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  1. v. re·solved, re·solving, re·solves. v.tr. 1. Medicine To cause reduction of (an inflammation, for example). 2. Chemistry To separate (an optically inactive compound or mixture) into its optically active constituents. re·solv′a·bil′i·ty, re·solv′a·ble·ness n. re·solv′a·ble adj. re·solv′ed·ly (-zŏl′vĭd-lē) adv.

    • General Definitions
    • Phases of Illness
    • Examples of Chronic and Acute Conditions
    • Where Definitions Fall Short
    • Clearing Up The Confusion

    Most illnesses can be categorized as acute or chronic. These terms can suggest the types of treatment required, how long treatment can be expected to last, and if treatment is appropriate. Acutedoes not mean new, although many newly diagnosed diseases present with acute symptoms. Nor does it mean that symptoms are severe. It simply means that sympt...

    An acute or chronic diagnosis is not necessarily fixed. An acute condition can sometimes become chronic, while a chronic condition may suddenly present with acute symptoms. Certain infections, for example, will progress from an acute phase (in which symptoms appear and resolve after the initial exposure) to a chronic phase (in which the infection p...

    While acute conditions are technically those that begin suddenly without preexisting symptoms and last temporarily, keep in mind that many acute conditions can become chronic or result in chronic symptoms.

    As tidy as the definitions may seem—six months or more for chronic versus less than six months for acute—these timeframes in no way suggest what you may be faced with if diagnosed with an acute or chronic illness. After all, an acute bout of the flu does not compare to an acute hepatitis C infection. Neither does HIV (a chronic infection that can b...

    The seemingly random ways in which these terms are applied can often create confusion in a patient's expectations. For example, can cancer truly be considered chronic when only a few types (such as multiple myeloma) are able to be managed chronically? Should a traumatic injury like a broken leg be considered acute even if it fits within the broader...

  2. Aug 15, 2022 · In the media, hospital terms that describe a patient’s condition -- like critical, fair, serious, stable -- are vague by design. They give you just a general sense of how someone is doing, which ...

    • Evan Starkman
  3. Resolve definition: to come to a definite or earnest decision about; determine (to do something). See examples of RESOLVE used in a sentence.

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  5. resolution: [noun] the act or process of resolving: such as. the act of analyzing a complex notion into simpler ones. the act of answering : solving. the act of determining. the passing of a voice part from a dissonant to a consonant tone or the progression of a chord from dissonance to consonance. the separating of a chemical compound or ...

  6. Definition of resolve noun in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. resolve something to resolve an issue/a dispute/a conflict/a crisis; Attempts are being made to resolve the problem of security in schools. Both sides met in order to try to resolve their differences. We hope to resolve the matter as soon as possible. Everything is being done to resolve the situation. The dispute has not been fully resolved.

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