Symptomatic treatment
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Symptomatic treatment is any medical therapy of a disease that only affects its symptoms, not its cause, i.e., its etiology. It is usually aimed at reducing the symptoms and signs for the comfort and well-being of the patient, but it also may be useful in reducing organic consequences and sequelae of these symptoms and signs of the disease. In many diseases, even in those that its etiology is known (e.g., most viral diseases, such as influenza), symptomatic treatment is the only one available so far.
Examples of asymptomatic treatments:
- Analgesics, for pain
- Fluid replacement therapy, for dehydration or body fluid loss (hypovolemia)
- Anti-inflammatory agents, for inflammation
- Antitussives, for cough
- Antihistaminics, for allergy
- Brain shunts, to alleviate hydrocephalus
Symptomatic treatment is not always recommended, and in fact it may be outright dangerous, because it may mask the presence of an underlying etiology which will then be forgotten or treated with great delay. Examples:
- Low-grade fever for 15 days or more sometimes is the only symptom of bacteremia by staphylococcus bacteria. Suppressing it by symptomatic treatment will hide the disease from effective diagnosis and treament with antibiotics. The consequence may be severe (rheumatic fever, nephritis, endocarditis, etc.)
- Chronic headache may be caused simply by a constitutional disposition or be the result of a brain tumor or a brain aneurysm.
See also
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