Medical Misquotes
Hepatic cirrhosis
Alfredo Pinzón-Junca • Bogotá, D.C. (Colombia)
Dr. Alfredo Pinzón-Junca: Especialista en Medicina Interna y Psicoanálisis. Hospital Universitario de La Samaritana y Hospital Simón Bolívar. Coordinador del Consejo de Acreditación y Recertificación de la ACMI®. Bogotá, D.C. (Colombia).
E-mail: alfpin@hotmail.com
Received: 17/IX//2019 Accepted: 19/IX/2019
* Envíe sus inquietudes, sugerencias o comentarios a: contacto@actamedicacolombiana.com - alfpin@hotmail.com
DOI: https://doi.org/10.36104/amc.2019.1637
Medical language seeks clarity and precision in its terms to avoid confusion and ambiguity. However, sometimes tradition perpetuates some expressions which could currently be considered inappropriate. This is the case of the syntagm hepatic cirrhosis.
Cirrhosis: (From the scientific Latin cirrhosis, and this from the Greek 'dark orange' +
'pathologic process'; coined by Laënnec in 1805):
Hepatic, ca: (From the Latin hepaticus, and this from the Greek 'related to the liver', derived from
'liver'):
Consequently, the word cirrhosis applies to any affectation or scarring of parenchymal organs such as the liver, kidney and lung. However, tacitly, medical terminology has reserved this term exclusively for disease of the first organ, which is why most people consider hepatic cirrhosis to be a redundancy, and prefer instead to clarify its possible type or etiology through expressions such as alcoholic cirrhosis, autoimmune cirrhosis, biliary cirrhosis, postviral cirrhosis, etc.
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