Diseases may be classified by cause,
pathogenesis (
mechanism by which the disease progresses), or by
symptom(s). Alternatively, diseases may be classified according to the
organ system involved, though this is often complicated since many diseases affect more than one organ. Traditionally diseases were defined as
syndromes by their symptoms. When more information is available, they are also defined by the damage they produce. When cause is known, they are better defined by their cause, though still important are their characteristics. This leads to a branching differentiation in which a clinical syndrome (pattern of signs and symptoms) can come to be understood as a nonspecific finding shared by a group of
disease entities or
endotypes. For example, concepts such as
murrain and
the grippe that were formerly undifferentiable to humans and thus understood as a single disease later can be logically unraveled as separate diseases with similar
clinical presentations. Thus, nosology is dynamic, reclassifying as science advances. The advent of
molecular biology brought a further reclassification potential with the concept of molecularly defined diseases, defined by their molecular characteristics. This concept was introduced in 1949, with the seminal paper, "
Sickle Cell Anemia, a Molecular Disease", in
Science magazine,
Linus Pauling,
Harvey Itano and their collaborators laid the groundwork for establishing the field of molecular medicine. Molecular medicine, in concert with genetics and genomics as aspects of molecular biology, provided new instances of the theme that clinical presentations that humans formerly interpreted as a single disease can be subclassified into a group of disease entities or endotypes. For example, many
OMIM database entries show the pattern of disease name XYZ with types identified as XYZ1 (involving sequence variants in gene A), XYZ2 (involving sequence variants in gene B), XYZ3 (involving sequence variants in gene C), XYZ4 (involving sequence variants in both genes B and C), and so on. ==Coding systems==