Idiopathic
is an adjective used primarily in
medicine meaning
arising spontaneously
or
from an obscure or unknown cause
. From
Greek
???????????, idios (one's own) + ??????????, pathos (suffering), it means approximately "a
disease of its own kind". It is technically a term from
nosology, the classification of disease. For some medical conditions, one or more causes are somewhat understood, but in a certain percentage of people with the condition, the cause may not be readily apparent or characterized. In these cases, the origin of the condition is said to be idiopathic.
With some medical conditions, the medical community cannot establish a root cause for a large percentage of all cases (for example,
focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, the majority of which are idiopathic); As medical and scientific advances are made with relation to a particular condition or disease, more root causes are discovered, and the percentage of cases designated as
idiopathic
shrinks.
In his book
The Human Body
,
Isaac Asimov noted a comment about the term
idiopathic
made in the 20th edition of
Stedman's Medical Dictionary: "A high-flown term to conceal ignorance". Similarly, in the American television show
House
, the title character, Dr.
Gregory House, remarks that the word "comes from the
Latin, meaning 'we're idiots, because we don't know what's causing it.
-
Idiosyncratic drug reaction