{{Short description|Diseases named after a person}} An '''eponymous disease''' is a disease, disorder, condition, or syndrome named after a person, usually the physician or other health care professional who first identified the disease; less commonly, a patient who had the disease; rarely, a literary or theatrical character who exhibited signs of the disease or the subject of an allusion, as its characteristics were suggestive of symptoms observed in the disorder.{{TOC right}}

==Naming systems== Eponyms are a longstanding tradition in Western science and medicine. Being awarded an eponym is regarded as an honor: "Eponymity, not anonymity, is the standard."<ref>Merton R K, 1973</ref> The scientific and medical communities regard it as bad form to attempt to form eponyms after oneself.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Gordon |first1=BL |title=Current medical information and terminology |date=1971 |publisher=Chicago |edition=4th}}</ref>

Ideally, to discuss something, it should have a name. When medicine lacked diagnostic tools to investigate and definitively pinpoint the underlying causes of most diseases, assigning an eponym afforded physicians a concise label for a symptom cluster versus cataloguing the multiple systemic features that characterized a patient’s illness.

Most commonly, diseases are named for the person, usually a physician, but occasionally another health care professional, who first described the condition—typically by publishing an article in a respected medical journal. Less frequently, an eponymous disease is named after a patient, examples being Lou Gehrig disease, Christmas disease, and Hartnup disease. In the instance of Machado–Joseph disease, the eponym is derived from the surnames of two families in which the condition was initially described. Examples of eponyms named for persons who displayed characteristics attributed to a syndrome include: Lazarus syndrome, named for a biblical character; and Miss Havisham syndrome, named for a Dickens character, and Plyushkin syndrome, named for a Gogol character, both fictional persons (the latter two also happen to be alternative names for the same symptom complex). Two eponymous disorders that follow none of the foregoing conventions are: Fregoli delusion, which derives its name from an actor whose character shifts mimicked the delusion it describes; and, Munchausen syndrome which derives from a literary allusion to Baron von Munchausen, whose personal habits were suggestive of the symptom cluster associated with it.

Disease naming conventions which reference place names (such as Bornholm disease, Lyme disease, and Ebola virus disease) are properly termed toponymic, although an NLM/NIH online publication described them as eponymic.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://medlineplus.gov/genetics/understanding/mutationsanddisorders/naming/|title = How are genetic conditions and genes named?: MedlinePlus Genetics}}</ref> Diseases named for animals with which they are associated, usually as a vector, are properly styled as zoonymic; cat scratch fever and monkeypox are examples. Those named for association with a particular occupation or trade, such as nun's knee, tennis elbow, and mad hatter's disease, are properly described as occupational diseases.

In May 2015, the World Health Organization, in collaboration with the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), released a statement on the Best Practices for the Naming of New Human Infectious Diseases "with the aim to minimize unnecessary negative impact of disease names on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare, and avoid causing offence to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional or ethnic groups."<ref name="WHO_HSE_FOS_15.1">{{cite report |last1=WHO |title=World Health Organization Best Practices for the Naming of New Human Infectious Diseases |url=https://www.who.int/topics/infectious_diseases/naming-new-diseases/en/ |date=15 May 2015 |pages=3 |ref=WHO_HSE_FOS_15.1 |publisher=World Health Organization |accessdate=26 October 2024}}</ref> These guidelines emerged in response to backlash against people and places, based on the vernacular names of infectious diseases such as Middle East respiratory syndrome, and the 2009 swine flu pandemic.<ref>{{cite web |last1=WHO |title=News News releases Statements Notes for the media Previous years Commentaries Events Fact sheets Fact files Questions & answers Features Multimedia Contacts WHO issues best practices for naming new human infectious diseases |url=https://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/notes/2015/naming-new-diseases/en/ |website=World Health Organization |accessdate=24 June 2020 |date=8 May 2015}}</ref> These naming conventions are not intended to replace the International Classification of Diseases, but rather, are guidelines for scientists, national authorities, the national and international media and other stakeholders who may be the first to discuss a disease publicly.

==Punctuation== In 1975, the Canadian National Institutes of Health held a conference that discussed the naming of diseases and conditions. This was reported in ''The Lancet'' where the conclusion was summarized as: "The possessive use of an eponym should be discontinued, since the author neither had nor owned the disorder."<ref name="pmid46972">{{cite journal |title=Classification and nomenclature of morphological defects |journal=Lancet |volume=1 |issue=7905 |page=513 |date=March 1975 |pmid=46972 |doi= 10.1016/S0140-6736(75)92847-0|s2cid=37636187 }}</ref> Medical journals, dictionaries and style guides remain divided on this issue. European journals tend towards continued possessive use, while US journals are largely discontinuing to do so.<ref>lo{{cite journal |title=Current use of medical eponyms—a need for global uniformity in scientific publications |vauthors=Jana N, Barik S, Arora N |journal=BMC Med Res Methodol |date=2009-03-09 |volume= 9 |page=18 |pmid=19272131 |pmc=2667526 |doi=10.1186/1471-2288-9-18 |doi-access=free }}</ref> Trends in possessive usage vary among countries, journals, diseases.<ref>{{cite journal |journal=PeerJ |date=16 April 2013 |volume=1|page=e67|doi=10.7717/peerj.67|title=Whose name is it anyway? Varying patterns of possessive usage in eponymous neurodegenerative diseases|vauthors=Macaskill MR, Anderson TJ |pmid=23646286 |pmc=3642700 |doi-access=free }}</ref>

The problem is that the possessive case received its misleading name for historical reasons and now even educated people, if they are not linguists, often make incorrect assumptions and decisions based on the name. Nevertheless, native speakers would neither accept the awkward construction "men department" as an alternative to "men's department" nor claim that the obligatory apostrophe in any way implies that men possess the department.

