MarketList of eponymous diseases
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List of eponymous diseases

An eponymous disease is a disease, disorder, condition, or syndrome named after a person, usually the physician or other health care professional who first identified the disease; less commonly, a patient who had the disease; rarely, a literary or theatrical character who exhibited signs of the disease or the subject of an allusion, as its characteristics were suggestive of symptoms observed in the disorder.

Naming systems
Eponyms are a longstanding tradition in Western science and medicine. Being awarded an eponym is regarded as an honor: "Eponymity, not anonymity, is the standard." The scientific and medical communities regard it as bad form to attempt to form eponyms after oneself. Ideally, to discuss something, it should have a name. When medicine lacked diagnostic tools to investigate and definitively pinpoint the underlying causes of most diseases, assigning an eponym afforded physicians a concise label for a symptom cluster versus cataloguing the multiple systemic features that characterized a patient’s illness. Most commonly, diseases are named for the person, usually a physician, but occasionally another health care professional, who first described the condition—typically by publishing an article in a respected medical journal. Less frequently, an eponymous disease is named after a patient, examples being Lou Gehrig disease, Christmas disease, and Hartnup disease. In the instance of Machado–Joseph disease, the eponym is derived from the surnames of two families in which the condition was initially described. Examples of eponyms named for persons who displayed characteristics attributed to a syndrome include: Lazarus syndrome, named for a biblical character; and Miss Havisham syndrome, named for a Dickens character, and Plyushkin syndrome, named for a Gogol character, both fictional persons (the latter two also happen to be alternative names for the same symptom complex). Two eponymous disorders that follow none of the foregoing conventions are: Fregoli delusion, which derives its name from an actor whose character shifts mimicked the delusion it describes; and, Munchausen syndrome which derives from a literary allusion to Baron von Munchausen, whose personal habits were suggestive of the symptom cluster associated with it. Disease naming conventions which reference place names (such as Bornholm disease, Lyme disease, and Ebola virus disease) are properly termed toponymic, although an NLM/NIH online publication described them as eponymic. Diseases named for animals with which they are associated, usually as a vector, are properly styled as zoonymic; cat scratch fever and monkeypox are examples. Those named for association with a particular occupation or trade, such as nun's knee, tennis elbow, and mad hatter's disease, are properly described as occupational diseases. In May 2015, the World Health Organization, in collaboration with the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), released a statement on the Best Practices for the Naming of New Human Infectious Diseases "with the aim to minimize unnecessary negative impact of disease names on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare, and avoid causing offence to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional or ethnic groups." These guidelines emerged in response to backlash against people and places, based on the vernacular names of infectious diseases such as Middle East respiratory syndrome, and the 2009 swine flu pandemic. These naming conventions are not intended to replace the International Classification of Diseases, but rather, are guidelines for scientists, national authorities, the national and international media and other stakeholders who may be the first to discuss a disease publicly. ==Punctuation==
Punctuation
In 1975, the Canadian National Institutes of Health held a conference that discussed the naming of diseases and conditions. This was reported in The Lancet where the conclusion was summarized as: "The possessive use of an eponym should be discontinued, since the author neither had nor owned the disorder." Medical journals, dictionaries and style guides remain divided on this issue. European journals tend towards continued possessive use, while US journals are largely discontinuing to do so. Trends in possessive usage vary among countries, journals, diseases. The problem is that the possessive case received its misleading name for historical reasons and now even educated people, if they are not linguists, often make incorrect assumptions and decisions based on the name. Nevertheless, native speakers would neither accept the awkward construction "men department" as an alternative to "men's department" nor claim that the obligatory apostrophe in any way implies that men possess the department. This case was termed the genitive until the 18th century and (like the genitive case in other languages) expresses much more than possession. For example, in the expressions "the school's headmaster" and "tomorrow's weather", the school does not own/possess the headmaster and tomorrow does not/will not own the weather. Disagreements about the use of possessive forms of nouns and of the apostrophe are due to the opinion that no apostrophe should be used, unless it is intended to express possession. Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage says: The dictionary also cites a study which found only 40% of possessive forms used to indicate actual possession. == Autoeponym == Associating an individual's name with a disease merely based on describing it confers only an eponymic; the individual must have been either affected by the disease or have died from it for the name to be termed auto-eponymic. Thus, an 'auto-eponym' is a medical condition named in honor of: a physician or other health care professional who was affected by or died as a result of the disease which he had described or identified; or, a patient, who was not a health care professional, but suffered from or died as a result of the disease. Auto-eponyms may use either the possessive or non-possessive form, with the preference to use the non-possessive form for a disease named for a physician or health care professional who first described it and the possessive form in cases of a disease named for a patient (commonly, but not always, the first patient) in whom the particular disease was identified. Autoeponyms listed in this entry conform to those conventions with regard to possessive and non-possessive forms. Examples of autoeponyms include: • Rickettsiosis: in 1906, Howard Taylor Ricketts discovered that the bacteria that causes Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever is carried by a tick. He injected himself with the pathogen. • Thomsen's disease: an autosomal dominant myotonia of voluntary muscles described by Asmus Julius Thomas Thomsen about himself and his family members. • Carrion disease: Peruvian medical student Daniel Alcides Carrión inoculated himself with Bartonella bacilliformis in 1885 to prove the link to this disease, characterized by "Oroya fever". • Lou Gehrig's disease: although Gehrig, a New York Yankees player of the early twentieth century, was not the first patient described as having amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, the association of such a prominent individual with the then little-known disease resulted in his name becoming eponymous with it. ==Continued Use of Eponyms==
Continued Use of Eponyms
A current trend seeks to step away from use of eponymous disease names in favor of medical naming that focuses on causation or primary signs. Arguments for this movement include that: • a national or ethnic bias may attach to the eponym chosen; • credit should have gone to a different person; • the same eponym may be applied to different diseases, causing confusion; • several eponyms refer to the same disease (e.g., amyloid degeneration is variously called Abercrombie disease, Abercrombie syndrome, and Virchow syndrome); • an eponym may prove to be invalid (e.g., Laurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedl syndrome, in which findings in the patients of Laurence and Moon were later found to differ from those of Bardet and Biedl). • an eponym would honor an individual who has been otherwise discredited. An example is ''Wegener's Granulomatosis''; it was renamed granulomatosis with polyangiitis due to Dr. Wegener's Nazi ties. • its referent varies by country (e.g., sideropenic dysphagia is Plummer–Vinson syndrome in the US and Australia, both Paterson–Kelly syndrome and Paterson–Brown-Kelly syndrome in the UK, and Waldenstrom–Kjellberg syndrome in Scandinavia). Arguments for maintaining eponyms include that: • an eponym may be shorter and more memorable than the medical name; • a medical name may prove to be incorrect; • a syndrome may have more than one cause, yet it remains useful to consider the totality of its features; • it continues to respect a person who may otherwise be forgotten. ==Alphabetical list==
Alphabetical list
Explanation of listing sequence As described above, multiple eponyms can exist for the same disease. In these instances, each is listed individually (except as described in item 1 below), followed by an in-line parenthetical entry beginning 'aka' ('also known as') that lists all alternative eponyms. This facilitates the use of the list for a reader who knows a particular disease only by one of its eponyms, without the necessity of cross-linking entries. It sometimes happens that an alternative eponym, if listed separately, would immediately alphabetically precede or succeed another eponymous entry for the same disease. One of three conventions have been applied to such cases: :1. No separate entry appears for the alternative eponym. It is listed only in the parenthetical 'aka' entry (e.g., Aarskog syndrome appears only as a parenthetical 'aka' entry to Aarskog–Scott syndrome). :2. If eponymous names subsequent to the first are sequenced differently or the eponym is differentiated by another term (e.g., disease versus syndrome), alphabetical sequence dictates which is the linked version versus which is listed as the alternative (e.g., Abderhalden–Kaufmann–Lignac is the linked entry and Abderhalden–Lignac–Kaufmann is the parenthetical 'aka' alternative entry). :3. If the number of names included in two or more eponyms varies, the linked entry is the one which includes the most individual surnames (e.g., Alpers–Huttenlocher syndrome is the linked entry for the disease also known as Alpers disease or Alpers syndrome). Some eponyms have an alternative entry that includes the name(s) of additional individuals. An example is Adams-Stokes syndrome; one of its alternative eponyms is Gerbec–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome. The entry for Adams-Stokes syndrome only names the two individuals (Adams and Stokes) whose names are associated with the entry as listed; a later, separate, entry for the alternative Gerbec–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome names all four of the individuals (Gerbec, Morgani, Adams, and Stokes) who are associated with the longer-named entry. AAarskog–Scott syndrome (aka Aarskog syndrome) – Dagfinn Aarskog, Charles I. Scott Jr.Aase–Smith syndrome (aka Aase syndrome) – Jon Morton Aase, David Weyhe SmithAbdallat–Davis–Farrage syndromeAdnan Al Abdallat, S.M. Davis, James Robert FarrageAbderhalden–Kaufmann–Lignac syndrome (aka Abderhalden–Lignac–Kaufmann disease) – Emil Abderhalden, Eduard Kauffman, George LignacAbercrombie disease (aka Abercrombie syndrome) – John AbercrombieAchard–Thiers syndromeEmile Achard, Joseph ThiersAckerman tumorLauren AckermanAdams–Oliver syndromeRobert Adams, William OliverAdams–Stokes syndrome (aka Gerbec–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome, Gerbezius–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome, Stokes–Adams syndrome) – Robert Adams, William StokesAddison diseaseThomas AddisonAdson–Caffey syndromeAlfred Washington Adson, I. R. CaffeyAguecheek's diseaseSir Andrew Aguecheek, Shakespearean literary character • Ahumada–Del Castillo syndromeJuan Carlos Ahumada Sotomayor, Enrique Benjamin Del CastilloAicardi syndromeJean AicardiAicardi–Goutières syndromeJean Aicardi, Francoise GoutieresAlagille syndromeDaniel AlagilleAlbers-Schönberg diseaseHeinrich Albers-SchönbergAlbright disease (aka Albright hereditary osteodystrophy, Albright syndrome, McCune–Albright syndrome) – Fuller AlbrightAlbright–Butler–Bloomberg diseaseFuller Albright, Allan Macy Butler, Esther BloombergAlbright–Hadorn syndromeFuller Albright, Walter HadornAlbright IV syndrome (aka Martin–Albright syndrome) – Fuller AlbrightAlexander diseaseWilliam Stuart AlexanderAlibert–Bazin syndromeJean-Louis-Marc Alibert, Pierre-Antoine-Ernest BazinAlice in Wonderland syndrome (aka Todd syndrome) – Alice, literary character in works of Lewis CarrollAlpers–Huttenlocher syndrome (aka Alpers disease, Alpers syndrome) – Bernard Jacob Alpers, Peter HuttenlocherAlport syndromeArthur Cecil AlportAlström syndromeCarl Henry AlströmAlvarez syndromeWalter C. AlvarezAlzheimer diseaseAlois AlzheimerAnders diseaseJames Meschter AndersAndersen diseaseDorothy Hansine AndersenAndersen–Tawil syndrome (aka Andersen syndrome) – Ellen Andersen, Al-Rabi TawilAnderson–Fabry diseaseWilliam Anderson, Johannes FabryAngelman syndromeHarry AngelmanAngelucci syndromeArnaldo AngelucciAnton–Babinski syndrome (aka Anton syndrome) – Gabriel Anton, Joseph BabinskiApert syndromeEugène ApertAran–Duchenne disease (aka Aran–Duchenne spinal muscular atrophy) – François-Amilcar Aran, Guillaume DuchenneArboleda-Tham SyndromeValerie A. Arboleda, Emma ThamArnold–Chiari malformationJulius Arnold, Hans ChiariAsherman syndromeJoseph AshermanAsperger syndrome (aka Asperger disorder) – Hans AspergerAvellis syndromeGeorg AvellisAyerza–Arrillaga syndrome (aka Ayerza–Arrillaga disease, Ayerza disease, Ayerza syndrome) – Abel Ayerza, Francisco Arrillaga BBaastrup diseaseChristian Ingerslev BaastrupBabesiosisVictor BabeșBabington diseaseBenjamin BabingtonBabinski–Fröhlich syndromeJoseph Babinski, Alfred FröhlichBabinski–Froment syndromeJoseph Babinski, Jules FromentBabinski–Nageotte syndromeJoseph Babinski, Jean NageotteBaker cystWilliam Morrant BakerBaller–Gerold syndromeFriedrich Baller, M GeroldBalo concentric sclerosis (aka Balo disease) – József Mátyás BalóBamberger diseaseHeinrich von BambergerBamberger–Marie diseaseEugen von Bamberger, Pierre MarieBamforth–Lazarus syndromeJ Steven Bamforth, John LazarusBancroft filariasisJoseph BancroftBang diseaseBernhard BangBankart lesionArthur Sidney Blundell BankartBannayan–Riley–Ruvalcaba syndromeGeorge A. Bannayan, Harris D. Riley Jr., Rogelio H. A. RuvalcabaBannayan–Zonana syndromeGeorge A. Bannayan, Jonathan X. ZonanaBanti syndromeGuido BantiBárány syndromeRobert BárányBardet–Biedl syndrome (formerly, aka Laurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedl syndrome, a construct now deemed invalid. For fuller explanation, see Laurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedl syndrome) – Georges Bardet, Arthur BiedlBarlow diseaseThomas BarlowBarlow syndromeJohn BarlowBarraquer–Simons syndromeLuis Barraquer Roviralta, Arthur SimonsBarré–Liéou syndromeJean Alexandre Barré, Yang-Choen LiéouBarrett ulcerNorman BarrettBart–Pumphrey syndromeR. S. Bart, R. E. PumphreyBarth syndromePeter BarthBartholin cystCaspar BartholinBartter syndromeFrederic BartterBasedow comaKarl Adolph von BasedowBasedow disease (aka Basedow syndrome, Begbie disease, Flajan disease, Flajani–Basedow syndrome, Graves disease, Graves–Basedow disease, Marsh disease, Morbus Basedow) – Karl Adolph von BasedowBasedow ocular syndromeKarl Adolph von BasedowBassen–Kornzweig syndromeFrank Bassen, Abraham KornzweigBatten diseaseFrederick BattenBazin diseasePierre-Antoine-Ernest BazinBecker muscular dystrophyPeter Emil BeckerBeckwith–Wiedemann syndromeJohn Bruce Beckwith, Hans-Rudolf WiedemannBehçet diseaseHulusi BehçetBekhterev diseaseVladimir BekhterevBell palsyCharles BellBenedikt syndromeMoritz BenediktBenjamin syndromeErich