SOC
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Bleah. I'm confusing myself, too, trying to describe what I think while trying to figure out what I think others are trying to say. Too messy. I'm not sure it really matters, but I'll try to clarify, FWIW.My definitions of remission and recovery/cure are essentially the same as your internet finds. Remission may be temporary, and may require continuing medication or other treatment to maintain it, whereas cure/recovery is permanent. An example of remission is in relapsing/remitting MS. I am not sure what complete remission would be - a temporary complete cessation of symptoms (and signs)?
You seem to be defining remission and recovery in the opposite way to normal usage, and I am getting confused!
I think of a remission in line with the definitions I found -- it doesn't require a complete cessation of symptoms, just a decrease or diminution. It may require treatment to maintain. A complete remission means (in the cancer world, at least) all signs and symptoms are gone, but you are still subject to relapse.
This is from the Wiki page "Cure". It might help the conversation, or it might confuse it further because it says a remission is the absence of disease activity rather than decrease or diminution used in other definitions. This article defines recovery as "restoration of health or functioning" and doesn't say anything about signs, symptoms, or continuing treatment.
I think there may not be a single, clear, agreed upon definition of remission or recovery.
Remission[edit]
Remission is the state of absence of disease activity in patients known to have a chronic illness that cannot be cured. It is commonly used to refer to absence of active cancer orinflammatory bowel disease when these diseases are expected to manifest again in the future. A partial remission may be defined for cancer as 50% or greater reduction in the measurable parameters of tumor growth as may be found on physical examination, radiologic study, or by biomarker levels from a blood or urine test. A complete remission is defined as complete disappearance of all such manifestations of disease. Each disease or even clinical trial can have its own definition of a partial remission.
Others[edit]
- A response is a partial reduction in symptoms after treatment.
- A recovery is a restoration of health or functioning. A person who has been cured may not be fully recovered, and a person who has recovered may not be cured, as in the case of a person in a temporary remission or who is an asymptomatic carrier for an infectious disease.
None of this really matters, though, if we're just trying to answer your question. For that, we just need to know what you mean. Are you looking for people who have absolutely no symptoms(10 on the PR activity scale)? Or just a return to relatively normal function (8-9 on the PR activity scale)?