This case was termed the genitive until the 18th century and (like the genitive case in other languages) expresses much more than possession. For example, in the expressions "the school's headmaster" and "tomorrow's weather", the school does not own/possess the headmaster and tomorrow does not/will not own the weather. Disagreements about the use of possessive forms of nouns and of the apostrophe are due to the opinion that no apostrophe should be used, unless it is intended to express possession.<ref>{{cite web |author1=Neal Whitman |title=Possessives |url=https://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/possessives |website=quickanddirtytips.com |access-date=2017-06-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170616011924/https://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/possessives |archive-date=2017-06-16}}</ref>

Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage says:<ref>{{cite book |page=[https://archive.org/details/merriamwebstersd00merr/page/475 475] |title=Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage |url=https://archive.org/details/merriamwebstersd00merr |url-access=registration |year=1994 |publisher=Merriam-Webster |isbn=978-0-87779-132-4 }}</ref> {{blockquote|The argument is a case of fooling oneself with one's own terminology. After the 18th-century grammarians began to refer to the genitive case as the possessive case, grammarians and other commentators got it into their heads that the only use of the case was to show possession.... Simply changing the name of the genitive does not change or eliminate any of its multiple functions.}}

The dictionary also cites a study<ref>{{Cite book |title=American English Grammar: The Grammatical Structure of Present-day American English with Especial Reference to Social Differences Or Class Dialects |first=Charles Carpenter |last=Fries |url = https://archive.org/details/americanenglishg00frie |url-access=registration |year=1940 |publisher=Appleton-Century }} (not checked by editor)</ref> which found only 40% of possessive forms used to indicate actual possession.<ref>{{cite book |page=[https://archive.org/details/merriamwebstersd00merr/page/475 475] |title= Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage |url=https://archive.org/details/merriamwebstersd00merr |url-access=registration |year = 1994 |publisher= Merriam-Webster |isbn = 978-0-87779-132-4 |quote=The only statistical investigation of the genitive case that we are aware of can be found in Fries 1940. Fries found that the possessive genitive was the most common, but that it accounted for only 40 percent of all genitives.}}</ref>

== Autoeponym == <!-- Anchor from redirect [Autoeponym]; caution. --> Associating an individual's name with a disease merely based on describing it confers only an eponymic; the individual must have been either affected by the disease or have died from it for the name to be termed auto-eponymic. Thus, an 'auto-eponym' is a medical condition named in honor of: a physician or other health care professional who was affected by or died as a result of the disease which he had described or identified; or, a patient, who was not a health care professional, but suffered from or died as a result of the disease.<ref>{{cite book | last=Segen| first=J. C.| title=The dictionary of modern medicine| year=1992| publisher=Taylor & Francis| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FbSlyyshjOoC&q=autoeponym+| isbn=9781850703211}}</ref> Auto-eponyms may use either the possessive or non-possessive form, with the preference to use the non-possessive form for a disease named for a physician or health care professional who first described it and the possessive form in cases of a disease named for a patient (commonly, but not always, the first patient) in whom the particular disease was identified.<ref name=MTStars>{{cite web | title=For eponyms, AAMT advocates dropping the possessive form| url=http://www.mtstars.com/word-For-eponyms-AAMT-advocates-dropping-the-possessive-form--7011.html| publisher=MTStars| accessdate=23 July 2011}}</ref> Autoeponyms listed in this entry conform to those conventions with regard to possessive and non-possessive forms.

Examples of autoeponyms include: * Rickettsiosis: in 1906, Howard Taylor Ricketts discovered that the bacteria that causes Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever is carried by a tick. He injected himself with the pathogen.<ref>{{cite book |author1=Weiss, Emilio |author2=Strauss, Bernard S. |year=1991 |chapter=The Life and Career of Howard Taylor Ricketts |title=Reviews of Infectious Diseases |volume=13 |pages=1241–2 |publisher=The University of Chicago}}</ref> * Thomsen's disease: an autosomal dominant myotonia of voluntary muscles described by Asmus Julius Thomas Thomsen about himself and his family members.<ref>{{Cite journal | author=Thomsen, Julius| title=Tonische Krämpfe in willkürlich beweglichen Muskeln in Folge von ererbter physischer Disposition (Ataxia muscularis?)|journal=Archiv für Psychiatrie und Nervenkrankheiten| location=Berlin| year=1875| volume=6| pages=702–718| doi=10.1007/bf02164912| s2cid=46151878| url=https://zenodo.org/record/1428396}}</ref> * Carrion disease: Peruvian medical student Daniel Alcides Carrión inoculated himself with ''Bartonella bacilliformis'' in 1885 to prove the link to this disease, characterized by "Oroya fever". * Lou Gehrig's disease: although Gehrig, a New York Yankees player of the early twentieth century, was not the first patient described as having amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, the association of such a prominent individual with the then little-known disease resulted in his name becoming eponymous with it.

==Continued Use of Eponyms== A current trend seeks to step away from use of eponymous disease names in favor of medical naming that focuses on causation or primary signs.<ref name="WHO_HSE_FOS_15.1"/>

Arguments for this movement include that:

* a national or ethnic bias may attach to the eponym chosen; * credit should have gone to a different person; * the same eponym may be applied to different diseases, causing confusion; * several eponyms refer to the same disease (e.g., ''amyloid degeneration'' is variously called ''Abercrombie disease'', ''Abercrombie syndrome'', and ''Virchow syndrome''); * an eponym may prove to be invalid (e.g., ''Laurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedl syndrome'', in which findings in the patients of Laurence and Moon were later found to differ from those of Bardet and Biedl). * an eponym would honor an individual who has been otherwise discredited. An example is ''Wegener's Granulomatosis''; it was renamed granulomatosis with polyangiitis due to Dr. Wegener's Nazi ties. * its referent varies by country (e.g., ''sideropenic dysphagia'' is ''Plummer–Vinson syndrome'' in the US and Australia, both ''Paterson–Kelly syndrome'' and ''Paterson–Brown-Kelly syndrome'' in the UK, and ''Waldenstrom–Kjellberg syndrome'' in Scandinavia).

Arguments for maintaining eponyms include that:{{citation needed|date=February 2014}} * an eponym may be shorter and more memorable than the medical name; * a medical name may prove to be incorrect; * a syndrome may have more than one cause, yet it remains useful to consider the totality of its features; * it continues to respect a person who may otherwise be forgotten.

==Alphabetical list== ===Explanation of listing sequence=== As described above, multiple eponyms can exist for the same disease. In these instances, each is listed individually (except as described in item 1 below), followed by an in-line parenthetical entry beginning 'aka' ('also known as') that lists all alternative eponyms. This facilitates the use of the list for a reader who knows a particular disease only by one of its eponyms, without the necessity of cross-linking entries.

