DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS: Hyperglycemia

Authors

Correspondents

Affiliation of Authors

The road to a correct diagnosis of disease relies heavily on the ability to consider all possibilities and to progress methodically in ruling them out to arrive at the correct diagnosis. Nothing is more distressing to a patient than a doctor who vigorously treats him or her on the premise of a wrong diagnosis. It is imperative that a doctor learns the art of correct clinical diagnosis; everything else depends on this.

Hyperglycemia is a derangement of the metabolic processes that regulate glucose in the body. It may be present in several disease conditions some of which are listed below.

Surgical Procedure – Complication

Cirrhosis/post small-bowel bypass

Infections  Amebiasis/Endameba histiolytica Arthritis, pyogenic/septic Bacterial endocarditis, subacute Hepatitis

Hepatitis B

Hepatitis C virus (non-A, non-B)

Immune deficiency, acquired (AIDS/HIV) Infectious mononucleosis

Lyme disease Meningitis, aseptic/viral Meningitis/bacterial

Pneumonia, pneumococcal Syphilis

Trichinosis Tuberculosis Typhoid fever

Actinomycosis, thoracic Actinomycosis/Actinomycosis bovis Amebic abscess (ameboma)/colon Amebic abscess, liver

Arthritis, tuberculous Aspergillosis Bacteroides infection Bartonellosis Blastomycosis Brucellosis

Cirrhosis, syphilitic (Hepar lobatum) Coccidioidomycosis

Hepatic brucellosis

Hepatitis B vasculitis syndrome Hepatitis E virus Histoplasmosis Histoplasmosis, hepatic

Hookworm (Ancylostomiasis) disease Leishmaniasis/kala-azar

Leprosy,

Leprous orchitis Leptospirosis/severe (Weils) type Lyme arthritis Lymphogranuloma venereum Measles (rubeola)

Pelvic actinomycosis Plasmodium falciparum malaria Psoas cold abscess/Tuberculous Relapsing fever (Borrelia) Rickettsial disease

Rubella, congenital

Sleeping sickness/trypanosomiasis Sprue, tropical

Strongyloides stercoralis Toxoplasmosis Trichuriasis

Tuberculosis

Visceral larval migrans Whipples disease Yersinia arthritis

Actinomycosis, abdominal Arthritis, fungal

Malaria

Infectious abscesses Sepsis

Septicemia

Inflammation, acute or chronic Sarcoidosis

Scroll to Top