Subacute Stroke in a Young Female: A Case of Moyamoya Syndrome Initially Anchoring with Anxiety, 2019, Chaughtai et al

Discussion in 'Other health news and research' started by Andy, Jan 4, 2020.

  1. Andy

    Andy Committee Member

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    Open access, https://www.hindawi.com/journals/crim/2019/7919568/
     
  2. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    Thanks to the authors for helping to make medical professionals less likely to write off people with this condition as just being anxious.

    It's a shame when being concerned enough about symptoms of impaired concentration and fatigue to consult a doctor is so readily seen as evidence of the symptom of 'anxiety'. And having the symptom 'anxiety' and no immediately obvious physical issues is enough for an explanatory diagnosis of 'Anxiety'.
     
  3. rvallee

    rvallee Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Rather suggesting that the reliability of what are considered psychiatric symptoms is essentially a crapshoot. "Diagnosed with anxiety" says a lot. There is no such thing as a diagnosis of anxiety, it's a vague symptom, there is no test for it and it has a vague nonspecific description, which usually bothers physicians but somehow here doesn't. It's never more than a possible option and as this case makes clear, is often made off-hand with zero effort and only as a means to disappear a "difficult" patient.

    Really revealing that the entire specialty is just a big mess, like that drawer in everyone's kitchen that is just a mix of random things that don't fit anywhere else. Maybe at the extremes, but this fad of pathologizing small superficial changes in behavior as absolutely being 100% guaranteed to be psychogenic is just about the most idiotic thing medicine has done since, well, doing exactly that many times before. Always the same assumptions and beliefs, always failure.

    Way past time to examine unhelpful beliefs about illness in the medical profession. This thing is out of control.
     
    Invisible Woman likes this.

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