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Pathognomonic


extracted from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia

Pathognomonic - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pathognomonic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Pathognomonic (often misspelled as pathognomic and sometimes as pathomnemonic) is a term, often used in medicine, that means characteristic for a particular disease. A pathognomonic sign is a particular sign whose presence means that a particular disease is present beyond any doubt. Labelling a sign or symptom "pathognomonic" represents a marked intensification of a "diagnostic" sign or symptom.

The word is an adjective of Greek origin (παθογνωμονικό [σύμπτωμα]), derived from páthos ("πάθος" meaning "disease") and gnōmon ("γνώμον" meaning "judge").

Contents

Practical use

While some findings may be classic, typical or highly suggestive in a certain condition, they may not occur uniquely in this condition and therefore may not directly imply a specific diagnosis. A pathognomonic sign or symptom is specific but need not be sensitive: for example it can sometimes be absent in a certain disease, since the term only implies that, when it is present, the doctor instantly knows the patient's illness. The presence of a pathognomonic finding, on the other hand, allows immediate diagnosis, since there are no other conditions in the differential diagnosis.

Singular pathognomonic signs are relatively uncommon. Examples of pathognomonic findings include Koplik's spots inside the mouth in measles, the palmar xanthomata seen on the hands of people suffering from hyperlipoproteinemia, or a tetrad of rash, arthralgia, abdominal pain and kidney disease in a child with Henoch-Schönlein purpura.

As opposed to symptoms (reported subjectively by the patient and not measured) and signs (observed by the physician at the bedside on physical exam, without need for a report) a larger number of medical test results are pathognomonic. A example is the hypersegmented neutrophil, which is seen only in megaloblastic anemias (not a single disease, but a set of closely related disease states). More often a test result is "pathognomonic" only because there has been a consensus to define the disease state in terms of the test result (such as diabetes mellitus being defined in terms of chronic fasting blood glucose levels).

Examples

Very few of the examples here are pathognomonic in the true sense of the word. For example, Parkinsonism is not only seen in Parkinson's disease.

Disease Sign
Cytomegalovirus infection Owl's eye appearance of inclusion bodies12
Inclusion body myositis Filamentous material seen in inclusion bodies under electron microscopy
Hypocalcemia Trousseau sign and Chvostek sign
Tetanus Risus sardonicus
Bulimia Nervosa Chipmunk facies (parotid gland swelling) (Chipmunk facies also seen in marrow expansion secondary to Beta Thalassemia Major)
Leprosy Leonine facies (thickened lion-like facial skin)
Measles Koplik's spots
Diphtheria Pseudomembrane on tonsils, pharynx and nasal cavity
Pancreatitis Cullen's sign (bluish discoloration of umbilicus)
Chronic hemorrhagic pancreatitis Grey-Turner's sign (ecchymosis in flank area)
Cholera Rice-watery stool
Typhoid fever Rose spots in abdomen
Meningitis Kernig's sign and Brudzinski's sign
Cholecystitis Murphy's sign (pain on deep inspiration when inflamed gallbladder is palpated)
Angina pectoris Levine's sign (hand clutching of chest)
Patent ductus arteriosus Machine-like murmur
Pleural Effusion Stony-dull percussion
Parkinson's disease Pill-rolling tremors
Whipple's disease Oculo-Masticatory Myorhythmia
Acute Myeloid Leukemia Auer rod
Multiple Sclerosis Bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia
Congestive heart failure Third heart sound
Pericarditis Pericardial friction rub
Neurofibromatosis I Plexiform neurofibroma
Hodgkin's lymphoma Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cells (giant mono- and multinucleated cells)
Pyelonephritis White blood cell casts
Rheumatic fever Aschoff nodules

See also

References

  1. ^ Page 268 in: Gibbs, Ronald Darnley; Sweet, Richard L. (2009). Infectious Diseases of the Female Genital Tract (INFECTIOUS DISEASE OF THE FEMALE GENITAL TRACT ( SWEET)). Hagerstwon, MD: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. ISBN 0-7817-7815-8. 
  2. ^ Mattes FM, McLaughlin JE, Emery VC, Clark DA, Griffiths PD (August 2000). "Histopathological detection of owl's eye inclusions is still specific for cytomegalovirus in the era of human herpesviruses 6 and 7". J. Clin. Pathol. 53 (8): 612–4. PMID 11002765. 

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