It sometimes happens that an alternative eponym, if listed separately, would immediately alphabetically precede or succeed another eponymous entry for the same disease. One of three conventions have been applied to such cases:

:1. No separate entry appears for the alternative eponym. It is listed only in the parenthetical 'aka' entry (e.g., Aarskog syndrome appears only as a parenthetical 'aka' entry to Aarskog–Scott syndrome). :2. If eponymous names subsequent to the first are sequenced differently or the eponym is differentiated by another term (e.g., disease versus syndrome), alphabetical sequence dictates which is the linked version versus which is listed as the alternative (e.g., Abderhalden–Kaufmann–Lignac is the linked entry and Abderhalden–Lignac–Kaufmann is the parenthetical 'aka' alternative entry). :3. If the number of names included in two or more eponyms varies, the linked entry is the one which includes the most individual surnames (e.g., Alpers–Huttenlocher syndrome is the linked entry for the disease also known as Alpers disease or Alpers syndrome).

Some eponyms have an alternative entry that includes the name(s) of additional individuals. An example is Adams-Stokes syndrome; one of its alternative eponyms is Gerbec–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome. The entry for Adams-Stokes syndrome only names the two individuals (Adams and Stokes) whose names are associated with the entry as listed; a later, separate, entry for the alternative Gerbec–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome names all four of the individuals (Gerbec, Morgani, Adams, and Stokes) who are associated with the longer-named entry.

{{Compact TOC |side=no | name=no |center=yes| |a=A |b=B |c=C |d=D |e=E |f=F |g=G |h=H |i=I |j=J |k=K |l=L |m=M |n=N |o=O |p=P |q=Q |r=R |s=S |t=T |u=U |v=V |w=W |x=X |y=Y |z=Z }}

===A=== * Aarskog–Scott syndrome (aka Aarskog syndrome) – Dagfinn Aarskog, Charles I. Scott Jr. * Aase–Smith syndrome (aka Aase syndrome) – Jon Morton Aase, David Weyhe Smith * Abdallat–Davis–Farrage syndromeAdnan Al Abdallat, S.M. Davis, James Robert Farrage * Abderhalden–Kaufmann–Lignac syndrome (aka Abderhalden–Lignac–Kaufmann disease) – Emil Abderhalden, Eduard Kauffman, George Lignac * Abercrombie disease (aka Abercrombie syndrome) – John Abercrombie * Achard–Thiers syndromeEmile Achard, Joseph Thiers * Ackerman tumorLauren Ackerman * Adams–Oliver syndromeRobert Adams, William Oliver * Adams–Stokes syndrome (aka Gerbec–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome, Gerbezius–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome, Stokes–Adams syndrome) – Robert Adams, William Stokes * Addison diseaseThomas Addison * Adson–Caffey syndromeAlfred Washington Adson, I. R. Caffey * Aguecheek's diseaseSir Andrew Aguecheek, Shakespearean literary character * Ahumada–Del Castillo syndromeJuan Carlos Ahumada Sotomayor, Enrique Benjamin Del Castillo * Aicardi syndromeJean Aicardi * Aicardi–Goutières syndromeJean Aicardi, Francoise Goutieres * Alagille syndromeDaniel Alagille * Albers-Schönberg diseaseHeinrich Albers-Schönberg * Albright disease (aka Albright hereditary osteodystrophy, Albright syndrome, McCune–Albright syndrome) – Fuller Albright * Albright–Butler–Bloomberg diseaseFuller Albright, Allan Macy Butler, Esther Bloomberg * Albright–Hadorn syndromeFuller Albright, Walter Hadorn * Albright IV syndrome (aka Martin–Albright syndrome) – Fuller Albright * Alexander diseaseWilliam Stuart Alexander * Alibert–Bazin syndromeJean-Louis-Marc Alibert, Pierre-Antoine-Ernest Bazin * Alice in Wonderland syndrome (aka Todd syndrome) – Alice, literary character in works of Lewis Carroll * Alpers–Huttenlocher syndrome (aka Alpers disease, Alpers syndrome) – Bernard Jacob Alpers, Peter Huttenlocher * Alport syndromeArthur Cecil Alport * Alström syndromeCarl Henry Alström * Alvarez syndromeWalter C. Alvarez * Alzheimer diseaseAlois Alzheimer * Anders diseaseJames Meschter Anders * Andersen diseaseDorothy Hansine Andersen * Andersen–Tawil syndrome (aka Andersen syndrome) – Ellen Andersen, Al-Rabi Tawil * Anderson–Fabry diseaseWilliam Anderson, Johannes Fabry * Angelman syndromeHarry Angelman * Angelucci syndromeArnaldo Angelucci * Anton–Babinski syndrome (aka Anton syndrome) – Gabriel Anton, Joseph Babinski * Apert syndromeEugène Apert * Aran–Duchenne disease (aka Aran–Duchenne spinal muscular atrophy) – François-Amilcar Aran, Guillaume Duchenne * Arboleda-Tham SyndromeValerie A. Arboleda, Emma Tham * Arnold–Chiari malformationJulius Arnold, Hans Chiari * Asherman syndromeJoseph Asherman * Asperger syndrome (aka Asperger disorder) – Hans Asperger * Avellis syndromeGeorg Avellis * Ayerza–Arrillaga syndrome (aka Ayerza–Arrillaga disease, Ayerza disease, Ayerza syndrome) – Abel Ayerza, Francisco Arrillaga

