A secondary and usually adverse effect of a drug. Usefulness: N/A(1 rating) by Andersen777 () Rate It! this definition is ... useful somewhat useful incorrect spam / offensive
Problem that occurs when treatment affects tissues or organs other than the ones meant to be affected by the treatment. Common side effects of cancer treatment are fatigue, pain, nausea, vomiting, decreased blood cell counts, hair loss and mouth sores.
Unintentional effects of one module on another module that is not part of the explicitly-defined interface between them.
Negative effect caused by interaction between an additive and an other component of the coating formulation. Can induce coating defects.
An effect caused by treatment with a drug. The term usually refers to unwanted effects, but some side effects may be beneficial.
an unintended effect of a drug.
unwanted, sometimes harmful, backlash of a drug.
Undesired symptom that occurs when a patient takes a medication or has some other form of treatment. Impotence may be a side effect of certain drugs used to treat prostate tumors.
adverse effect produced by a drug.
The effect of a drug, other than the desired effect, sometimes in an organ other than the target organ.
An unintended alteration of a program's behavior caused by a change in one part of the program, without taking into account the effect the change has on another part of the program. See: regression analysis and testing.
An unintended symptom that results from using a drug.
a reaction to a medication or treatment (most commonly used to mean an unnecessary or undesirable effect)
A problem caused by medical treatment or medication. For example, if you take medication to relieve a headache, your stomach may become upset.
A change of state, other than the obvious one, caused by a routine, function call, or assignment. Function calls can have side effects if they change the value of an externally visible item.
Undesired effect of a treatment. Investigational new drugs and devices are evaluated for immediate and long-term side effects.
A result of drug therapy other than the desired effect.
any condition caused by a drug other than the effect for which it was prescribed. For side effects of medications commonly prescribed for bipolar disorder, see Side Effects Library.
A drug*s effect that is different from the beneficial effect for which the drug is being taken.
a secondary and usually adverse effect of a drug or therapy; "severe headaches are one of the side effects of the drug"
any adverse and unwanted secondary effect; "a strategy to contain the fallout from the accounting scandal"
a consequence of using a medication that is other than the intended or desired effect
a drug result that is not intentional
an additional effect of a drug, which can be good or bad, depending on the situation
an effect of the drug other than the one for which it was administered
an extra problem that's caused by the treatment
an undesired effect that accompanies the desired effect of medications
an unwanted response to a medication when it is taken in normal doses
a recognized effect other than that for which the medication was intended
secondary effect caused by cancer treatment.
Any action or effect of a intervention other than the effect for which the intervention is used. Usually, "side effect" is used to mean a negative or adverse effect such as headache, nausea, hair loss, skin irritation, infection, or other physical problem.
A change in a person's condition caused by taking a drug. For example, common side effects of chemotherapy include fatigue, nausea, vomiting, and loss of appetite.
A non-logical effect of a built-in predicate, such as input, output, arithmetic evaluation or database modification.
Any effect caused by a medication or therapy other than the reason for which it was prescribed. It may or may not be expected.
A problem that happens when medical treatment affects healthy tissues or organs. Side effects of certain cancer treatments may include pain, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, hair loss, mouth sores and decreased blood cell counts.
Unwanted effects of medications or other treatments.
An effect of a drug that is not wanted.
An unintended consequence of a treatment.
a reaction to a medicine.
An unintended reaction to a drug or medical procedure.
any undesired actions or effects of a drug or treatment. Experimental drugs must be evaluated for both immediate and long-term side effects.
An unwanted effect of treatment.
A result of drug or other therapy.
sometimes referred to as adverse event; a secondary, and usually adverse effect, as of a drug or device
an adverse reaction to a treatment
Undesirable reaction resulting from immunization.
An effect other than that for which a medication is used.
An operation that changes the global state of the program. It is good practice to avoid side effects whenever practical, as it makes the program easier to maintain and to test.
