Literature DB >> 11346314

When do symptoms become a disease?

R A Aronowitz1.   

Abstract

When do symptoms become a disease? Are there rules or norms, currently or in the past, that tell us when a particular collection of largely symptom-based criteria has enough specificity, utility, or plausibility to justify the appellation disease ? The history of numerous symptom-based diagnoses in use today suggests partial answers to these questions. The 19th-century shift to understanding ill health as a result of specific diseases, increasingly defined more by signs than symptoms, led to a loss of status for illnesses that possessed little clinical or laboratory specificity. Nevertheless, clinicians then and now have used symptom-based diagnoses. Some of these diagnoses owe their existence as specific diseases to the norms and practices of an older era much different from our own. Others have not only thrived but have resisted plausible redefinition done by using more "objective" criteria. Many strategies, such as response-to-treatment arguments, quantitative methods (for example, factor analysis), and consensus conferences, have been used to find or confer specificity in symptom-based diagnoses. These strategies are problematic and have generally been used after symptom-based diagnoses have been recognized and defined. These historical observations emphasize that although biological and clinical factors have set boundaries for which symptoms might plausibly be linked in a disease concept, social influences have largely determined which symptom clusters have become diseases.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11346314     DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-134-9_part_2-200105011-00002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-4819            Impact factor:   25.391


  15 in total

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3.  State-of-the-art psychiatric diagnosis.

Authors:  Darrel A Regier
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Authors:  B Chamak; B Bonniau
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2013-09

Review 6.  [Functional somatic pain syndromes-nomenclature].

Authors:  W Häuser; J C Türp; M Lempa; U Wesselmann; C Derra
Journal:  Schmerz       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 1.107

7.  Electronic Support Groups: An Open Line of Communication in Contested Illness.

Authors:  Michael Murphy; Nicholas Kontos; Oliver Freudenreich
Journal:  Psychosomatics       Date:  2016-04-29       Impact factor: 2.386

8.  On the ontological assumptions of the medical model of psychiatry: philosophical considerations and pragmatic tasks.

Authors:  Tejas Patil; James Giordano
Journal:  Philos Ethics Humanit Med       Date:  2010-01-28       Impact factor: 2.464

9.  The Prevalence and Characteristics of Fibromyalgia in the 2012 National Health Interview Survey.

Authors:  Brian Walitt; Richard L Nahin; Robert S Katz; Martin J Bergman; Frederick Wolfe
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-09-17       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Functional Somatic Syndromes: Emerging Biomedical Models and Traditional Chinese Medicine.

Authors:  Steven Tan; Kirsten Tillisch; Emeran Mayer
Journal:  Evid Based Complement Alternat Med       Date:  2004-06-01       Impact factor: 2.629

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