wasting assets - meaning and definition. What is wasting assets
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What (who) is wasting assets - definition

RARE DISEASE
CSWS; Cerebral salt wasting syndrome; Cerebral salt wasting; Cerebral salt-wasting; Cerebral Sodium-wasting syndrome

Wasting         
  • World Map - Share of children with a weight too low for their height (wasting)
HUMAN DISEASE
Wasting disease; Wasting syndromes; Wasted growth
In medicine, wasting, also known as wasting syndrome, refers to the process by which a debilitating disease causes muscle and fat tissue to "waste" away. Wasting is sometimes referred to as "acute malnutrition" because it is believed that episodes of wasting have a short duration, in contrast to stunting, which is regarded as chronic malnutrition.
Wasting         
  • World Map - Share of children with a weight too low for their height (wasting)
HUMAN DISEASE
Wasting disease; Wasting syndromes; Wasted growth
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Waste.
II. Wasting ·adj Causing waste; also, undergoing waste; diminishing; as, a wasting disease; a wasting fortune.
wasting         
  • World Map - Share of children with a weight too low for their height (wasting)
HUMAN DISEASE
Wasting disease; Wasting syndromes; Wasted growth
A wasting disease is one which makes you gradually become thinner and weaker.
ADJ: ADJ n

Wikipedia

Cerebral salt-wasting syndrome

Cerebral salt-wasting syndrome (CSWS), also written cerebral salt wasting syndrome, is a rare endocrine condition featuring a low blood sodium concentration and dehydration in response to injury (trauma) or the presence of tumors in or surrounding the brain. In this condition, the kidney is functioning normally but excreting excessive sodium. The condition was initially described in 1950. Its cause and management remain controversial. In the current literature across several fields, including neurology, neurosurgery, nephrology, and critical care medicine, there is controversy over whether CSWS is a distinct condition, or a special form of syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH).