Cryptogenic disease
A cryptogenic disease is a disease of which the cause is unknown. It may be used in a particular case, when the nature of the patient's condition is known but the cause has not been found (e.g. cryptogenic stroke[1]). The word cryptogenic also appears in the names of some disease entities, when the situation is sufficiently common to be considered a diagnosis in its own right (e.g. cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis).
Cryptogenic, idiopathic and primary may all be used in both these senses, but cryptogenic is more likely to be used where there is presumed to be a simple cause but this happens to have eluded discovery. Cryptogenic is used in this technical sense in the description of epilepsy syndromes (although the distinction has now been officially abandoned).[2]
Cryptogenic diseases
In practice, the term cryptogenic is largely restricted to certain specific conditions. These include:
- diseases of the lung: cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis, cryptogenic organizing pneumonia
- diseases of the liver: cryptogenic cirrhosis, cryptogenic hepatitis
- diseases of the brain: cryptogenic stroke, cryptogenic epilepsy
See also
- Idiopathic
- Symptomatic
References
- ↑ Di Tullio M, Sacco RL, Gopal A, Mohr JP, Homma S (1992). "Patent Foramen Ovale as a Risk Factor for Cryptogenic Stroke". Ann Intern Med 117 (6): 461–465. PMID 1503349.
- ↑ Report of the Commission on Classification and Terminology, International League Against Epilepsy.