Vaquez"s disease - significado y definición. Qué es Vaquez"s disease
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Qué (quién) es Vaquez"s disease - definición

HUMAN DISEASE
Polycythaemia; Erythrocytosis; Polycythemic; Erythraemia; Secondary polycythaemia; Familial erythrocytosis; Polycytemia; Osler-Vaquez disease; Chuvash polycythemia; Polycythaemia neonatorum; Erythrocythemia; Polyglobulia; Gaisböck syndrome; Osler–Vaquez disease; Secondary polycythemia

Kimura's disease         
Kimura's disease is a benign rare chronic inflammatory disorder. Its primary symptoms are subdermal lesions in the head or neck or painless unilateral inflammation of cervical lymph nodes.
Bright's disease         
HISTORICAL CLASSIFICATION OF NEPHRITIS
Bright's Disease; Brights Disease; Blight's Disease; Bright disease; Bright's (renal) disease
·- An affection of the kidneys, usually inflammatory in character, and distinguished by the occurrence of albumin and renal casts in the urine. Several varieties of Bright's disease are now recognized, differing in the part of the kidney involved, and in the intensity and course of the morbid process.
Bright's disease         
HISTORICAL CLASSIFICATION OF NEPHRITIS
Bright's Disease; Brights Disease; Blight's Disease; Bright disease; Bright's (renal) disease
¦ noun a disease involving chronic inflammation of the kidneys.
Origin
C19: named after the English physician Richard Bright.

Wikipedia

Polycythemia

Polycythemia (also known as polycythaemia) is a laboratory finding in which the hematocrit (the volume percentage of red blood cells in the blood) and/or hemoglobin concentration are increased in the blood. Polycythemia is sometimes called erythrocytosis, and there is significant overlap in the two findings, but the terms are not the same: polycythemia describes any increase in hematocrit and/or hemoglobin, while erythrocytosis describes an increase specifically in the number of red blood cells in the blood.

Polycythemia has many causes. It can describe an increase in the number of red blood cells ("absolute polycythemia") or to a decrease in the volume of plasma ("relative polycythemia"). Absolute polycythemia can be due to genetic mutations in the bone marrow ("primary polycythemia"), physiologic adaptations to one's environment, medications, and/or other health conditions. Laboratory studies such as serum erythropoeitin levels and genetic testing might be helpful to clarify the cause of polycythemia if the physical exam and patient history don't reveal a likely cause.

Mild polycythemia on its own is often asymptomatic. Treatment for polycythemia varies, and typically involves treating its underlying cause. Treatment of primary polycythemia (see polycythemia vera) could involve phlebotomy, antiplatelet therapy to reduce risk of blood clots, and additional cytoreductive therapy to reduce the number of red blood cells produced in the bone marrow.