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Pathognomonic

Medical term meaning "characteristic for a particular disease"


Medical term meaning "characteristic for a particular disease"

Pathognomonic (synonym pathognomic) 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. The absence of a pathognomonic sign does not rule out the disease. Labelling a sign or symptom "pathognomonic" represents a marked intensification of a "diagnostic" sign or symptom.

The word is an adjective of Greek origin derived from πάθος pathos 'disease' and γνώμων gnomon 'indicator' (from γιγνώσκω gignosko 'I know, I recognize').

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 has very high positive predictive value and high specificity but does not need to have high sensitivity: 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 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, Negri bodies within brain tissue infected with rabies, or a tetrad of rash, arthralgia, abdominal pain and kidney disease in a child with Henoch–Schönlein purpura, or succinylacetone for Tyrosinemia Type I.

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. An 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).

In contrast, a test with very high sensitivity rarely misses a condition, so a negative result should be reassuring (the disease tested for is absent). A sign or symptom with very high sensitivity is often termed sine qua non. An example of such test is a genetic test to find an underlying mutation in certain types of hereditary colon cancer.

Examples

DiseaseSign
Cytomegalovirus infection
Lyme disease
Inclusion body myositis
Hypocalcemia
Tetanus or strychnine poisoning
Measles
Wilson's disease
Diphtheria
Chronic hemorrhagic pancreatitis
Cholera
Enteric fever
Meningitis
Angina pectoris
Patent ductus arteriosus
Parkinson's disease
Whipple's disease
Acute myeloid leukemia
Multiple sclerosis
Pericarditis
Rheumatic fever
Rabies
Gout
Acute tubular necrosis
Granulosa cell tumour
Malakoplakia
Narcolepsy (with cataplexy)
Endodermal sinus tumor
Parkinson's disease
Atrial flutter
Sickle cell disease
Lightning injury

References

References

  1. "Pathognomic". Oxford Dictionaries.
  2. (2007). "Hereditary colorectal cancer syndromes: molecular genetics, genetic counseling, diagnosis and management". Familial Cancer.
  3. (November 2010). "Colorectal cancer survival advantage in MUTYH-associated polyposis and Lynch syndrome families". Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
  4. (2009). "Infectious Diseases of the Female Genital Tract". Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
  5. (August 2000). "Histopathological detection of owl's eye inclusions is still specific for cytomegalovirus in the era of human herpesviruses 6 and 7". Journal of Clinical Pathology.
  6. (January 2008). "The rising challenge of Lyme borreliosis in Canada". Canada Communicable Disease Report.
  7. Swartz, Mark H.. (2014). "Textbook of Physical Diagnosis: History and Examination". [[Elsevier]].
  8. Arslan, Orhan E.. (2015). "Neuroanatomical Basis of Clinical Neurology, Second Edition". CRC Press.
  9. (15 October 2004). "Why a Sawtooth? Inferences on the Generation of the Flutter Wave during Typical Atrial Flutter Drawn from Radiofrequency Ablation". Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology.
  10. (July 2013). "Gender differences in severity of sickle cell diseases in non-smokers". Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences.
  11. (2021). "Case Report: Unravelling the Mysterious Lichtenberg Figure Skin Response in a Patient with a High-Voltage Electrical Injury". Frontiers in Medicine.
  12. (2015). "On the possible mechanism of keraunographic markings on lightning victims". Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics.
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