In medicine,
etiology refers to the cause or causes of
diseases or
pathologies. Where no etiology can be ascertained, the disorder is said to be
idiopathic. Traditional accounts of the causes of disease may point to the "
evil eye". The
Ancient Roman scholar
Marcus Terentius Varro put forward early ideas about
microorganisms in a 1st-century BC book titled
On Agriculture. Medieval thinking on the etiology of disease showed the influence of
Galen and of
Hippocrates. Medieval
European doctors generally held the view that disease was related to the air and adopted a
miasmatic approach to disease etiology. Etiological discovery in medicine has a history in
Robert Koch's demonstration that species of the
pathogenic bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis causes the disease
tuberculosis;
Bacillus anthracis causes
anthrax, and
Vibrio cholerae causes
cholera. This line of thinking and evidence is summarized in
Koch's postulates. But proof of causation in infectious diseases is limited to individual cases that provide experimental evidence of etiology. In
epidemiology, several lines of evidence together are required to for
causal inference.
Austin Bradford Hill demonstrated a causal relationship between
tobacco smoking and
lung cancer, and summarized the line of reasoning in the
Bradford Hill criteria, a group of nine principles to establish epidemiological causation. This idea of causality was later used in a proposal for a
Unified concept of causation.
Disease causative agent The infectious diseases are caused by infectious agents or
pathogens. The infectious agents that cause disease fall into five groups: viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and helminths (worms). The term can also refer to a toxin or toxic chemical that causes illness. ==Chain of causation and correlation==