===B=== * Baastrup diseaseChristian Ingerslev Baastrup * BabesiosisVictor Babeș * Babington diseaseBenjamin Babington * Babinski–Fröhlich syndromeJoseph Babinski, Alfred Fröhlich * Babinski–Froment syndromeJoseph Babinski, Jules Froment * Babinski–Nageotte syndromeJoseph Babinski, Jean Nageotte * Baker cystWilliam Morrant Baker * Baller–Gerold syndromeFriedrich Baller, M Gerold * Balo concentric sclerosis (aka Balo disease) – József Mátyás Baló * Bamberger diseaseHeinrich von Bamberger * Bamberger–Marie diseaseEugen von Bamberger, Pierre Marie * Bamforth–Lazarus syndromeJ Steven Bamforth, John Lazarus * Bancroft filariasisJoseph Bancroft * Bang diseaseBernhard Bang * Bankart lesionArthur Sidney Blundell Bankart * Bannayan–Riley–Ruvalcaba syndromeGeorge A. Bannayan, Harris D. Riley Jr., Rogelio H. A. Ruvalcaba * Bannayan–Zonana syndromeGeorge A. Bannayan, Jonathan X. Zonana * Banti syndromeGuido Banti * Bárány syndromeRobert Bárány * Bardet–Biedl syndrome (formerly, aka Laurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedl syndrome, a construct now deemed invalid. For fuller explanation, see ''Laurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedl syndrome'') – Georges Bardet, Arthur Biedl * Barlow diseaseThomas Barlow * Barlow syndromeJohn Barlow * Barraquer–Simons syndromeLuis Barraquer Roviralta, Arthur Simons * Barré–Liéou syndromeJean Alexandre Barré, Yang-Choen Liéou * Barrett ulcerNorman Barrett * Bart–Pumphrey syndromeR. S. Bart, R. E. Pumphrey * Barth syndromePeter Barth * Bartholin cystCaspar Bartholin * Bartter syndromeFrederic Bartter * Basedow comaKarl Adolph von Basedow * Basedow disease (aka Basedow syndrome, Begbie disease, Flajan disease, Flajani–Basedow syndrome, Graves disease, Graves–Basedow disease, Marsh disease, Morbus Basedow) – Karl Adolph von Basedow * Basedow ocular syndromeKarl Adolph von Basedow * Bassen–Kornzweig syndromeFrank Bassen, Abraham Kornzweig * Batten diseaseFrederick Batten * Bazin diseasePierre-Antoine-Ernest Bazin * Becker muscular dystrophyPeter Emil Becker * Beckwith–Wiedemann syndromeJohn Bruce Beckwith, Hans-Rudolf Wiedemann * Behçet diseaseHulusi Behçet * Bekhterev diseaseVladimir Bekhterev * Bell palsyCharles Bell * Benedikt syndromeMoritz Benedikt * Benjamin syndromeErich Benjamin * Berardinelli–Seip congenital lipodystrophyWaldemar Berardinelli, Martin Seip * Berdon syndromeWalter Berdon * Berger diseaseJean Berger * Bergeron diseaseEtienne-Jules Bergeron * Bernard–Horner syndrome (aka Horner syndrome) – Claude Bernard, Johann Friedrich Horner * Bernard–Soulier syndromeJean Bernard, Jean Pierre Soulier * Bernhardt–Roth paraesthesiaMartin Bernhardt, Vladimir Karlovich Roth * Bernheim syndromeP. I. Bernheim * Besnier prurigoErnest Henri Besnier * Besnier–Boeck–Schaumann diseaseErnest Henri Besnier, Cæsar Peter Møller Boeck, Jörgen Nilsen Schaumann * Biermer anaemiaMichael Anton Biermer * Bietti crystalline dystrophyG. Bietti * Bickerstaff brainstem encephalitisEdwin Bickerstaff * BilharziaTheodor Maximilian Bilharz * Binder syndromeK.H. Binder * Bing–Horton syndromePaul Robert Bing, Bayard Taylor Horton * Bing–Neel syndromeJens Bing, Axel Valdemar Neel * Binswanger dementiaOtto Binswanger * Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndromeArthur Birt, Georgina Hogg, William Dubé * Bland–White–Garland syndromeEdward Franklin Bland, Paul Dudley White, Joseph Garland * Bloch–Sulzberger syndromeBruno Bloch, Marion Baldur Sulzberger * Blocq disease (aka Blocq syndrome) – Paul Blocq * Bloom syndromeDavid Bloom * Blount syndromeWalter Putnam Blount * Boerhaave syndromeHerman Boerhaave * Bogorad syndromeF.A. Bogorad * Bonnevie–Ullrich syndromeKristine Bonnevie, Otto Ullrich * Bourneville–Pringle diseaseDésiré-Magloire Bourneville, John James Pringle * Bowen diseaseJohn T. Bowen * Brachman de Lange syndromeWinfried Robert Clemens Brachmann, Cornelia Catharina de Lange * Brailsford–Morquio syndromeJames Frederick Brailsford, Luís Morquio * Brandt syndromeThore Edvard Brandt * Brenner tumourFritz Brenner * Brewer kidneyGeorge Emerson Brewer * Bright diseaseRichard Bright * Brill–Symmers diseaseNathan Brill, Douglas Symmers * Brill–Zinsser diseaseNathan Brill, Hans Zinsser * Briquet syndromePaul Briquet * Brissaud diseaseÉdouard Brissaud * Brissaud–Sicard syndromeÉdouard Brissaud, Jean-Athanase Sicard * Broadbent apoplexyWilliam Broadbent * Broca aphasiaPierre Paul Broca * Brock syndromeRussell Claude Brock * Brodie abscessBenjamin Collins Brodie * Brodie syndromeBenjamin Collins Brodie * Brooke epitheliomaHenry Ambrose Grundy Brooke * Brown-Séquard syndromeCharles-Édouard Brown-Séquard * BrucellosisDavid Bruce * Bruck–de Lange diseaseFranz Bruck, Cornelia Catharina de Lange * Brugada syndromePedro Brugada, Josep Brugada * Bruns–Garland syndromeLudwig Bruns, Hugh Garland * Bruns syndromeLudwig Bruns * Bruton–Gitlin syndromeOgden Carr Bruton, David Gitlin * Budd–Chiari syndromeGeorge Budd, Hans Chiari * Buerger diseaseLeo Buerger * Bumke syndromeOswald Conrad Edouard Bumke * Bürger–Grütz syndromeMax Burger, Otto Grutz * Burkitt lymphomaDenis Parsons Burkitt * Burnett syndromeCharles Hoyt Burnett * Bywaters syndromeEric George Lapthorne Bywaters

