recurrence
(noun)
The returning of a disease that was already treated successfuly.
Examples of recurrence in the following topics:
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Pyelonephritis
- Pyelonephritis requires antibiotic therapy, and sometimes surgical intervention, as well as treatment of any underlying causes to prevent its recurrence.
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Other Infectious Eye Diseases
- Herpetic simplex keratitis is a form of keratitis caused by recurrent herpes simplex virus in cornea.
- Recurrent herpes of the eye in turn is caused by reactivation of the virus in a latently infected sensory ganglion, transport of the virus down the nerve axon to sensory nerve endings, and subsequent infection of ocular surface.
- Focal or diffuse reduction in corneal sensation develops following recurrent epithelial keratitis.
- Serologic tests in turn may show a rising antibody titer during primary infection but are of no diagnostic assistance during recurrent episodes.
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Compromised Host
- Patients' treatments can leave them vulnerable to infection: immunosuppression and antacid treatment undermine the body's defences, while antimicrobial therapy (removing competitive flora and only leaving resistant organisms) and recurrent blood transfusions have also been identified as risk factors.
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Biofilms, Persisters, and Antibiotic Tolerance
- Elimination of persisters remains an obstacle for the eradication of some tenacious and highly recurrent bacterial infections.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
- The treatment is usually successful but BV has high rates of recurrence.
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Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
- Recurrences are common.
- For those with recurrent infections, taking a short course of antibiotics when each infection occurs is associated with the lowest antibiotic use.
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Prostatitis
- The recurrence of the disease is high.
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Genital Warts
- It kills warts 71–79% of the time, but recurrence is 38% to 73% 6 months after treatment.
- More effective than cryosurgery and recurrence is at a much lower rate.
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Genital Herpes
- Furthermore, it decreases the frequency and severity of recurrent infections.
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Disease Severity and Duration
- A flare-up can refer to either the recurrence of symptoms or an onset of more severe symptoms.