Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Of or relating to a
syndrome .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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The frontier of therapy in the next century will be "" sub-syndromal '' conditions such as mild depression, social phobias and anxieties.
Tomorrow's Child 2008
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But many do, and the temperamental similarities between those who meet all the diagnostic criteria for mania or major depression (that is, are “syndromal”) and those who meet them only partially (that is, are “subsyndromal,” or cyclothymic) are compelling.
Touched with Fire Kay Redfield Jamison 1993
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But many do, and the temperamental similarities between those who meet all the diagnostic criteria for mania or major depression (that is, are “syndromal”) and those who meet them only partially (that is, are “subsyndromal,” or cyclothymic) are compelling.
Touched with Fire Kay Redfield Jamison 1993
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But many do, and the temperamental similarities between those who meet all the diagnostic criteria for mania or major depression (that is, are “syndromal”) and those who meet them only partially (that is, are “subsyndromal,” or cyclothymic) are compelling.
Touched with Fire Kay Redfield Jamison 1993
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But many do, and the temperamental similarities between those who meet all the diagnostic criteria for mania or major depression (that is, are “syndromal”) and those who meet them only partially (that is, are “subsyndromal,” or cyclothymic) are compelling.
Touched with Fire Kay Redfield Jamison 1993
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Dr. Daniel Dickstein, assistant professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Alpert Medical School and head of the Pediatric Mood, Imaging and Neurodevelopment (Pedi-MIND) program at Bradley Hospital, has been awarded a $1. 87-million grant to identify biological and behavioral markers that distinguish between development of full-blown and sub-syndromal bipolar disorder.
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The synergy between the two projects is designed to identify biological and behavioral markers that differentiate between full-blown and sub-syndromal bipolar disorder.
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Dr. Daniel Dickstein, assistant professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Alpert Medical School and head of the Pediatric Mood, Imaging and Neurodevelopment (Pedi-MIND) program at Bradley Hospital, has been awarded a $1. 87-million grant to identify biological and behavioral markers that distinguish between development of full-blown and sub-syndromal bipolar disorder.
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Television coverage brought the disaster to a much larger audience and caused full-blown and sub-syndromal cases of PTSD throughout the nation.
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The synergy between the two projects is designed to identify biological and behavioral markers that differentiate between full-blown and sub-syndromal bipolar disorder.
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