Asymptomatic

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Pulmonary contusion due to trauma is an example of a condition that can be asymptomatic with half of people showing no signs at the initial presentation. The CT scan shows a pulmonary contusion (red arrow) accompanied by a rib fracture (purple arrow).

Asymptomatic (or clinically silent) is an adjective categorising the medical conditions (i.e.,

injuries or diseases) that patients carry but without experiencing their symptoms
, despite an explicit diagnosis (e.g., a positive medical test).

Pre-symptomatic is the adjective categorising the time periods during which the medical conditions are asymptomatic.

Subclinical and paucisymptomatic are other adjectives categorising either the asymptomatic infections (i.e., subclinical infections), or the psychosomatic illnesses and mental disorders expressing a subset of symptoms but not the entire set an explicit medical diagnosis requires.

Examples

An example of an asymptomatic disease is

incidental findings) while treating other diseases.[2]

Importance

Knowing that a condition is asymptomatic is important because:

Mental health

Subclinical or subthreshold conditions are those for which the full diagnostic criteria are not met and have not been met in the past, although symptoms are present. This can mean that symptoms are not severe enough to merit a diagnosis,[6] or that symptoms are severe but do not meet the criteria of a condition.[7]

List

These are conditions for which there is a sufficient number of documented individuals that are asymptomatic that it is clinically noted. For a complete list of asymptomatic infections see subclinical infection.

Millions of women reported lack of symptoms during pregnancy until the point of childbirth or the beginning of labor; they didn't know they were pregnant. This phenomenon is known as cryptic pregnancies.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Vinson, B. (2012). Language Disorders Across the Lifespan. p. 94. Clifton Park, NY: Delmar
  2. S2CID 21581253
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  7. OCLC 830807378.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link
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  8. ^ "What is a Cryptic Pregnancy?". 10 September 2019.