===C=== * Caffey–Silverman syndromeJohn Patrick Caffey, William Silverman * Calvé diseaseJacques Calvé * Camurati–Engelmann disease (aka Camurati–Engelmann syndrome) – M. Camurati, G. Engelmann * Canavan diseaseMyrtelle Canavan * Cannon diseaseAbernathy Benson Cannon * Cantú syndromeJosé María Cantú * Capgras delusion (aka Capgras syndrome) – Jean Marie Joseph Capgras * Caplan syndromeAnthony Caplan * Carney complexJ. Aidan Carney * Carney triadJ. Aidan Carney * Carney–Stratakis syndromeJ. Aidan Carney, C. A. Stratakis * Caroli syndromeJacques Caroli * Carrion diseaseDaniel Alcides Carrión * Castleman diseaseBenjamin Castleman * Céstan–Chenais syndromeÉtienne Jacques Marie Raymond Céstan, Louis Jean Chennais * Chagas diseaseCarlos Chagas * Charcot diseaseJean-Martin Charcot * Charcot–Marie–Tooth diseaseJean-Martin Charcot, Pierre Marie, Howard Henry Tooth * Charles Bonnet syndromeCharles Bonnet * Cheadle diseaseWalter Butler Cheadle * Chédiak–Higashi syndromeAlexander Chédiak, Otokata Higashi * Chiari malformationHans Chiari * Chiari–Frommel syndromeJohann Baptist Chiari, Richard Frommel * Chilaiditi syndromeDemetrius Chilaiditi * Christ–Siemens–Touraine syndromeJosef Christ, Hermann Werner Siemens, Albert Touraine * Christensen–Krabbe diseaseErna Christensen, Knud Krabbe * Christmas diseaseStephen Christmas * Churg–Strauss syndromeJacob Churg, Lotte Strauss * Claude syndromeHenri Claude * Clerambault syndromeGaëtan Gatian de Clerambault * Clerambault–Kandinsky syndromeGaëtan Gatian de Clerambault, Victor Khrisanfovich Kandinsky * Coats diseaseGeorge Coats * Cock peculiar tumorEdward Cock * Cockayne syndromeEdward Alfred Cockayne * Coffin–Lowry syndromeGrange Coffin, Robert Lowry * Coffin–Siris syndromeGrange Coffin, Evelyn Siris * Cogan syndromeDavid Glendenning Cogan * Cohen syndromeMichael Cohen * Collet–Sicard syndromeFrédéric Justin Collet, Jean-Athanase Sicard * Concato diseaseLuigi Maria Concato * Conn syndromeJerome Conn * Conradi-Hünermann syndrome - Erich Conradi, Karl Hünermann * Cooley anemiaThomas Benton Cooley * Cori DiseaseCarl Ferdinand Cori, Gerty Cori * Cornelia de Lange syndromeCornelia Catharina de Lange * Costello syndromeJack Costello * Costen syndromeJames Bray Costen * Cotard delusion (aka Cotard syndrome) – Jules Cotard * Cowden syndrome (aka Cowden disease) – Rachel Cowden * Crigler–Najjar syndromeJohn Fielding Crigler, Victor Assad Najjar * Creutzfeldt–Jakob diseaseHans Gerhard Creutzfeldt, Alfons Maria Jakob * Crocq–Cassirer syndromeJean Crocq, Richard Cassirer * Crohn diseaseBurrill Bernard Crohn * Cronkhite–Canada syndromeL. W. Cronkhite, Wilma Canada * Crouzon syndromeOctave Crouzon * Cruveilhier–Baumgarten diseaseJean Cruveilhier, Paul Clemens von Baumgarten * Cruz diseaseOsvaldo Gonçalves Cruz * Cryer syndromePhilip E. Cryer * Curling ulcerThomas Blizard Curling * Curschmann–Batten–Steinert syndromeHans Curschmann, Frederick Batten, Hans Gustav Steinert * Cushing diseaseHarvey Cushing * Cushing ulcerHarvey Cushing

===D=== * Da Costa syndromeJacob Mendez Da Costa * Dalrymple diseaseJohn Dalrymple * Danbolt–Closs syndromeNiels Christian Gauslaa Danbolt, Karl Philipp Closs * Dandy–Walker syndromeWalter Dandy, Arthur Earl Walker * De Clérambault syndromeGaëtan Gatian de Clérambault * de Quervain diseaseFritz de Quervain * de Quervain thyroiditisFritz de Quervain * Dejerine–Sottas diseaseJoseph Jules Dejerine, Jules Sottas * Dennie–Marfan syndromeCharles Clayton Dennie, Antoine Marfan * Dent diseaseCharles Enrique Dent * Denys–Drash syndromePierre Denys, Allan L. Drash * Dercum diseaseFrancis Xavier Dercum * Devic disease (aka Devic syndrome) – Eugène Devic * Diamond–Blackfan anemiaLouis Diamond, Kenneth Blackfan * DiGeorge syndromeAngelo DiGeorge * Di Guglielmo diseaseGiovanni di Gugliemo * Diogenes syndrome (aka Havisham syndrome, Miss Havisham syndrome, Plyushkin syndrome)– the Greek philosopher Diogenes of Sinope (usage is deemed a misnomer, as Diogenes did not exhibit these symptoms) * Doege–Potter syndromeKarl W. Doege, Roy P. Potter * Donnai–Barrow syndromeDian Donnai, Margaret Barrow * DonovanosisCharles Donovan * Down syndromeJohn Langdon Down * Dravet syndromeCharlotte Dravet * Dressler syndromeWilliam Dressler * Duane syndromeAlexander Duane * Dubin–Johnson syndromeIsadore Dubin, Frank Bacchus Johnson * Duchenne–Aran diseaseGuillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne de Boulogne, François-Amilcar Aran * Duchenne muscular dystrophyGuillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne de Boulogne * Dukes diseaseClement Dukes * Duncan disease (aka Duncan syndrome, Purtilo syndrome) – Duncan family (6 of 18 males had the condition) * Dupuytren contracture (aka Dupuytren disease) – Baron Guillaume Dupuytren * Duroziez diseasePaul Louis Duroziez

===E=== * Eales diseaseHenry Eales * Early-onset Alzheimer diseaseAlois Alzheimer * Ebstein's anomalyWilhelm Ebstein * Edwards syndromeJohn H. Edwards * Ehlers–Danlos syndromes – Edvard Ehlers, Henri-Alexandre Danlos **Arthrochalasia Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Brittle cornea Ehlers-Danlos syndrome **Cardiac–valvular Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Classical Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Classical–like Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Dermatosparaxis Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Hypermobile Classical Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Kyphoscoliotic Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Musculocontractual Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Myopathic Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Periodontal Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Spondylodysplastic Ehlers–Danlos syndrome **Vascular Ehlers–Danlos syndrome * EhrlichiosisPaul Ehrlich * Eisenmenger's syndromeVictor Eisenmenger * Ekbom syndromeKarl-Axel Ekbom * Emanuel syndromeBeverly Emanuel * Emery–Dreifuss muscular dystrophyAlan Eglin Heathecote Emery, Fritz E. Dreifuss * Erb–Duchenne palsy (aka Erb palsy) – Wilhelm Heinrich Erb, Guillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne de Boulogne * Erdheim–Chester disease (aka Erdheim–Chester syndrome) – Jakob Erdheim, William Chester * Evans syndromeRobert S. Evans * Extramammary Paget's disease – Sir James Paget

