serw-MX  [xml]  
 


    
 DeCS Categories

C20 Immune System Diseases .
C20.543 Hypersensitivity .
C20.543.312 Environmental Illness .
C21 Disorders of Environmental Origin .
C21.223 Environmental Illness .
G16 Biological Phenomena .
G16.500 Ecological and Environmental Phenomena .
G16.500.275 Environment .
N06 Environment and Public Health .
N06.230 Environment .
SP4 Environmental Health .
SP4.001 Health .
SP4.001.012 Environmental Illness .
SP4.011 Science .
SP4.011.072 Environmental Sciences .
SP4.011.072.573 Environment .
SP4.011.087 Contamination .
SP4.011.087.693 Environmental Pollution .
SP4.011.087.693.344 Environmental Impact .
SP8 Disasters .
SP8.473 Risk 17142 .
SP8.473.654 Hazards .
SP8.473.654.377 Environment .
SP8.946 Disaster Management .
SP8.946.351 Impact of Disasters .
SP8.946.351.388 Environmental Impact .
 
 Terms
 Synonyms & Historicals
Documents
LILACS e MDL
 
Environment .
Environmental Impact .
Environmental Impacts .
Impact, Environmental .
Impacts, Environmental .
Environments .
The external elements and conditions which surround, influence, and affect the life and development of an organism or population. .
1.00
 
Environmental Impact .
Environmental Impact Assessment .
Impact Assessment .
Impact Evaluation .
EVALUATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT .
Environment modification caused by man or nature. .
0.93
 
Environmental Illness .
Environmental Hypersensitivities .
Environmental Illnesses .
Hypersensitivities, Environmental .
Illness, Environmental .
Illnesses, Environmental .
Environmental Hypersensitivity .
Hypersensitivity, Environmental .
A polysymptomatic condition believed by clinical ecologists to result from immune dysregulation induced by common foods, allergens, and chemicals, resulting in various physical and mental disorders. The medical community has remained largely skeptical of the existence of this "disease", given the plethora of symptoms attributed to environmental illness, the lack of reproducible laboratory abnormalities, and the use of unproven therapies to treat the condition. (From Segen, Dictionary of Modern Medicine, 1992) .
0.65