anergia


Also found in: Medical.

anergia

(ænˈɜːdʒɪə; ænˈɜːdʒə)
n
a lack of energy
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
Mentioned in ?
References in periodicals archive ?
Depletion, anergia, deflated ego-ideal structures (Khantzian, 1999).
Analysis of the five factor scores on the PANSS revealed that the smokers had significantly higher anergia, thought disturbance, activation, paranoid-belligerence, and depression scores.
Para este estudio se analizo exclusivamente la escala de depresion, esta escala contiene 10 items que corresponden a sintomas caracteristicos de la depresion, como tristeza, desesperanza, anhedonia, anergia, impotencia ideacion autodestructiva, entre ellos la culpa.
La negatividad al test tuberculinico en el animal enfermo de TBC, podria deberse al fenomeno de anergia que caracteriza a los estados cronicos de la enfermedad y obedece a un detrimento importante en la capacidad de respuesta del sistema inmune (6).
Contudo a tolerancia imunologica aos antigenos proprios ocorre principalmente no timo por mecanismos que eliminam ou inativam linfocitos T autoreativos atraves de delecao clonal, anergia clonal ou supressao.
Feeling tired or lacking energy (called anergia) affects everyone at times, but as you age it can become more chronic as you lose muscle mass, experience problems sleeping, and face physical challenges like joint pain, which make movement and exercise more difficult.
In recent-onset patients, for example, negative symptom exacerbations were found to coincide with positive symptom exacerbations (Ventura et al., 2004) and Rector, Beck, and Stolar (2005) presented a case analysis of a patient who was alogic and showed withdrawal and anergia symptoms because of his delusional beliefs.