atrophy

(verb)

To wither or waste away.

Related Terms

  • sarcopenia
  • wasting
  • dystrophy
  • muscle tone

Examples of atrophy in the following topics:

  • Muscular Atrophy

    • Muscle atrophy can occur from disuse (decreated activity) or disease, resulting in power loss or immobility.
    • Most cases of muscle atrophy in the general population results from disuse.
    • This type of atrophy is reversible with vigorous exercise.
    • Muscle atrophy that results from disease rather than disuse is generally one of two types:
    • Even minor muscle atrophy usually results in some loss of mobility or power.
  • Muscular Atrophy and Hypertrophy

    • Muscle atrophy is the decrease in muscle strength due to a decrease in muscle mass, or the amount of muscle fibers.
    • Atrophy can be partial or complete, varying in the extent of muscle weakness.
    • Starvation can also result in muscle atrophy.
    • Muscle atrophy is typical to some extent during aging.
    • Atrophy over time due to aging is known as sarcopenia.
  • Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

    • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is caused by degeneration of upper and lower motor neurons, resulting in muscle weakness and atrophy.
    • The disorder causes muscle weakness and atrophy throughout the body as a result of degeneration of the upper and lower motor neurons.
    • Unable to function, the muscles weaken and atrophy.
    • The earliest symptoms of ALS are typically obvious weakness and/or muscle atrophy.
    • Symptoms of lower motor neuron degeneration include muscle weakness and atrophy, muscle cramps, and fleeting twitches of muscles that can be seen under the skin (fasciculations).
  • Hypoglossal (XII) Nerve

    • Progressive bulbar palsy is a neuromuscular atrophy associated with the combined lesions of the hypoglossal nucleus and the nucleus ambiguous, upon atrophy of the motor nerves of the pons and medulla.
    • Tongue muscle atrophy may also occur.
  • Embryological and Fetal Events

    • A large part of the head end of the mesonephros atrophies and disappears; of the remainder the anterior tubules form the efferent ducts of the testis; while the posterior tubules are represented by the ductuli aberrantes, and by the paradidymis, which is sometimes found in front of the spermatic cord above the head of the epididymis.
    • In the female the Wolffian bodies and ducts atrophy.
    • In the male the Müllerian ducts atrophy, but in the female the Müllerian ducts persist and undergo further development.
  • Stress and Disease

    • This atrophy of the hippocampus is thought to represent decreased neuronal density.
    • However, other studies suggest that hippocampal changes are explained by whole brain atrophy, and generalized white matter atrophy is exhibited by people with PTSD.
  • Stability and Range of Motion at Synovial Joints

    • Disuse, causing decrease in synovial fluid, flexibility of ligaments and tendons, and muscle atrophy
  • Accessory (XI) Nerve

    • Patients with spinal accessory nerve palsy may exhibit signs of lower motor neuron disease, such as atrophy and fasciculations of both the sternocleidomastoid and trapezius muscles.
  • Hair and Hormones

    • Male baldness is the result of genetic sensitivity of hair follicles to dihydrotestosterone that causes hair follicles to atrophy.
  • Tonsils

    • Similarly to the thymus, the tonsils tend to reach their largest size near puberty, and they gradually undergo atrophy thereafter.
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