Diagnosis of exclusion

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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[]

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  7. ^ Ferguson B, Gryfe D, Hsu W (December 2013). "Chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis in a 13 year old female athlete: a case report". The Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association. 57 (4): 334–40. PMC 3845477. PMID 24302781.
  8. ^ 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. PMC 6016049. PMID 29946208.
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