BenjaminBerardinelli–Seip congenital lipodystrophyWaldemar Berardinelli, Martin SeipBerdon syndromeWalter BerdonBerger diseaseJean BergerBergeron diseaseEtienne-Jules BergeronBernard–Horner syndrome (aka Horner syndrome) – Claude Bernard, Johann Friedrich HornerBernard–Soulier syndromeJean Bernard, Jean Pierre SoulierBernhardt–Roth paraesthesiaMartin Bernhardt, Vladimir Karlovich RothBernheim syndromeP. I. BernheimBesnier prurigoErnest Henri BesnierBesnier–Boeck–Schaumann diseaseErnest Henri Besnier, Cæsar Peter Møller Boeck, Jörgen Nilsen SchaumannBiermer anaemiaMichael Anton BiermerBietti crystalline dystrophyG. BiettiBickerstaff brainstem encephalitisEdwin BickerstaffBilharziaTheodor Maximilian BilharzBinder syndromeK.H. BinderBing–Horton syndromePaul Robert Bing, Bayard Taylor HortonBing–Neel syndromeJens Bing, Axel Valdemar NeelBinswanger dementiaOtto BinswangerBirt–Hogg–Dubé syndromeArthur Birt, Georgina Hogg, William DubéBland–White–Garland syndromeEdward Franklin Bland, Paul Dudley White, Joseph GarlandBloch–Sulzberger syndromeBruno Bloch, Marion Baldur SulzbergerBlocq disease (aka Blocq syndrome) – Paul BlocqBloom syndromeDavid BloomBlount syndromeWalter Putnam BlountBoerhaave syndromeHerman BoerhaaveBogorad syndromeF.A. BogoradBonnevie–Ullrich syndromeKristine Bonnevie, Otto UllrichBourneville–Pringle diseaseDésiré-Magloire Bourneville, John James PringleBowen diseaseJohn T. BowenBrachman de Lange syndromeWinfried Robert Clemens Brachmann, Cornelia Catharina de LangeBrailsford–Morquio syndromeJames Frederick Brailsford, Luís MorquioBrandt syndromeThore Edvard BrandtBrenner tumourFritz BrennerBrewer kidneyGeorge Emerson BrewerBright diseaseRichard BrightBrill–Symmers diseaseNathan Brill, Douglas SymmersBrill–Zinsser diseaseNathan Brill, Hans ZinsserBriquet syndromePaul BriquetBrissaud diseaseÉdouard BrissaudBrissaud–Sicard syndromeÉdouard Brissaud, Jean-Athanase SicardBroadbent apoplexyWilliam BroadbentBroca aphasiaPierre Paul BrocaBrock syndromeRussell Claude BrockBrodie abscessBenjamin Collins BrodieBrodie syndromeBenjamin Collins BrodieBrooke epitheliomaHenry Ambrose Grundy BrookeBrown-Séquard syndromeCharles-Édouard Brown-SéquardBrucellosisDavid BruceBruck–de Lange diseaseFranz Bruck, Cornelia Catharina de LangeBrugada syndromePedro Brugada, Josep BrugadaBruns–Garland syndromeLudwig Bruns, Hugh GarlandBruns syndromeLudwig BrunsBruton–Gitlin syndromeOgden Carr Bruton, David GitlinBudd–Chiari syndromeGeorge Budd, Hans ChiariBuerger diseaseLeo BuergerBumke syndromeOswald Conrad Edouard BumkeBürger–Grütz syndromeMax Burger, Otto GrutzBurkitt lymphomaDenis Parsons BurkittBurnett syndromeCharles Hoyt BurnettBywaters syndromeEric George Lapthorne Bywaters CCaffey–Silverman syndromeJohn Patrick Caffey, William SilvermanCalvé diseaseJacques CalvéCamurati–Engelmann disease (aka Camurati–Engelmann syndrome) – M. Camurati, G. EngelmannCanavan diseaseMyrtelle CanavanCannon diseaseAbernathy Benson CannonCantú syndromeJosé María CantúCapgras delusion (aka Capgras syndrome) – Jean Marie Joseph CapgrasCaplan syndromeAnthony CaplanCarney complexJ. Aidan CarneyCarney triadJ. Aidan CarneyCarney–Stratakis syndromeJ. Aidan Carney, C. A. StratakisCaroli syndromeJacques CaroliCarrion diseaseDaniel Alcides CarriónCastleman diseaseBenjamin CastlemanCéstan–Chenais syndromeÉtienne Jacques Marie Raymond Céstan, Louis Jean ChennaisChagas diseaseCarlos ChagasCharcot diseaseJean-Martin CharcotCharcot–Marie–Tooth diseaseJean-Martin Charcot, Pierre Marie, Howard Henry ToothCharles Bonnet syndromeCharles BonnetCheadle diseaseWalter Butler CheadleChédiak–Higashi syndromeAlexander Chédiak, Otokata HigashiChiari malformationHans ChiariChiari–Frommel syndromeJohann Baptist Chiari, Richard FrommelChilaiditi syndromeDemetrius ChilaiditiChrist–Siemens–Touraine syndromeJosef Christ, Hermann Werner Siemens, Albert TouraineChristensen–Krabbe diseaseErna Christensen, Knud KrabbeChristmas diseaseStephen ChristmasChurg–Strauss syndromeJacob Churg, Lotte StraussClaude syndromeHenri ClaudeClerambault syndromeGaëtan Gatian de ClerambaultClerambault–Kandinsky syndromeGaëtan Gatian de Clerambault, Victor Khrisanfovich KandinskyCoats diseaseGeorge CoatsCock peculiar tumorEdward CockCockayne syndromeEdward Alfred CockayneCoffin–Lowry syndromeGrange Coffin, Robert LowryCoffin–Siris syndromeGrange Coffin, Evelyn SirisCogan syndromeDavid Glendenning CoganCohen syndromeMichael CohenCollet–Sicard syndromeFrédéric Justin Collet, Jean-Athanase SicardConcato diseaseLuigi Maria ConcatoConn syndromeJerome ConnConradi-Hünermann syndrome - Erich Conradi, Karl HünermannCooley anemiaThomas Benton CooleyCori DiseaseCarl Ferdinand Cori, Gerty CoriCornelia de Lange syndromeCornelia Catharina de LangeCostello syndromeJack CostelloCosten syndromeJames Bray CostenCotard delusion (aka Cotard syndrome) – Jules CotardCowden syndrome (aka Cowden disease) – Rachel CowdenCrigler–Najjar syndromeJohn Fielding Crigler, Victor Assad NajjarCreutzfeldt–Jakob diseaseHans Gerhard Creutzfeldt, Alfons Maria JakobCrocq–Cassirer syndromeJean Crocq, Richard CassirerCrohn diseaseBurrill Bernard CrohnCronkhite–Canada syndromeL. W. Cronkhite, Wilma CanadaCrouzon syndromeOctave CrouzonCruveilhier–Baumgarten diseaseJean Cruveilhier, Paul Clemens von BaumgartenCruz diseaseOsvaldo Gonçalves CruzCryer syndromePhilip E. CryerCurling ulcerThomas Blizard CurlingCurschmann–Batten–Steinert syndromeHans