===F=== * Fabry diseaseJohannes Fabry * Fanconi anemiaGuido Fanconi * Fanconi syndromeGuido Fanconi * Farber diseaseSidney Farber * Felty's syndromeAugustus Roi Felty * Fitz-Hugh–Curtis syndromeThomas Fitz-Hugh Jr., Arthur Hale Curtis * Foix–Alajouanine syndromeCharles Foix, Théophile Alajouanine * Foix–Chavany–Marie syndromeCharles Foix, Jean Alfred Émile Chavany, Julien Marie * Fournier gangreneJean Alfred Fournier * Forbes–Albright syndromeAnne Pappenheimer Forbes, Fuller Albright * Forbes diseaseGilbert Burnett Forbes * Fregoli delusion – (aka Fregoli syndrome) Leopoldo Fregoli, an Italian actor * Frey syndromeLucja Frey-Gottesman * Friedreich's ataxiaNikolaus Friedreich * Fritsch–Asherman syndrome (aka Fritsch syndrome) – Heinrich Fritsch, Joseph Asherman * Fryns syndromeJean-Pierre Fryns * Fuchs dystrophyErnst Fuchs

===G=== * Ganser syndromeSigbert Ganser * Gaucher diseasePhilippe Gaucher * Gerbec–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome (aka Adams–Stokes syndrome, Gerbezius–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome, Stokes–Adams syndrome) – Marko Gerbec, Giovanni Battista Morgagni, Robert Adams, William Stokes * Gerbezius–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome (aka Adams–Stokes syndrome, Gerbec–Morgagni–Adams–Stokes syndrome, Stokes–Adams syndrome) – Marko Gerbec (latinized as ''Gerbezius''), Giovanni Battista Morgagni, Robert Adams, William Stokes * Ghon complexAnton Ghon * Ghon focusAnton Ghon * Gianotti-Crosti syndrome - Ferdinando Gianotti, Agostino Crosti * Gilbert syndromeAugustin Nicolas Gilbert * Gitelman syndromeHillel J. Gitelman * Glanzmann thrombastheniaEduard Glanzmann * Goodpasture syndromeErnest Goodpasture * Goldberg-Shprintzen syndrome - R. B. Goldberg, R. J. Shprintzen * Goldenhar syndromeMaurice Goldenhar * Gorlin–Goltz syndromeRobert J. Gorlin, Robert W. Goltz * Gouverneur syndromeR. Gouverneur * Graves diseaseRobert James Graves * Graves–Basedow diseaseRobert James Graves, Karl Adolph von Basedow * Grawitz tumorPaul Albert Grawitz * Grinker myelinopathyRoy R. Grinker, Sr. * Gruber syndromeGeorg Gruber * Guillain–Barré syndromeGeorges Guillain, Jean Alexandre Barré * Guillain–Barré–Strohl syndromeGeorges Guillain, Jean Alexandre Barré, André Strohl * Gunther diseaseHans Gunther

===H=== * Hailey–Hailey diseaseHugh Edward Hailey, William Howard Hailey * Hallervorden–Spatz diseaseJulius Hallervorden, Hugo Spatz - in disuse, due to Nazi association * Hand–Schüller–Christian diseaseAlfred Hand, Artur Schüller, Henry Asbury Christian * Hansen diseaseGerhard Armauer Hansen * Hardikar SyndromeWinita Hardikar * Hartnup disease (aka Hartnup disorder) – the Hartnup family, in which causative gene was identified * Hashimoto thyroiditisHakaru Hashimoto * Havisham syndrome (aka Diogenes syndrome, Miss Havisham syndrome, Plyushkin syndrome) – Miss Havisham, a literary character in Charles Dickens' Great Expectations * Hecht–Scott syndromeJacqueline T. Hecht, Charles I. Scott, Jr * Henoch–Schönlein purpuraEduard Heinrich Henoch, Johann Lukas Schönlein * Heyde's syndromeEdward C. Heyde * Hirschsprung diseaseHarald Hirschsprung * Hodgkin diseaseThomas Hodgkin * Holt–Oram syndromeMary Clayton Holt, Samuel Oram * Horner syndromeJohann Friedrich Horner * Horton headacheBayard Taylor Horton * Huntington diseaseGeorge Huntington * Hurler syndromeGertrud Hurler * Hurler–Scheie syndromeGertrud Hurler, Harold Glendon Scheie * Hutchinson–Gilford progeria syndromeJonathan Hutchinson, Hastings Gilford

===I=== * Illig syndromeRuth Illig * Irvine–Gass syndromeS. Rodman Irvine, J. Donald M. Gass

===J=== * Jaeken's diseaseJaak Jaeken * Jakob–Creutzfeldt diseaseAlfons Maria Jakob, Hans Gerhard Creutzfeldt * Jalili syndromeI.K. Jalili * Jarvi–Nasu–Hakola diseaseO. Jarvi, T. Nasu, P. Hakola * Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome - Anton Jervell, Fred Lange-Nielsen * Johanson–Blizzard syndromeAnn Johanson, Robert M. Blizzard * Jones–Smith SyndromeKenneth Lyons Jones, David Weyhe Smith

===K=== * Kahler's diseaseOtto Kahler * Kallmann syndromeFranz Josef Kallmann * Kanner syndromeLeo Kanner * Kaposi sarcomaMoritz Kaposi * Kartagener syndromeManes Kartagener * Kasabach–Merritt syndromeHaig Haigouni Kasabach, Katharine Krom Merritt * Kashin–Beck diseaseNicolai Ivanowich Kashin, Evgeny Vladimirovich Bek * Kawasaki diseaseTomisaku Kawasaki * Kearns–Sayre syndromeThomas P. Kearns, George Pomeroy Sayre * Kennedy diseaseWilliam R. Kennedy * Kennedy syndromeRobert Foster Kennedy * Kenny-Caffey syndromeFrederic Marshal Kenny, John Patrick Caffey * Kienbock diseaseRobert Kienböck * Kikuchi diseaseMasahiro Kikuchi, Y.Fujimoto * Kimmelstiel–Wilson diseasePaul Kimmelstiel, Clifford Wilson * Kimura diseaseT. Kimura * King–Kopetzky syndromeP. F. King, Samuel J. Kopetzky * Kinsbourne syndromeMarcel Kinsbourne * Kjer optic neuropathyPoul Kjer * Klatskin tumorGerald Klatskin * Klinefelter syndromeHarry Klinefelter * Klüver–Bucy syndromeHeinrich Klüver, Paul Bucy * Köhler diseaseAlban Köhler * Korsakoff syndromeSergei Korsakoff * Kostmann disease - Rolf Kostmann * Kounis syndromeNicholas Kounis * Krabbe diseaseKnud Haraldsen Krabbe * Krukenberg tumorFriedrich Ernst Krukenberg * Kugelberg–Welander diseaseErik Klas Henrik Kugelberg, Lisa Welander * Kuttner tumor – Hermann Küttner

