• Am. J. Med. · Oct 2015

    Review

    Medically unexplained neurologic symptoms: a primer for physicians who make the initial encounter.

    • Ashley Evens, Lindsay Vendetta, Kaitlin Krebs, and Priyantha Herath.
    • School of Medicine, University of South Carolina, Columbia.
    • Am. J. Med. 2015 Oct 1; 128 (10): 1059-64.

    AbstractMedically unexplained symptoms are ubiquitous in clinical practice. Medical use costs of medically unexplained symptoms are projected at approximately $256 billion per year. When initially seen, these symptoms are often baffling, not only to the patients but also to the physicians who encounter them. Because of this, properly diagnosing them is seen generally as difficult at best, leading to massive overuse of unnecessary testing. Subsequently, their management can be cumbersome. All this burdens the patients with unnecessary costs, financially and emotionally. This primer discusses historical perspectives of these and the changing nomenclature, and outlines how to think about these complex symptoms and neurologic findings that will enable a positive diagnosis rather than a diagnosis of exclusion. We also offer useful heuristic principles of their management so that physician-patient relationships can be better maintained and the quality of life of these patients can be improved by way of some simple, economic approaches. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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