List of medical symptoms
Medical symptoms are complaints which indicate disease. They are noticed by the patient and cause people to go and see a health practitioner. It is rare that a person would visit a doctor and complain as follows: "Doctor, I have amaurosis fugax." They are more likely to complain of loss of vision. This list is not exhaustive but might be useful as a guide.
Symptoms by presentation
Pain
- Abdominal pain
- Back pain
- Chest pain
- Otalgia (Earache)
- Headache
- Chronic pelvic pain
- Toothache (ache)
- Vaginal (Pain)
- Rectal pain
- Dermatomal pain...Dermatome (anatomy)...and note the chart about all-important referred pain
I feel:
- Chills
- Fever
- Paresthesia (numbness, tingling, electric tweaks)
- Light-headed
- Dizzy
- My mouth is dry
- Nauseated
- Sick
- Short of breath
- Sleepy
- Sweaty
- Thirsty
- Tired
- Weak
I can't:
- Breathe normally
- Hear normally:
- Move one side – arm and/or leg
- Pass a bowel action normally
- Pass urine normally
- Remember normally
- See properly:
- Sleep normally
- Smell things normally
- Speak normally
- Stop passing watery bowel actions
- Stop scratching
- Stop sweating
- Swallow normally
- Taste properly
- Walk normally
- Write normally
Medical symptoms
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Where available, ICD-10 codes are listed. When codes are available both as a sign/symptom (R code) and as an underlying condition, the code for the sign is used.
See also
- List of ICD-9 codes 780-799: Symptoms, signs, and ill-defined conditions
- ICD-10 Chapter R: Symptoms, signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.