Curschmann, Frederick Batten, Hans Gustav SteinertCushing diseaseHarvey CushingCushing ulcerHarvey Cushing DDa Costa syndromeJacob Mendez Da CostaDalrymple diseaseJohn DalrympleDanbolt–Closs syndromeNiels Christian Gauslaa Danbolt, Karl Philipp ClossDandy–Walker syndromeWalter Dandy, Arthur Earl WalkerDe Clérambault syndromeGaëtan Gatian de Clérambaultde Quervain diseaseFritz de Quervainde Quervain thyroiditisFritz de QuervainDejerine–Sottas diseaseJoseph Jules Dejerine, Jules SottasDennie–Marfan syndromeCharles Clayton Dennie, Antoine MarfanDent diseaseCharles Enrique DentDenys–Drash syndromePierre Denys, Allan L. DrashDercum diseaseFrancis Xavier DercumDevic disease (aka Devic syndrome) – Eugène DevicDiamond–Blackfan anemiaLouis Diamond, Kenneth BlackfanDiGeorge syndromeAngelo DiGeorgeDi Guglielmo diseaseGiovanni di GugliemoDiogenes syndrome (aka Havisham syndrome, Miss Havisham syndrome, Plyushkin syndrome)– the Greek philosopher Diogenes of Sinope (usage is deemed a misnomer, as Diogenes did not exhibit these symptoms) • Doege–Potter syndromeKarl W. Doege, Roy P. PotterDonnai–Barrow syndromeDian Donnai, Margaret BarrowDonovanosisCharles DonovanDown syndromeJohn Langdon DownDravet syndromeCharlotte DravetDressler syndromeWilliam DresslerDuane syndromeAlexander DuaneDubin–Johnson syndromeIsadore Dubin, Frank Bacchus JohnsonDuchenne–Aran diseaseGuillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne de Boulogne, François-Amilcar AranDuchenne muscular dystrophyGuillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne de BoulogneDukes diseaseClement DukesDuncan disease (aka Duncan syndrome, Purtilo syndrome) – Duncan family (6 of 18 males had the condition) • Dupuytren contracture (aka Dupuytren disease) – Baron Guillaume DupuytrenDuroziez diseasePaul Louis Duroziez EEales diseaseHenry EalesEarly-onset Alzheimer diseaseAlois AlzheimerEbstein's anomalyWilhelm EbsteinEdwards syndromeJohn H. EdwardsEhlers–Danlos syndromes – Edvard Ehlers, Henri-Alexandre DanlosArthrochalasia Ehlers–Danlos syndromeBrittle cornea Ehlers-Danlos syndromeCardiac–valvular Ehlers–Danlos syndromeClassical Ehlers–Danlos syndromeClassical–like Ehlers–Danlos syndromeDermatosparaxis Ehlers–Danlos syndromeHypermobile Classical Ehlers–Danlos syndromeKyphoscoliotic Ehlers–Danlos syndromeMusculocontractual Ehlers–Danlos syndromeMyopathic Ehlers–Danlos syndromePeriodontal Ehlers–Danlos syndromeSpondylodysplastic Ehlers–Danlos syndromeVascular Ehlers–Danlos syndromeEhrlichiosisPaul EhrlichEisenmenger's syndromeVictor EisenmengerEkbom syndromeKarl-Axel EkbomEmanuel syndromeBeverly EmanuelEmery–Dreifuss muscular dystrophyAlan Eglin Heathecote Emery, Fritz E. DreifussErb–Duchenne palsy (aka Erb palsy) – Wilhelm Heinrich Erb, Guillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne de BoulogneErdheim–Chester disease (aka Erdheim–Chester syndrome) – Jakob Erdheim, William ChesterEvans syndromeRobert S. EvansExtramammary Paget's disease – Sir James Paget FFabry diseaseJohannes FabryFanconi anemiaGuido FanconiFanconi syndromeGuido FanconiFarber diseaseSidney FarberFelty's syndromeAugustus Roi FeltyFitz-Hugh–Curtis syndromeThomas Fitz-Hugh Jr., Arthur Hale CurtisFoix–Alajouanine syndromeCharles Foix, Théophile AlajouanineFoix–Chavany–Marie syndromeCharles Foix, Jean Alfred Émile Chavany, Julien MarieFournier gangreneJean Alfred FournierForbes–Albright syndromeAnne Pappenheimer Forbes, Fuller AlbrightForbes diseaseGilbert Burnett ForbesFregoli delusion – (aka Fregoli syndrome) Leopoldo Fregoli, an Italian actor • Frey syndromeLucja Frey-GottesmanFriedreich's ataxiaNikolaus FriedreichFritsch–Asherman syndrome (aka Fritsch syndrome) – Heinrich Fritsch, Joseph AshermanFryns syndromeJean-Pierre FrynsFuchs dystrophyErnst Fuchs GGanser syndromeSigbert GanserGaucher diseasePhilippe GaucherGerbec–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome (aka Adams–Stokes syndrome, Gerbezius–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome, Stokes–Adams syndrome) – Marko Gerbec, Giovanni Battista Morgagni, Robert Adams, William StokesGerbezius–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome (aka Adams–Stokes syndrome, Gerbec–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome, Stokes–Adams syndrome) – Marko Gerbec (latinized as Gerbezius), Giovanni Battista Morgagni, Robert Adams, William StokesGhon complexAnton GhonGhon focusAnton GhonGianotti-Crosti syndrome - Ferdinando Gianotti, Agostino CrostiGilbert syndromeAugustin Nicolas GilbertGitelman syndromeHillel J. GitelmanGlanzmann thrombastheniaEduard GlanzmannGoodpasture syndromeErnest GoodpastureGoldberg-Shprintzen syndrome - R. B. Goldberg, R. J. ShprintzenGoldenhar syndromeMaurice GoldenharGorlin–Goltz syndromeRobert J. Gorlin, Robert W. GoltzGouverneur syndromeR. GouverneurGraves diseaseRobert James GravesGraves–Basedow diseaseRobert James Graves, Karl Adolph von BasedowGrawitz tumorPaul Albert GrawitzGrinker myelinopathyRoy R. Grinker, Sr.Gruber syndromeGeorg GruberGuillain–Barré syndromeGeorges Guillain, Jean Alexandre BarréGuillain–Barré–Strohl syndromeGeorges Guillain, Jean Alexandre Barré, André StrohlGunther diseaseHans Gunther HHailey–Hailey diseaseHugh Edward Hailey, William Howard HaileyHallervorden–Spatz diseaseJulius Hallervorden, Hugo Spatz - in disuse, due to Nazi association • Hand–Schüller–Christian diseaseAlfred Hand, Artur Schüller, Henry Asbury ChristianHansen diseaseGerhard Armauer HansenHardikar SyndromeWinita HardikarHartnup disease (aka Hartnup disorder) – the Hartnup family, in which causative gene was identified • Hashimoto thyroiditisHakaru HashimotoHavisham syndrome (aka Diogenes syndrome, Miss Havisham syndrome, Plyushkin syndrome) – Miss Havisham, a literary character in Charles Dickens' Great ExpectationsHecht–Scott syndromeJacqueline T. Hecht, Charles I. Scott, JrHenoch–Schönlein purpuraEduard Heinrich Henoch, Johann Lukas SchönleinHeyde's syndromeEdward C. HeydeHirschsprung diseaseHarald HirschsprungHodgkin diseaseThomas HodgkinHolt–Oram syndromeMary Clayton Holt, Samuel OramHorner syndromeJohann Friedrich HornerHorton headacheBayard Taylor HortonHuntington diseaseGeorge HuntingtonHurler syndromeGertrud HurlerHurler–Scheie syndromeGertrud Hurler, Harold Glendon ScheieHutchinson–Gilford progeria syndromeJonathan Hutchinson, Hastings Gilford IIllig syndromeRuth IlligIrvine–Gass syndromeS. Rodman Irvine, J. Donald M. Gass JJaeken's diseaseJaak JaekenJakob–Creutzfeldt diseaseAlfons Maria Jakob, Hans Gerhard CreutzfeldtJalili syndromeI.K. JaliliJarvi–Nasu–Hakola diseaseO. Jarvi, T. Nasu, P. HakolaJervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome - Anton Jervell, Fred Lange-NielsenJohanson–Blizzard syndromeAnn Johanson, Robert M. BlizzardJones–Smith SyndromeKenneth Lyons Jones, David Weyhe Smith KKahler's diseaseOtto KahlerKallmann syndromeFranz Josef KallmannKanner syndromeLeo KannerKaposi sarcomaMoritz KaposiKartagener syndromeManes KartagenerKasabach–Merritt syndromeHaig Haigouni Kasabach, Katharine Krom MerrittKashin–Beck diseaseNicolai Ivanowich Kashin, Evgeny Vladimirovich BekKawasaki diseaseTomisaku KawasakiKearns–Sayre syndromeThomas P. Kearns, George Pomeroy SayreKennedy diseaseWilliam R. KennedyKennedy syndromeRobert Foster KennedyKenny-Caffey syndromeFrederic Marshal Kenny, John Patrick CaffeyKienbock diseaseRobert KienböckKikuchi diseaseMasahiro Kikuchi, Y.FujimotoKimmelstiel–Wilson diseasePaul Kimmelstiel, Clifford WilsonKimura diseaseT. KimuraKing–Kopetzky syndromeP. F. King, Samuel J. KopetzkyKinsbourne syndromeMarcel KinsbourneKjer optic neuropathyPoul KjerKlatskin tumorGerald KlatskinKlinefelter syndromeHarry KlinefelterKlüver–Bucy syndromeHeinrich Klüver, Paul BucyKöhler diseaseAlban KöhlerKorsakoff syndromeSergei KorsakoffKostmann disease - Rolf KostmannKounis syndromeNicholas KounisKrabbe diseaseKnud Haraldsen KrabbeKrukenberg tumorFriedrich Ernst KrukenbergKugelberg–Welander diseaseErik Klas Henrik Kugelberg, Lisa WelanderKuttner tumor – Hermann Küttner LLafora diseaseGonzalo Rodriguez LaforaLaron syndromeZvi LaronLaurence–Moon syndromeJohn Zachariah Laurence, Robert Charles MoonLaurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedl syndrome (aka Laurence–Moon–Biedl–Bardet syndrome, aka Laurence–Moon–Biedl syndrome - both now deemed invalid constructs, as patients of Laurence and Moon were found to differ from those of Bardet and Beidl; see instead Bardet–Biedl syndrome and Laurence-Moon syndrome) – John Zachariah Laurence, Robert Charles Moon, Georges Bardet, Arthur BiedlLazarus syndromeLazarus of Bethany, an individual in New Testament • Legg–Calvé–Perthes syndromeArthur Legg, Jacques Calvé, Georg PerthesLeigh diseaseDenis Archibald LeighLeiner syndromeKarl Leiner, André MoussousLeishmaniasisSir William Boog LeishmanLejeune syndromeJérôme LejeuneLemierre syndromeAndré LemierreLenègre diseaseJean LenègreLennox–Gastaut syndrome (aka Lennox syndrome) – William Gordon Lennox, Henri Jean Pascal GastautLesch–Nyhan syndromeMichael Lesch, William Leo NyhanLetterer–Siwe diseaseErich Letterer, Sture SiweLev diseaseMaurice LevLewandowsky–Lutz dysplasiaFelix Lewandowsky, Wilhelm LutzLi–Fraumeni syndromeFrederick Pei Li, Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr.Libman–Sacks diseaseEmanuel Libman, Benjamin SacksLiddle syndromeGrant LiddleLisfranc injury (aka Lisfranc dislocation, Lisfranc fracture) – Jacques Lisfranc de St. MartinListeriosisJoseph ListerLobomycosisJorge LoboLoeys–Dietz SyndromeBart Loeys, Hal DietzLöeffler endocarditisWilhelm LöefflerLöffler syndromeWilhelm LöefflerLöfgren syndromeSven Halvar LöfgrenLown–Ganong–Levine syndrome - Bernard Lown, William Francis Ganong, Jr., and Samuel A. LevineLou Gehrig's disease – New York Yankee baseball player Lou GehrigLowe SyndromeCharles Upton LoweLudwig anginaWilhelm Friedrich von LudwigLujan–Fryns syndromeJ. Enrique Lujan, Jean-Pierre FrynsLynch syndromeHenry T. Lynch MMachado–Joseph Azorean disease (aka Machado–Joseph disease, Machado disease, Joseph disease) – patriarchal surnames of families in which first identified • Mallory–Weiss syndromeG. Kenneth Mallory, Soma WeissMansonelliasisSir Patrick MansonMarburg multiple sclerosisOtto MarburgMarfan syndromeAntoine MarfanMarie Antoinette syndrome (aka Thomas More syndrome) – Queen Marie Antoinette, said to have experienced it • Marie–Foix–Alajouanine syndromePierre Marie, Charles Foix, Théophile AlajouanineMarshall–Smith- Weaver syndrome (aka Marshall-Smith syndrone, Marshall-Smith type accelerated skeletal maturation syndrome) – Richard E. Marshall, David Weyhe Smith, David Weaver NB: To differentiate 2 identically named syndromes, parenthetical clinical descriptors were added: • Marshall syndrome – {ectodermal dysplasia syndrome with auditory defect} – D. MarshallMarshall syndrome – {post-inflammatory elastolysis and