General medicine In medicine, a broad definition of syndrome is used, which describes a collection of symptoms and findings without necessarily tying them to a single identifiable pathogenesis. Examples of infectious syndromes include
encephalitis and
hepatitis, which can both have several different infectious causes. The more specific definition employed in
medical genetics describes a subset of all medical syndromes.
History Early texts by physicians noted the symptoms of various maladies and introduced diagnoses based upon those symptoms. For example,
Avicenna's
The Canon of Medicine (1025) describes diagnosing
pleurisy by its symptoms, including chronic fever, cough, shooting pains, and labored breathing. The 17th century doctor
Thomas Sydenham likewise approached diagnoses based upon collections of symptoms.
Psychiatry and psychopathology Psychiatric syndromes often called
psychopathological syndromes (
psychopathology refers both to psychic dysfunctions occurring in
mental disorders, and the study of the origin, diagnosis, development, and treatment of mental disorders). In
Russia those psychopathological syndromes are used in modern clinical practice and described in psychiatric literature in the details:
asthenic syndrome,
obsessive syndrome,
emotional syndromes (for example,
manic syndrome, depressive syndrome),
Cotard's syndrome,
catatonic syndrome, hebephrenic syndrome,
delusional and
hallucinatory syndromes (for example, paranoid syndrome, paranoid-hallucinatory syndrome,
Kandinsky-
Clérambault's syndrome also known as syndrome of psychic automatism, hallucinosis),
paraphrenic syndrome,
psychopathic syndromes (includes all personality disorders),
clouding of consciousness syndromes (for example, twilight clouding of consciousness, amential syndrome also known as amentia,
delirious syndrome, stunned consciousness syndrome,
oneiroid syndrome), hysteric syndrome,
neurotic syndrome,
Korsakoff's syndrome,
hypochondriacal syndrome, paranoiac syndrome, senestopathic syndrome,
encephalopathic syndrome. Some examples of psychopathological syndromes used in modern Germany are
psychoorganic syndrome, depressive syndrome, paranoid-hallucinatory syndrome,
obsessive-compulsive syndrome, autonomic syndrome, hostility syndrome,
manic syndrome,
apathy syndrome.
Münchausen syndrome,
Ganser syndrome,
neuroleptic-induced deficit syndrome,
olfactory reference syndrome are also well-known.
History The most important psychopathological syndromes were classified into three groups ranked in order of severity by German psychiatrist
Emil Kraepelin (1856—1926). The first group, which includes the mild disorders, consists of five syndromes: emotional, paranoid,
hysterical,
delirious, and impulsive. The second, intermediate, group includes two syndromes:
schizophrenic syndrome and
speech-hallucinatory syndrome.
Medical genetics In the field of medical genetics, the term "syndrome" is traditionally only used when the underlying genetic cause is known. Thus,
trisomy 21 is commonly known as Down syndrome. Until 2005,
CHARGE syndrome was most frequently referred to as "CHARGE association". When the major causative gene (
CHD7) for the condition was discovered, the name was changed. The consensus underlying cause of
VACTERL association has not been determined, and thus it is not commonly referred to as a "syndrome".
Other fields In biology, "syndrome" is used in a more general sense to describe characteristic sets of features in various contexts. Examples include
behavioral syndromes, as well as
pollination syndromes and
seed dispersal syndromes. In orbital mechanics and astronomy,
Kessler syndrome refers to the effect where the density of objects in
low Earth orbit (LEO) is high enough that collisions between objects could cause a cascade in which each collision generates
space debris that increases the likelihood of further collisions. In
quantum error correction theory syndromes correspond to errors in code words which are determined with syndrome measurements, which only collapse the state on an error state, so that the error can be corrected without affecting the quantum information stored in the code words. ==Naming==