest by progressive involuntary weight loss and diminished food intake and characterized by a variety of biochemical alterations.
page 125,
- Cancer cachexia is a complex metabolic process, due to both host and tumor factors, which results in excess catabolism as well as aberrant fat and carbohydrate metabolism.
page 84,
- Preoperative nutritional therapy in CHF[Cardiac Heart Failure] patients with cachexia is associated with improved postoperative survival rates (56).
page 158,
- While sarcopenia occurs very commonly with aging, cachexia occurs mainly in association with acute or chronic disease.