acquired acute cutis laxa Type II} – J. MarshallMartin–Albright syndrome (aka Albright IV syndrome) – August E. Martin, Fuller AlbrightMartin–Bell syndromeJ. Purdon Martin, Julia BellMay–Hegglin anomalyRichard May, Robert HegglinMay–Thurner syndromeRichard May, J ThurnerMaydl herniaKarel MaydlMayer–Rokitansky–Küster–Hauser syndrome – (aka Müllerian agenesis, Müllerian aplasia) – August Franz Josef Karl Mayer, Carl von Rokitansky, Hermann Küster, Georges Andre HauserMazzotti reactionLuigi MazzottiMcArdle diseaseBrian McArdleMcCune–Albright syndrome – (aka Albright disease, Albright hereditary osteodystrophy, Albright syndrome) – Donovan James McCune, Fuller AlbrightMeckel–Gruber syndrome (aka Meckel syndrome) – Johann Meckel, Georg GruberMeigs syndromeJoe Vincent MeigsMénétrier diseasePierre Eugène MénétrierMénière diseaseProsper MénièreMenkes diseaseJohn Hans MenkesMiddleton syndromeStephen John MiddletonMirizzi syndromePablo Luis MirizziMikulicz diseaseJan Mikulicz-RadeckiMiss Havisham syndrome (aka Diogenes syndrome, Havisham syndrome, and Plyushkin syndrome) – Miss Havisham, a literary character in Charles Dickens' Great ExpectationsMondor diseaseHenri MondorMonge diseaseCarlos MongeMortimer's disease – Mrs. Mortimer, a patient who experienced it • Morton neuromaMoschcowitz syndromeEli MoschcowitzMowat–Wilson syndromeDavid Mowat, Meredith WilsonMucha–Habermann diseaseViktor Mucha, Rudolf HabermannMulvihill–Smith syndromeJohn J. Mulvihill, David Weyhe SmithMunchausen syndromeBaron MunchausenMunchausen syndrome by proxyBaron MunchausenMyhre–Riley–Smith syndromeS. Myhre, Harris D. Riley Jr. NNasu–Hakola diseaseT. Nasu, P. HakolaNon-Hodgkin's lymphomaThomas HodgkinNoonan syndromeJacqueline Noonan OOpitz–Kaveggia syndromeJohn M. Opitz, Elisabeth G. KaveggiaOrmond's diseaseJohn Kelso OrmondOsgood–Schlatter diseaseRobert Bayley Osgood, Carl B. SchlatterOsler–Weber–Rendu syndromeWilliam Osler, Frederick Parkes Weber, Henri Jules Louis Marie RenduOthello SyndromePPaget's disease of bone (a.k.a. Paget's disease) – James PagetPaget's disease of the breast (a.k.a. Paget's disease of the nipple) – James PagetPaget's disease of the penisJames PagetPaget's disease of the vulvaJames PagetPaget–Schroetter disease (a.k.a. Paget–Schroetter syndrome and Paget–von Schrötter disease) – James Paget, Leopold von SchrötterParkinson's diseaseJames ParkinsonPatau syndromeKlaus PatauPearson syndromeHoward PearsonPelizaeus–Merzbacher diseaseFriedrich Christoph Pelizaeus, Ludwig MerzbacherPendred syndromeVaughan Pendred, a British doctor (1869–1946) • Perlman syndromeMax PerlmanPerthes syndromeArthur Legg, Jacques Calvé, Georg PerthesPeutz–Jeghers syndromeJan Peutz, Harold JeghersPeyronie's diseaseFrançois Gigot de la PeyroniePfaundler–Hurler syndromeMeinhard von Pfaundler, Gertrud HurlerPick's diseaseArnold PickPickardt syndromeRenate PickardtPlummer's diseaseHenry Stanley PlummerPlummer–Vinson syndrome (a.k.a. Kelly–Patterson syndrome, Paterson–Brown–Kelly syndrome, and Waldenstrom–Kjellberg syndrome) – Henry Stanley Plummer and Porter Paisley VinsonPlyushkin syndrome (a.k.a. Diogenes syndrome, Havisham syndrome, and Miss Havisham syndrome)– Stepan Plyushkin, a fictional character in Nikolai Gogol's Dead SoulsPoland's syndromeAlfred PolandPompe's diseaseJohann Cassianius PompePott's diseasePercivall PottPott's puffy tumorPercivall PottPotocki–Lupski syndromeLorraine Potocki, James R. LupskiPotocki–Shaffer syndromeLorraine Potocki, Lisa G. ShafferPotter sequenceEdith PotterPrader–Willi syndromeAndrea Prader, Heinrich WilliPrasad's SyndromeAshok PrasadPrimrose syndromeD. A. PrimrosePrinzmetal anginaMyron PrinzmetalPurtilo syndrome (aka Duncan disease and Duncan syndrome) – David Theodore Purtilio QQuarelli syndromeG.QuarelliQuervain syndrome RRamsay Hunt syndromesJames Ramsay HuntRanke complexKarl Ernst RankeRaymond Céstan syndromeÉtienne Jacques Marie Raymond CéstanRaynaud diseaseMaurice RaynaudRefsum diseaseSigvald Bernhard RefsumReiter syndromeHans Conrad Julius Reiter (This is now a strongly discouraged eponym due to Dr. Reiter's Nazi party ties. The disease is now known as reactive arthritis.) • Rett syndromeAndreas RettReye syndromeDouglas ReyeRickettsiosisHoward Taylor RickettsRiddoch syndromeGeorge RiddochRiedel thyroiditisBernhard RiedelRiggs diseaseJohn M. Riggs (dentist)Riley–Day syndromeConrad Milton Riley, Richard Lawrence DayRiley–Smith syndromeHarris D. Riley Jr., William R. SmithRitter diseaseBaron Gottfried Ritter von RittershainRobles diseaseRodolfo RoblesRoger diseaseHenri Louis RogerRolandic epilepsyLuigi RolandoRomano–Ward syndromeRothmund–Thomson syndromeAugust von Rothmund, Matthew Sydney ThomsonRotor syndromeArturo Belleza RotorRubinstein–Taybi syndromeJack Herbert Rubinstein, Hooshang TaybiRussell–Silver syndromeAlexander Russell, Henry SilverRuvalcaba–Myhre syndromeRogelio H. A. Ruvalcaba, S. MyhreRuvalcaba–Myhre–Smith syndromeRogelio H. A. Ruvalcaba, S. Myhre, David Weyhe SmithRuzicka–Goerz–Anton syndromeT. Ruzicka, G. Goerz, I. Anton-Lamprecht SSaint's triadC. F. M. SaintSandhoff diseaseKonrad SandhoffSandifer syndromePaul SandiferSanjad-Sakati syndrome (a.k.a Sanjad–Sakati–Richardson–Kirk syndrome) – Sami A. Sanjad, Nadia Awni Sakati, Ricky J Richardson, Jeremy MW KirkSchamberg diseaseJay Frank SchambergScheie syndromeHarold Glendon ScheieScheuermann's diseaseHolger ScheuermannSchilder's diseasePaul Ferdinand