Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Diagnosis of exclusion
Medical diagnosis made by ruling out other conditions From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Remove ads
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.[1]
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. It can also commonly occur where objective diagnostic tests do exist, but extensive diagnostic testing or sufficient exploration of differential diagnosis by a multidisciplinary team is not undertaken due to financial constraints or assessment bias (health inequity).[2][3][4][5][6]
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.[7][8]
Remove ads
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:
- Fibromyalgia[9]
- Adult-onset Still's disease[10]
- Behçet's disease[11]
- Bell's palsy[12]
- Burning mouth syndrome[13]
- Chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis[14]
- Long COVID[15]
- Inappropriate sinus tachycardia[16]
- Psychogenic polydipsia[17]
- Schizophrenia[18]
- Somatic symptom disorder[19]
- Sudden infant death syndrome[20]
- Tolosa–Hunt syndrome[21]
- Systemic-onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis[22]
Remove ads
See also
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads