presby-, presbyo- +
(Greek: old, relationship to old age, elderly, elder; literally, "he that goes first")
presbyacousia, presbyacusia
1. Dullness of hearing characteristic of old age.
2. Loss of the ability to perceive or to discriminate sounds which is associated with aging; the pattern and age of onset vary.
3. A progressive, bilaterally symmetric perceptive hearing loss occurring with age.
4. The most common type of hearing loss in the elderly, consisting of slowly progressive, bilaterally symmetrical, sensorineural hearing loss. It often involves poor speech discrimination.
presbyacusis, presbycusis
Age-related hearing loss with gradually progressive inability to hear; especially, high frequency sounds.
Presbycusis most often occurs in both ears. Because the loss of hearing is so gradual, people with presbycusis may not realize that their hearing is diminishing.
They may have trouble distinguishing and understanding conversation in a noisy setting. Environmental exposures (such as to guns, power tools, industrial machinery, or very loud music) contribute significantly to presbycusis, but up to half of presbycusis is genetically determined.
Presbycusis is common, affecting a third of people between 65 and 75 years and up to a half of people 75 and over. The hearing loss can usually be corrected with a hearing aid.
presbyasomnia
Sleeplessness that is characteristic of old age.
presbyatrics
Rarely used terms for geriatrics; medical treatment of the aged.
presbycardia, senile heart disease
1. Impaired cardiac function attributed to the aging process, occurring in association with recognizable changes of senescence in the body and in the absence of convincing evidence of other forms of heart disease.
2. Involutional aging changes of the myocardium, with associated pigmentation of the heart.
It decreases cardiac reserve but rarely produces heart failure itself.
presbyderma, presbydermia
1. The skin changes of middle and old age.
2. Cutaneous (skin) changes associated with the middle and later years of life.
presbyesophagus
1. A condition characterized by alteration in motor function of the esophagus as a result of degenerative changes occurring with advancing age.
2. A disorder in the elderly characterized by altered motility of the esophagus.
presbymnemia
Impairment of memory that is characteristic of old age.
presbymoria
Silliness sometimes accompanying old age.
presbyophrenia
1. Impairment of mental faculties that are characteristic of old age.
2. Its principal characteristics are marked confusional disorientation, confabulation, mistakes in identity, and agitation without the accomplishment of any objective.
Presbyophrenic confabulations typically show a poverty, monotony, puerility, and naiveté of content. Because ethical conduct is preserved for a relatively long time, the patient is able to fit into limited social contacts, and particularly so since his/her affect tends toward the euphoric and the amiable.
presbyophrenic
Characterized by senile dementia; especially, that variety in which apparent mental alertness is combined with failure of memory, disorientation, and confabulation.
presbyopia, presbyopic; presbytia, presbytic, presbytism
1. A form of farsightedness occurring after middle age, caused by a diminished elasticity of the crystalline lens.
2. The physiological loss of accommodation in the eyes in advancing age, said to begin when the near point has receded beyond 22 cm (9 inches).
3. The loss of the eye's ability to change focus to see near objects.
4. Eyesight characteristic of older people.
The reasons for this loss of the power of accommodation are not yet fully known. It is conventionally said to be a result of the lenses of the eyes becoming less elastic with time.
Presbyopia is associated with aging; however, it happens with everyone. The first sign is often the necessity to hold reading material farther away in order to be able to focus on the contents.
The term presbyopia is said to come from the Greek for "elderly vision".
presbystasis
Impairment of the ability to properly stand which is associated with aging.
presbyter
1. In the early Christian church and in the Presbyterian Church, an elder.
2. In the Episcopal Church, a priest or minister.
presbyterate
1. The office of a presbyter.
2. A body of presbyters.
Related "old; old age, elder" units:
gero-;
obsolesc-;
sen-;
veter-.