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prognosis

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prognosis

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++prog·no·sis /prɒɡˈnəʊsɪs $ prɑːɡˈnoʊ-/ noun (plural prognoses /-siːz/) [countable]  1 Ma doctor’s opinion of how an illness or disease will develop 预后,预断〔医生对于病情如何发展的预测〕 diagnosisgood/poor prognosis Doctors said Blake’s long-term prognosis is good. 医生们说布莱克的远期预后良好。2 formalPREDICT a judgment about the future, based on information or experience 〔基于资料和经验而作出的〕预测,展望prognosis of a hopeful prognosis of the country’s future development 对这个国家未来发展的乐观展望
Examples from the Corpus
prognosisThese results suggest that underlying health is much more important than age in determining prognosis after hospital care with community-acquired pneumonia.The single most important determinant of future prognosis remains left ventricular function.Her prognosis, by any reasonable medical standards, was very poor.Doctors say his prognosis is good, and they expect a full recovery.His prognosis for one-year survival is five per cent.The report's prognosis for unemployment was very pessimistic.By the early 1990s the prognosis for Communism wasn't at all good.What is the prognosis for that?Well, doctor, what's the prognosis?Where ownership is not committed to long-term success, the prognosis for ongoing performance improvement is poor.The prognosis is perhaps for a euro recovery, but how far is it likely to move?The prognosis was given as extremely negative.good/poor prognosisThis syndrome carried a poor prognosis.Older children have a better prognosis because their immune system is better developed.These risk factors have been linked to a poor prognosis.A retrospective study showed that amiodarone was associated with a better prognosis in patients with documented ventricular tachycardia on electrocardiographic monitoring.While it is clear that specific genetic alterations serve as prognostic indicators, not all correlate with a poor prognosis.Cancer vaccines can cause an advanced tumor to shrink while patients with a poor prognosis can remain in remission.The poorer prognosis for linear growth among boys who develop Crohn's disease before puberty has not been previously reported.This presentation implies a very poor prognosis despite treatment, as was the case in six patients in this series.
Origin prognosis (1600-1700) Late Latin Greek, from progignoskein to know before
prog·no·sis nounChineseSyllable
opinion of illness how an or doctor’s disease a Corpus


prognosis
prognosis /prɒɡˈnəʊsəs, prɒɡˈnəʊsɪs $ prɑːɡˈnoʊ-/ noun (plural prognoses /-siːz/) [countable]
 Date: 1600-1700
 Language: Late Latin
 Origin: Greek, from progignoskein 'to know before'
1. a doctor’s opinion of how an illness or disease will develop ⇨ diagnosis
    good/poor prognosis
    Doctors said Blake’s long-term prognosis is good.
2. formal a judgment about the future, based on information or experience
    prognosis of
    a hopeful prognosis of the country’s future development


prog·no·sisBrE /prɒɡˈnəʊsɪs/ 🔊NAmE /prɑːɡˈnoʊsɪs/ 🔊 noun (
plural
prog·no·ses BrE /prɒɡˈnəʊsiːz/ 🔊 NAmE /prɑːɡˈnoʊsiːz/ 🔊
)
(medical 医学) an opinion, based on medical experience, of the likely development of a disease or an illness (对病情的)预断,预后(formal) a judgement about how sth is likely to develop in the future 预测;预言;展望 SYN forecast The prognosis is for more people to work part-time in the future. 预计将来会有更多人从事兼职工作。🔊🔊 prog·nos·tic BrE /prɒɡˈnɒstɪk/ 🔊NAmE /prɑːɡˈnɑːstɪk/ 🔊 adjective