Biology, asked by Ayusbisht, 2 months ago

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Answered by lekshmipshine
1

Answer:

Explanation:

1.Acute illnesses generally develop suddenly and last a short time, often only a few days or weeks. Chronic conditions develop slowly and may worsen over an extended period of time—months to years.

2. Syndrome is a collection of symptoms, or problems in the body. Because the immune system is damaged, and cannot fight off disease, people with AIDS get a collection of symptoms which is referred to as the "Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome.

Answered by Anonymous
3

Answer:

Question 1

Acute disease :

These diseases last for a short period of time and have no major effect on general health.

eg : common cold

Chronic disease:

These disease last for a long period of time and have ill effects on general health.

eg : chronic heart diseases

Question 2

Syndrome means a group of health problems that make up a disease. AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is not one disease but a set of diseases. Not all the people who develop AIDS suffer from the same diseases but there are certain unusual illnesses that occur very frequently in AIDS. That is why it is called a syndrome.

Hope it helps :)

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