In medicine, the etiology of an illness or condition refers to the frequent studies to determine one or more factors that come together to cause it. Relatedly, when disease is widespread,
epidemiological studies investigate what associated factors, such as location, sex, exposure to chemicals, and many others, make a population more or less likely to have an illness, condition, or disease, thus helping determine its etiology. Sometimes determining etiology is an imprecise process. In the past, the etiology of a common sailor's disease,
scurvy, was long unknown. When large, ocean-going ships were built, sailors began to put to sea for long periods of time, and often lacked fresh fruit and vegetables. Without knowing the precise cause,
Captain James Cook suspected scurvy was caused by the lack of vegetables in the diet. Based on his suspicion, he forced his crew to eat
sauerkraut, a cabbage preparation, every day, and based upon the positive outcomes, he
inferred that it prevented scurvy, even though he did not know precisely why. It took about another two hundred years to discover the precise etiology: the lack of
vitamin C in a sailor's diet. The following are examples of intrinsic factors: • Inherited conditions, or conditions that are passed down to you from your parents. An example of this is hemophilia, a disorder that leads to excessive bleeding. • Metabolic and endocrine, or hormone, disorders. These are abnormalities in the
chemical signaling and interaction in the body. For example, Diabetes mellitus is an endocrine disease that causes high blood sugar. • Neoplastic disorders or cancer where the cells of the body grow out of control. • Problems with immunity, such as allergies, which are an overreaction of the immune system. == Mythology ==