deconditioned


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de·con·di·tion

 (dē′kən-dĭsh′ən)
v. de·con·di·tioned, de·con·di·tion·ing, de·con·di·tions
v.tr.
1. Psychology To cause (a conditioned response) to become extinct.
2. To cause to decline from a condition of physical fitness, as through a prolonged period of inactivity or, in astronauts, through weightlessness in space.
v.intr.
To lose physical fitness.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Translations

deconditioned

adj fuera de forma
English-Spanish/Spanish-English Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive ?
I also worry that we might not even be caring about violence because we have been deconditioned. Patients confined to the bed for a long time, without exercise, may end up not being able to walk.
If the measurement is accurate, you must exclude circumstances that may contribute to a higher HR with activity, including exercising in a hot environment or deconditioned state, dehydration, fever, caffeine use and certain medications and medical conditions.
Often heart surgery patients become afraid to do anything and become deconditioned. But with supervision they can improve outcomes, if we get them moving."
He said: "They become deconditioned, they lose muscle mass, lose their independence and there is the risk of hospital-acquired infection.
She was clinically severely deconditioned (serum albumin 22) with evidence of fat and muscle wasting, undergoing a protracted wean from the ventilator (on day 30 she was still receiving pressure support ventilation 12/5 and transitioned to T-piece ventilation trials on day 31), and globally weak with 1-2/5 power throughout.
The Australian stated last week that a number of the Lions who faced the All Blacks arrived into the Portugal training camp "deconditioned" and it is Farrell and Itoje who have been stood down.
Prof Caplan said: "Following current missions to the International Space Station, astronauts return to Earth in a physiologically deconditioned state, where they have immediate access to medical support.
Jones had stated a number of his Lions arrived into the Portugal camp deconditioned and needed to be given vastly reduced training programs before it would be decided if they are fit to play.
Rehabilitation intervention with deconditioned older adults following an acute hospital admission: a systematic review.
"He's deconditioned because he hasn't played a lot of football.
But don't become deconditioned through lack of exercise--keep active, walking around your home, and marching on the spot.