===L=== * Lafora diseaseGonzalo Rodriguez Lafora * Laron syndromeZvi Laron * Laurence–Moon syndromeJohn Zachariah Laurence, Robert Charles Moon * Laurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedl syndrome (aka Laurence–Moon–Biedl–Bardet syndrome, aka Laurence–Moon–Biedl syndrome - both now deemed invalid constructs, as patients of Laurence and Moon were found to differ from those of Bardet and Beidl; see instead ''Bardet–Biedl syndrome'' and ''Laurence-Moon syndrome'') – John Zachariah Laurence, Robert Charles Moon, Georges Bardet, Arthur Biedl * Lazarus syndromeLazarus of Bethany, an individual in New Testament * Legg–Calvé–Perthes syndromeArthur Legg, Jacques Calvé, Georg Perthes * Leigh diseaseDenis Archibald Leigh * Leiner syndromeKarl Leiner, André Moussous * LeishmaniasisSir William Boog Leishman * Lejeune syndromeJérôme Lejeune * Lemierre syndromeAndré Lemierre * Lenègre diseaseJean Lenègre * Lennox–Gastaut syndrome (aka Lennox syndrome) – William Gordon Lennox, Henri Jean Pascal Gastaut * Lesch–Nyhan syndromeMichael Lesch, William Leo Nyhan * Letterer–Siwe diseaseErich Letterer, Sture Siwe * Lev diseaseMaurice Lev * Lewandowsky–Lutz dysplasiaFelix Lewandowsky, Wilhelm Lutz * Li–Fraumeni syndromeFrederick Pei Li, Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr. * Libman–Sacks diseaseEmanuel Libman, Benjamin Sacks * Liddle syndromeGrant Liddle * Lisfranc injury (aka Lisfranc dislocation, Lisfranc fracture) – Jacques Lisfranc de St. Martin * ListeriosisJoseph Lister * LobomycosisJorge Lobo * Loeys–Dietz SyndromeBart Loeys, Hal Dietz * Löeffler endocarditisWilhelm Löeffler * Löffler syndromeWilhelm Löeffler * Löfgren syndromeSven Halvar Löfgren * Lown–Ganong–Levine syndrome - Bernard Lown, William Francis Ganong, Jr., and Samuel A. Levine * Lou Gehrig's disease – New York Yankee baseball player Lou Gehrig * Lowe SyndromeCharles Upton Lowe * Ludwig anginaWilhelm Friedrich von Ludwig * Lujan–Fryns syndromeJ. Enrique Lujan, Jean-Pierre Fryns * Lynch syndromeHenry T. Lynch

===M=== * Machado–Joseph Azorean disease (aka Machado–Joseph disease, Machado disease, Joseph disease) – patriarchal surnames of families in which first identified

* Mallory–Weiss syndromeG. Kenneth Mallory, Soma Weiss * MansonelliasisSir Patrick Manson * Marburg multiple sclerosisOtto Marburg * Marfan syndromeAntoine Marfan * Marie Antoinette syndrome (aka Thomas More syndrome) – Queen Marie Antoinette, said to have experienced it * Marie–Foix–Alajouanine syndromePierre Marie, Charles Foix, Théophile Alajouanine *Marshall–Smith- Weaver syndrome (aka Marshall-Smith syndrone, Marshall-Smith type accelerated skeletal maturation syndrome) – Richard E. Marshall, David Weyhe Smith, David Weaver

NB: To differentiate 2 identically named syndromes, parenthetical clinical descriptors were added:

* Marshall syndrome – {ectodermal dysplasia syndrome with auditory defect} – D. Marshall * Marshall syndrome – {post-inflammatory elastolysis and acquired acute cutis laxa Type II} – J. Marshall

* Martin–Albright syndrome (aka Albright IV syndrome) – August E. Martin, Fuller Albright * Martin–Bell syndromeJ. Purdon Martin, Julia Bell * May–Hegglin anomalyRichard May, Robert Hegglin * May–Thurner syndromeRichard May, J Thurner * Maydl herniaKarel Maydl * Mayer–Rokitansky–Küster–Hauser syndrome – (aka Müllerian agenesis, Müllerian aplasia) – August Franz Josef Karl Mayer, Carl von Rokitansky, Hermann Küster, Georges Andre Hauser * Mazzotti reactionLuigi Mazzotti * McArdle diseaseBrian McArdle * McCune–Albright syndrome – (aka Albright disease, Albright hereditary osteodystrophy, Albright syndrome) – Donovan James McCune, Fuller Albright * Meckel–Gruber syndrome (aka Meckel syndrome) – Johann Meckel, Georg Gruber * Meigs syndromeJoe Vincent Meigs * Ménétrier diseasePierre Eugène Ménétrier * Ménière diseaseProsper Ménière * Menkes diseaseJohn Hans Menkes * Middleton syndromeStephen John Middleton * Mirizzi syndromePablo Luis Mirizzi * Mikulicz diseaseJan Mikulicz-Radecki * Miss Havisham syndrome (aka Diogenes syndrome, Havisham syndrome, and Plyushkin syndrome) – Miss Havisham, a literary character in Charles Dickens' Great Expectations * Mondor diseaseHenri Mondor * Monge diseaseCarlos Monge * Mortimer's disease – Mrs. Mortimer, a patient who experienced it * Morton neuroma * Moschcowitz syndromeEli Moschcowitz * Mowat–Wilson syndromeDavid Mowat, Meredith Wilson * Mucha–Habermann diseaseViktor Mucha, Rudolf Habermann * Mulvihill–Smith syndromeJohn J. Mulvihill, David Weyhe Smith * Munchausen syndromeBaron Munchausen * Munchausen syndrome by proxyBaron Munchausen * Myhre–Riley–Smith syndromeS. Myhre, Harris D. Riley Jr.

