Thursday, June 14, 2007

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

SEE THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

Signs are what a doctor sees,
symptoms are what you experience.
 
 
Did you know that 90 - 95% of a doctor's diagnosis will
come from what you say? Yep! If you do not give the
doctor all of your symptoms and history then you are
asking him or her to diagnose you based on
 insufficient information. Whenever you go to the
doctor, he or she will take a patient history using
 a mneumonic called, "OPPQRST." Every doctor
 on the planet follows this mneumonic. This
 translates into: Objective, Palliative, Provocative,
Quality, Radiating, Subjective and Timing.
  • ONSET: When did it start?
  • PALLIATIVE: What relieves your symptoms?
  • PROVOCATIVE: What provokes your symptoms?
  • QUALITY: How would you describe the symptoms?
  •  Sharp? stabbing?, sore? uncomfortable? nausea
  •  achy? throbbing? ripping? tearing?
  • RADIATING: Do the symptoms or pain radiate to another area of your body?
  • SEVERITY: On a scale of 1 - 10, how would you rate your pain or discomfort?
  • TIMING: How often do the symptoms occur?
Typically with chest pain, the additional LMN are added to the mneumonic which means: Last, Movement and Notable Symptoms.
  • LAST: When was the last episode?
  • MOVEMENT: What activities could you do before you first felt chest pain and what activities can you do now?
  • NOTABLE SYMPTOMS: What other symptoms do you have with your chest pain?
 
 
Here are just a few things that will automatically pop into a doctor's head when you give the following symptoms. The doctor will then perform various orthopedic, laboratory or imaging tests on you to confirm or deny his or her suspicions:
Please keep in mind there are many other conditions, diseases, syndromes and illnesses that your doctor may be thinking depending on what you stated in your patient history.





 
 

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