Computer diagnosis of skin disease

A transferable computer program for the differential diagnosis of diseases of the skin, CLINDERM, has been produced for use by physicians on standard IBM and compatible personal microcomputers. This program lists the differential diagnosis and definitive diagnosis of any presented disease of the ski...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Journal of family practice Vol. 30; no. 2; p. 201
Main Authors Potter, B, Ronan, S G
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.02.1990
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Summary:A transferable computer program for the differential diagnosis of diseases of the skin, CLINDERM, has been produced for use by physicians on standard IBM and compatible personal microcomputers. This program lists the differential diagnosis and definitive diagnosis of any presented disease of the skin, except single tumors. The physician operator indicates the distribution and detailed description of lesions, which the interactive system integrates with a comprehensive knowledge base. The computer diagnosis in 129 cases was compared with independent interpretation of the same information by an academic dermatologist. Results were synonymous in 66.7% of all diseases and similar in an additional 4.7%. A common differential diagnosis was obtained in 24%, for a 95.3% rate of synonymous, similar, or common differential diagnoses. Diagnosis was different in 3.9% and description was inadequate for diagnosis in 0.8%. The variation in diagnosis showed that some descriptive terms are prejudicial of certain diagnoses; that diagnostic terms are not all completely standardized; that some diagnoses are variants of another disease; and that drug-induced eruptions simulate many other diseases. A skin disease can usually be diagnosed by specific description. Most lesions that are not diagnostic from inspection are nodular. A computer can be programmed to list diagnoses according to morphologic description.
ISSN:0094-3509