Course (medicine)
- Course (medicine)
-
In medicine, a course of medication is a period of continuous treatment with a drug, sometimes with variable dosage. Treatment with some drugs should not end abruptly. Instead, their course should end with a tapering dosage.
- Antibiotics: Taking the full course of antibiotics is important to prevent reinfection and/or development of drug-resistant bacteria.[1]
- Steroids: For both short-term and long-term steroid treatment, when stopping treatment, the dosage is tapered rather than abruptly ended. This permits the adrenal glands to resume the body's natural production of cortisol. Abrupt discontinuation can result in adrenal insufficiency; and/or steroid withdrawal syndrome (a rebound effect in which exaggerated symptoms return).[2]
Another meaning in medicine is the course of a disease, or its natural history, which is a description of the speed of evolution of the disease. Diseases can have an acute, a subacute, a chronic or a recurrent course. A fulminant course is a particularly severe and rapid acute course. A patient can be at the beginning, the middle or the end of the disease's course.
References
Categories:- Medical terms
- Pharmacodynamics
- Pharmacology stubs
- Medicine stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.
Look at other dictionaries:
Course: Oblivion (Star Trek: Voyager) — Course: Oblivion Star Trek: Voyager episode Duplicates of Torres and Paris are wed Episode no … Wikipedia
Medicine Man (film) — Medicine Man Theatrical poster Directed by John McTiernan Produced by Donna Dubrow … Wikipedia
medicine, history of — Introduction the development of the prevention and treatment of disease from prehistoric and ancient times to the 20th century. Medicine and surgery before 1800 Primitive (primitive culture) medicine and folklore Unwritten history is not… … Universalium
Medicine Hat — For an electoral district, see Medicine Hat (disambiguation). Medicine Hat City City of Medicine Hat … Wikipedia
Medicine — This article is about the science and art of healing. For pharmaceutical drugs, see Medication. For other uses, see Medicine (disambiguation). Statue of Asclepius, the Greek god of medicine, holding the symbolic Rod of Asclepius with its coiled… … Wikipedia
medicine — /med euh sin/ or, esp. Brit., /med seuhn/, n., v., medicined, medicining. n. 1. any substance or substances used in treating disease or illness; medicament; remedy. 2. the art or science of restoring or preserving health or due physical condition … Universalium
Medicine in China — In China, most hospitals are run by the government, therefore physicians were previously quasi government employees and enjoyed little freedom in the choice of the hospital to work with. In addition, decades of planned economic policy discouraged … Wikipedia
Imperial College School of Medicine — Established 1821 Charing Cross Hospital Medical School 1834 Westminster Hospital Medical School 1854 St Mary s Hospital Medical School 1984 Charing Cr … Wikipedia
Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery — Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery, or in Latin Medicinae Baccalaureus et Baccalaureus Chirurgiae (abbreviated MB BChir , BM BCh , MB BCh , MB ChB , BM BS , MB BS etc.), are the two degrees awarded upon graduation from medical school… … Wikipedia
History of Medicine — History of Medicine † Catholic Encyclopedia ► History of Medicine The history of medical science, considered as a part of the general history of civilization, should logically begin in Mesopotamia, where tradition and… … Catholic encyclopedia



