- Differential Diagnosis
- Diseases
- Drugs
- More
-
- Try building your search one term at a time, and be as specific as you can! Search term example: "chronic cough".
- Do not enter multiple findings such as "anemia, chronic cough, weight loss, vomiting" all at the same time.
- After selecting your term from the search results a list of possible diagnoses will be generated. If the list is too long, you will be able to narrow it down by entering additional terms.
- Do not enter values such as "heart rhythm 110" or "sodium 125", instead use "tachycardia" or "hyponatremia".
Sign-in (or register) to check out the new features we've just launched!
Differential Diagnosis For Mobile edema/shifts overnight
- Allergic, Collagen, Auto-Immune Disorders
Nephrotic syndrome
Lipoid nephrosis/Minimal change disease
Nephrosis of pregnancy, recurrent- Metabolic, Storage Disorders
Kimmelstiel-Wilson nephropathy/diabetic- Biochemical Disorders
Hypoalbuminemia/hypoproteinemia- Deficiency Disorders
Malnutrition/Starvation
Edema of malnutrition (nutritional)
Starvation recovery/edema syndrome- Congenital, Developmental Disorders
Nephrotic syndrome, congenital- Vegetative, Autonomic, Endocrine Disorders
Eclampsia of pregnancy
Preeclampsia/Toxemia of pregnancy- Reference to Organ System
Edema
Cirrhosis
Chronic liver disease
Anasarca
Cirrhosis, cardiac
Cirrhosis, postnecrotic- Synonyms
- Dropsy, Edema, Edema (finding), Edema (morphologic abnormality), Edema (observable entity), Edema lesion, Edema symptom, Edema unspecified, EDEMAS, Edematous, Hydrops, Hydrops (morphologic abnormality), Interstitial edema, Interstitial oedema, moving overnight, Oedema, Oedema lesion, Oedema symptom, Oedema unspecified, Oedematous, SWELLING
- Definition
- Be the first to add a definition for Mobile edema/shifts overnight
- External Links Related to Mobile edema/shifts overnight
- Wikipedia
- Merck
- Images
- PubMed (National Library of Medicine)
- NGC (National Guideline Clearinghouse)
- Medscape (eMedicine)
- Harrison's Online (accessmedicine)
- NEJM (The New England Journal of Medicine)