Problems that occur when treatment affects healthy cells. Common side effects of standard cancer treatments are fatigue, nausea, vomiting, decreased blood cell counts, hair loss, and mouth sores. New treatments being tested may have these or other unknown side effects.
An undesirable event caused by use of the product.
adverse reaction; an allergic response to a drug. Many of the drugs used to fight HIV Disease cause adverse reactions in a small number of people. Some side effects are minor, and others go away after a few days. A few are truly nasty and require quick medical attention. If you think you are having an adverse reaction to a drug, contact your doctor immediately.
An effect of a drug that is not the main or intended effect. Side effects may be of no concern, or they may be bothersome or even dangerous, in which case they may limit the upper dose a patient can tolerate. Side effects are also called adverse effects.
A side effect occurs when an expression has an effect aside from merely producing a value. Assignment expressions, increment expressions and function calls have side effects. See section Assignment Expressions.
A problem that occurs when treatment affects tissues or organs other than the ones being treated. Some common side effects of cancer treatment are fatigue, pain, nausea, vomiting, decreased blood cell counts, hair loss, and mouth sores.
An unwanted effect produced by a medication or other medical treatment.
A secondary effect of medicine such as nausea, dry mouth, constipation or drowsiness.
A side effect is a secondary and usually undesirable effect from a drug or other treatment. For example, nausea is a common side effect of some pain medications.
an unwanted adverse reaction to a drug (e.g., rash, nausea, peripheral neuropathy, bone marrow suppression, liver failure).
The effect of a drug that is different from what was originally intended
An action or effect of a drug other than that desired. Commonly it is an undesirable effect such as nausea, headache, insomnia, acute toxic reaction or drug interaction.
A secondary and usually adverse effect, as from a drug or other treatment. For example, nausea is a side effect of some anticancer drugs.
A reaction to a treatment or medication, usually referring to an undesirable effect.
any reaction that results from a medication or therapy.
a symptom or a reaction that a person may have to brain tumor treatment.
A problem caused by treatment. For example, medicine you take for high blood pressure may make you feel sleepy. Most treatments have some side effects.
An unexpected, usually undesirable reaction to a medicine or therapy.
A peripheral or secondary effect, especially an undesirable secondary effect of a drug or therapy.
Unintentional or undesirable secondary effect of a treatment. Treatment
n. Something permanent which happens when an expression or subexpression is evaluated, beyond simply yielding a value. Typical side effects are: modifying a variable, printing something. See ANSI Sec. 2.1.2.3 or ISO Sec. 5.1.2.3.
An undesired effect of a drug treatment that may range from barely noticeable to uncomfortable or even dangerous. Side effects usually are predictable.
effect, usually undesirable, which accompanies primary desired effect.
Unintended effects of a medicine.
Known but unpreventable effects of a medicine.
An unintended, unexpected, or undesirable result of an intervention. See also Adverse event.
A usually predictable or dose-dependant effect of a drug that is not the principal effect for which the drug was chosen; the side effect may be desirable, undesirable, or inconsequential.
A secondary reaction that results from a medication or therapy. Side effects of some heart failure medications include headaches, nausea, dizziness, and low blood pressure.
An undesired effect of a drug treatment that may range in severity from barely noticeable, to uncomfortable, to dangerous. Side effects are usually predictable.
An undesired and/or harmful reaction to a pharmaceutical product, which arises by chance during its use for prevention, diagnosis or therapy. All drugs can cause a number of undesired effects to a greater or lesser extent, in addition to their therapeutic effects. These are always indicated in the proprietary medicine’s information sheet.
In computer science, a function or expression is said to produce a side effect if it modifies some state other than its return value. For example, a function might modify a global or a static variable, modify one of its arguments, write data to a display or file, or read some data from other side-effecting functions. Side effects often make a program's behavior more difficult to predict.
Side Effect was a soul musical group that recorded between 1972 and 1995.