Medicine:Diagnosis of exclusion

From HandWiki
Short description: Medical diagnosis made by ruling out other conditions

A diagnosis of exclusion or by exclusion (per exclusionem) is a diagnosis of a medical condition reached by a process of elimination, which may be necessary if presence cannot be established with complete confidence from history, examination or testing. Such elimination of other reasonable possibilities is a major component in performing a differential diagnosis.

Diagnosis by exclusion tends to occur where scientific knowledge is scarce, specifically where the means to verify a diagnosis by an objective method is absent. As a specific diagnosis cannot be confirmed, a fall back position is to exclude that group of known causes that may cause a similar clinical presentation.

The largest category of diagnosis by exclusion is seen among psychiatric disorders where the presence of physical or organic disease must be excluded as a prerequisite for making a functional diagnosis.

Examples

An example of such a diagnosis is "fever of unknown origin": to explain the cause of elevated temperature the most common causes of unexplained fever (infection, neoplasm, or collagen vascular disease) must be ruled out.

Other examples include:

See also

  • Idiopathic

References

  1. "Aseptic meningitis in adult onset Still's disease". Rheumatol Int 32 (12): 4031–4034. December 2012. doi:10.1007/s00296-010-1529-8. PMID 20495923. 
  2. "Behcet Disease: Overview – eMedicine Dermatology". http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1122381-overview. 
  3. "Bell's palsy. A diagnosis of exclusion". Postgraduate Medicine 90 (2): 115–118, 121–122, 125–127. August 1991. doi:10.1080/00325481.1991.11701011. PMID 1862038. 
  4. "Burning mouth syndrome: will better understanding yield better management?". Pain Practice 7 (2): 151–162. June 2007. doi:10.1111/j.1533-2500.2007.00124.x. PMID 17559486. 
  5. "Chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis in a 13 year old female athlete: a case report". The Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association 57 (4): 334–340. December 2013. PMID 24302781. 
  6. Leviner, Sherry (7 May 2021). "Recognizing the Clinical Sequelae of COVID-19 in Adults: COVID-19 Long-Haulers". The Journal for Nurse Practitioners 17 (8): 946–949. doi:10.1016/j.nurpra.2021.05.003. ISSN 1555-4155. PMID 33976591. 
  7. Prince, Jim McMorran, Damian Crowther, Stew McMorran, Steve Youngmin, Ian Wacogne, Jon Pleat, Clive. "primary polydipsia – General Practice Notebook". http://www.gpnotebook.co.uk/simplepage.cfm?ID=-2087059408. 
  8. Freudenreich, O (December 2012). "Differential Diagnosis of Psychotic Symptoms: Medical 'Mimics'". Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/forensic-psychiatry/differential-diagnosis-psychotic-symptoms-medical-%E2%80%9Cmimics%E2%80%9D. Retrieved 2013-12-25. 
  9. Henningsen, Peter (March 2018). "Management of somatic symptom disorder". Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience 20 (1): 23–31. doi:10.31887/DCNS.2018.20.1/phenningsen. ISSN 1294-8322. PMID 29946208. 
  10. "Tolosa-Hunt syndrome revisited: not necessarily a diagnosis of exclusion". AJR. American Journal of Roentgenology 150 (2): 413–418. February 1988. doi:10.2214/ajr.150.2.413. PMID 3257334.