Differentiating (disease name) from other diseases page
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Charmaine Patel, M.D. [2]
Introduction to the Differentiating (Disease Name) From Other Diseases Page
- This chapter covers the process that is traditionally known as "differential diagnosis".
- The page name should be "Differentiating (disease name) from other diseases", with only the first letter of the title capitalized.
- Goal: To provide information on a systematic method of differentiating a given disease from other diseases that may present similarly.
- For an example of a microchapter on differentiating disease, click here.
- Search the disease database (http://diseasesdatabase.com/content.asp) to assure the content for this page is complete.
- As with all microchapter pages linking to the main page, at the top of the edit box put {{CMG}}, your name template, and the microchapter navigation template you created at the beginning.
- Remember to create links within Wikidoc by placing [[square brackets]] around key words which you want to link to other pages. Make sure you makes your links as specific as possible. For example if a sentence contained the phrase anterior spinal artery syndrome, the link should be to anterior spinal artery syndrome not anterior or artery or syndrome. For more information on how to create links click here.
- Remember to follow the same format and capitalization of letters as outlined in the template below.
- You should include the name of the disease in the first sentence of every subsection.
Overview
- The overview section should include the disease name in the first sentence.
- The goal is to summarize the page several sentences, usually stating the categories that the disease is classified by.
- This section can be the same as the differentiating disease section in the overview page.
Template
- First Sentence:
- [Disease name] must be differentiated from other diseases that cause [clinical feature 1], [clinical feature 2], and [clinical feature 3], such as [differential dx1], [differential dx2], and [differential dx3].
- Examples:
- Hepatitis C must be differentiated from other diseases that cause hepatic injury and abnormal liver function tests, such as other viral hepatitides (Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, and Hepatitis E), alcoholic liver disease, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, drug-induced liver injury, autoimmune hepatitis, and hepatocellular carcinoma.
- Colorectal cancer must be differentiated from other diseases that cause unexplained weight loss, unexplained loss of appetite, abdominal discomfort, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, anemia, and fatigue, such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), hemorrhoids, anal fissures, and diverticular disease.
Differentiating (Disease name) from other Diseases
- In this section you will outline the conditions or diseases that may often be confused with the disease you are describing.
- You can list the diseases, include major clinical features of each differential diagnosis including major symptoms, physical exam findings, and provide a brief description of how each disease is different from the one you are describing, as seen here.
- You can differentiate physical examination characteristics from those of similar diseases.
- You can also provide guidance on the distinguishing characteristics of the physical exam findings, the laboratory findings, and other diagnostic modalities.
- A table may be helpful. It should be preceded by the following sentence:
The table below summarizes the findings that differentiate ______ dz from other conditions that cause ____symptom and _____ signs:
- Example
The table below summarizes the findings that differentiate Ebola from other conditions that cause fever and hemorrhage:
Tables that illustrate the differentiating features are shown here
These differentiating features are summarized in the table below:[1]
Characteristic/Parameter | Pericarditis | Myocardial infarction |
---|---|---|
Pain description | Sharp, pleuritic, retro-sternal (under the sternum) or left precordial (left chest) pain. | Crushing, pressure-like, heavy pain. Described as "elephant on the chest". |
Radiation | Pain radiates to the trapezius ridge (to the lowest portion of the scapula on the back) or no radiation. | Pain radiates to the jaw, or the left or arm, or does not radiate. |
Exertion | Does not change the pain | Can increase the pain |
Position | Pain is worse supine or upon inspiration (breathing in) | Not positional |
Onset/duration | Sudden pain, that lasts for hours or sometimes days before a patient comes to the ER | Sudden or chronically worsening pain that can come and go in paroxysms or it can last for hours before the patient decides to come to the ER |
and here.
References
- References should be cited for the material that you have put on your page. Type in {{reflist|2}}.This will generate your references in small font, in two columns, with links to the original article and abstract.
- For information on how to add references into your page, click here