SchilderSchinzel–Giedion syndromeAlbert Schinzel, Andreas GiedionSchnitzler syndromeLiliane SchnitzlerSeaver Cassidy syndromeLaurie Seaver, Suzanne CassidySeligmann's diseaseMaxime SeligmannSertoli–Leydig cell tumour - Enrico Sertoli, Franz Leydig a sex-cord stromal tumor, (aka arrhenoblastoma) • Sever's diseaseJ. W. SeverShabbir syndromeG. ShabbirSheehan's syndromeHarold Leeming SheehanShprintzen's syndromeRobert ShprintzenShwachman–Bodian–Diamond syndromeHarry Shwachman, Martin Bodian, Louis Klein DiamondSilver–Russell syndrome (a.k.a. Silver–Russell dwarfism) – Henry Silver, Alexander RussellSimmonds' syndromeMoritz SimmondsSipple's syndromeJohn H. SippleSjögren syndromeHenrik SjögrenSjögren–Larsson syndromeTorsten Sjögren, Tage Konrad Leopold LarssonSkumin syndromeVictor SkuminSmith–Lemli–Opitz syndromeDavid Weyhe SmithStargardt diseaseKarl StargardtSteele–Richardson–Olszewski syndrome – • Stein-Leventhal Syndrome - Irving F. Stein, Sr. and Michael L. Leventhal (Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, PCOS) • Stevens–Johnson syndromeAlbert Mason Stevens, Frank Chambliss JohnsonSturge–Weber syndromeWilliam Allen Sturge, Frederick Parkes WeberStill's disease – Sir George Frederic StillSusac's syndromeJohn SusacSutton's diseaseRichard Lightburn Sutton TTAN syndromeTan Aik KahTakayasu's arteritisMikito TakayasuTatton-Brown–Rahman syndromeKatrina Tatton-Brown, Nazneen RahmanTay–Sachs diseaseWarren Tay, Bernard SachsTheileriosis – Sir Arnold TheilerThomsen's diseaseJulius ThomsenTietz syndromeWalter TietzTietze syndromeAlexander TietzeTemple–Baraitser syndrome – Karin Temple and Michael Baraitser • Timothy syndrome - Katherine W. Timothy • Todd syndrome (a.k.a. Alice in Wonderland syndrome) – John Todd • Tourette syndromeGeorges Albert Édouard Brutus Gilles de la TouretteTreacher Collins syndromeEdward Treacher CollinsTurcot syndromeJacques TurcotTurner syndromeHenry Turner UUnverricht–Lundborg diseaseHeinrich Unverricht, Herman Bernhard LundborgUsher syndromeCharles Usher VValentino syndromeRudolph ValentinoVerner Morrison syndromeJ. V. Verner, A. B. MorrisonVincent's anginaHenri VincentVirchow's syndromeRudolf VirchowVogt–Koyanagi–Harada diseaseAlfred Vogt, Yoshizo Koyanagi, Einosuke HaradaVon Gierke's diseaseEdgar von GierkeVon Hippel–Lindau diseaseEugen von Hippel, Arvid Vilhelm LindauVon Recklinghausen's diseaseFriedrich Daniel von RecklinghausenVon Willebrand's diseaseErik Adolf von WillebrandVon Zumbusch (acute) generalized pustular psoriasis) – (a.k.a. Zumbusch psoriasis) Leo Ritter von ZumbuschVon Zumbusch syndrome (a.k.a. Csillag disease, Hallopeau disease, Zumbusch syndrome) – Leo Ritter von Zumbusch WWaardenburg syndromePetrus Johannes WaardenburgWaldenstrom–Kjellberg syndromeJan G. Waldenström, S. R. KjellbergWaldenstrom macroglobulinaemiaJan G. WaldenströmWarkany syndrome 1Joseph WarkanyWarkany syndrome 2Joseph WarkanyWarthin's tumorAldred Scott WarthinWaterhouse–Friderichsen syndromeRupert Waterhouse, Carl FriderichsenWatson syndromeG.H.WatsonWeber–Christian diseaseFrederick Parkes Weber, Henry Asbury Christian • Wegener's granulomatosis – Friedrich Wegener (This usage is now formally discouraged by professional medical societies due to the Nazi associations of the eponymous physician. The disease is now known as granulomatosis with polyangiitis.) • Weil's diseaseAdolf WeilWelander distal myopathyLisa WelanderWells syndromeGeorge Crichton WellsWellens' syndromeHein WellensWerdnig–Hoffmann diseaseGuido Werdnig, Johann HoffmannWermer's syndromePaul WermerWerner's syndromeOtto WernerWernicke's AphasiaCarl WernickeWernicke's encephalopathyCarl WernickeWernicke–Korsakoff syndromeCarl Wernicke, Sergei KorsakoffWesterhof syndromeWiete WesterhofWesterhof–Beemer–Cormane syndromeWiete Westerhof, Frederikus Antonius Beemer, R. H.CormaneWhipple's diseaseGeorge Hoyt WhippleWilliams syndromeJ. C. P. WilliamsWilms tumorMax WilmsWilson's diseaseSamuel Alexander Kinnier WilsonWillis–Ekbom syndromeThomas Willis, Karl-Axel EkbomWiskott–Aldrich syndromeAlfred Wiskott, Robert AldrichWittmaack–Ekbom syndromeTheodur Wittmaack, Karl-Axel EkbomWohlfart–Kugelberg–Welander diseaseKarl Gunnar Vilhelm Wohlfart, Erik Klas Henrik Kugelberg, Lisa WelanderWolff–Parkinson–White syndromeLouis Wolff, John Parkinson, Paul Dudley WhiteWolman diseaseMoshe Wolman X YYesudian syndromePaul Yesudian ZZahorsky syndrome IJohn ZahorskyZahorsky syndrome II (a.k.a. Mikulicz' Aphthae, Mikulicz' Disease, Sutton disease 2, Mikulicz' Aphthae, Zahorsky disease) – John ZahorskyZellweger syndromeHans Ulrich ZellwegerZenker diverticulumFriedrich Albert von ZenkerZenker paralysisFriedrich Albert von ZenkerZieve syndromeLeslie ZieveZimmermann–Laband syndrome (a.k.a. Laband syndrome, Laband–Zimmermann syndrome) – Karl Wilhelm ZimmermannZollinger–Ellison syndromeRobert Zollinger, Edwin EllisonZondek–Bromberg–Rozin syndrome (a.k.a. Zondek syndrome) – Bernhard Zondek, Yehuda M. Bromberg, R.RozinZuelzer syndromeWolf William ZuelzerZuelzer–Kaplan syndrome II (a.k.a. Crosby syndrome) – Wolf William Zuelzer, E. KaplanZuelzer–Ogden syndromeWolf William Zuelzer, Frank Nevin OgdenZumbusch psoriasis (a.k.a. von Zumbusch (acute) generalized pustular psoriasis) – Leo Ritter von ZumbuschZumbusch syndrome (a.k.a. Csillag disease, Hallopeau disease, von Zumbusch syndrome) – Leo Ritter von Zumbusch ==See also==
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