===N=== * Nasu–Hakola diseaseT. Nasu, P. Hakola * Non-Hodgkin's lymphomaThomas Hodgkin * Noonan syndromeJacqueline Noonan

===O=== * Opitz–Kaveggia syndromeJohn M. Opitz, Elisabeth G. Kaveggia * Ormond's diseaseJohn Kelso Ormond * Osgood–Schlatter diseaseRobert Bayley Osgood, Carl B. Schlatter * Osler–Weber–Rendu syndromeWilliam Osler, Frederick Parkes Weber, Henri Jules Louis Marie Rendu * Othello Syndrome

===P=== * Paget's disease of bone (a.k.a. Paget's disease) – James Paget * Paget's disease of the breast (a.k.a. Paget's disease of the nipple) – James Paget * Paget's disease of the penisJames Paget * Paget's disease of the vulvaJames Paget * Paget–Schroetter disease (a.k.a. Paget–Schroetter syndrome and Paget–von Schrötter disease) – James Paget, Leopold von Schrötter * Parkinson's diseaseJames Parkinson * Patau syndromeKlaus Patau * Pearson syndromeHoward Pearson * Pelizaeus–Merzbacher diseaseFriedrich Christoph Pelizaeus, Ludwig Merzbacher * Pendred syndromeVaughan Pendred, a British doctor (1869–1946) * Perlman syndromeMax Perlman * Perthes syndromeArthur Legg, Jacques Calvé, Georg Perthes * Peutz–Jeghers syndromeJan Peutz, Harold Jeghers * Peyronie's diseaseFrançois Gigot de la Peyronie * Pfaundler–Hurler syndromeMeinhard von Pfaundler, Gertrud Hurler * Pick's diseaseArnold Pick * Pickardt syndromeRenate Pickardt * Plummer's diseaseHenry Stanley Plummer * Plummer–Vinson syndrome (a.k.a. Kelly–Patterson syndrome, Paterson–Brown–Kelly syndrome, and Waldenstrom–Kjellberg syndrome) – Henry Stanley Plummer and Porter Paisley Vinson * Plyushkin syndrome (a.k.a. Diogenes syndrome, Havisham syndrome, and Miss Havisham syndrome)– Stepan Plyushkin, a fictional character in Nikolai Gogol's Dead Souls * Poland's syndromeAlfred Poland * Pompe's diseaseJohann Cassianius Pompe * Pott's diseasePercivall Pott * Pott's puffy tumorPercivall Pott * Potocki–Lupski syndromeLorraine Potocki, James R. Lupski * Potocki–Shaffer syndromeLorraine Potocki, Lisa G. Shaffer * Potter sequenceEdith Potter * Prader–Willi syndromeAndrea Prader, Heinrich Willi * Prasad's SyndromeAshok Prasad * Primrose syndromeD. A. Primrose * Prinzmetal anginaMyron Prinzmetal * Purtilo syndrome (aka Duncan disease and Duncan syndrome) – David Theodore Purtilio

===Q=== * Quarelli syndromeG.Quarelli * Quervain syndrome

===R=== * Ramsay Hunt syndromesJames Ramsay Hunt * Ranke complexKarl Ernst Ranke * Raymond Céstan syndromeÉtienne Jacques Marie Raymond Céstan * Raynaud diseaseMaurice Raynaud * Refsum diseaseSigvald Bernhard Refsum * Reiter syndromeHans Conrad Julius Reiter (This is now a strongly discouraged eponym due to Dr. Reiter's Nazi party ties. The disease is now known as reactive arthritis.) * Rett syndromeAndreas Rett * Reye syndromeDouglas Reye * RickettsiosisHoward Taylor Ricketts * Riddoch syndromeGeorge Riddoch * Riedel thyroiditisBernhard Riedel * Riggs diseaseJohn M. Riggs (dentist) * Riley–Day syndromeConrad Milton Riley, Richard Lawrence Day * Riley–Smith syndromeHarris D. Riley Jr., William R. Smith * Ritter diseaseBaron Gottfried Ritter von Rittershain * Robles diseaseRodolfo Robles * Roger diseaseHenri Louis Roger * Rolandic epilepsyLuigi Rolando * Romano–Ward syndrome * Rothmund–Thomson syndromeAugust von Rothmund, Matthew Sydney Thomson * Rotor syndromeArturo Belleza Rotor * Rubinstein–Taybi syndromeJack Herbert Rubinstein, Hooshang Taybi * Russell–Silver syndromeAlexander Russell, Henry Silver * Ruvalcaba–Myhre syndromeRogelio H. A. Ruvalcaba, S. Myhre * Ruvalcaba–Myhre–Smith syndromeRogelio H. A. Ruvalcaba, S. Myhre, David Weyhe Smith * Ruzicka–Goerz–Anton syndromeT. Ruzicka, G. Goerz, I. Anton-Lamprecht

===S=== * Saint's triadC. F. M. Saint * Sandhoff diseaseKonrad Sandhoff * Sandifer syndromePaul Sandifer * Sanjad-Sakati syndrome (a.k.a Sanjad–Sakati–Richardson–Kirk syndrome) – Sami A. Sanjad, Nadia Awni Sakati, Ricky J Richardson, Jeremy MW Kirk * Schamberg diseaseJay Frank Schamberg * Scheie syndromeHarold Glendon Scheie * Scheuermann's diseaseHolger Scheuermann * Schilder's diseasePaul Ferdinand Schilder * Schinzel–Giedion syndromeAlbert Schinzel, Andreas Giedion * Schnitzler syndromeLiliane Schnitzler * Seaver Cassidy syndromeLaurie Seaver, Suzanne Cassidy * Seligmann's diseaseMaxime Seligmann * Sertoli–Leydig cell tumour - Enrico Sertoli, Franz Leydig a sex-cord stromal tumor, (aka arrhenoblastoma) * Sever's diseaseJ. W. Sever * Shabbir syndromeG. Shabbir * Sheehan's syndromeHarold Leeming Sheehan * Shprintzen's syndromeRobert Shprintzen * Shwachman–Bodian–Diamond syndromeHarry Shwachman, Martin Bodian, Louis Klein Diamond * Silver–Russell syndrome (a.k.a. Silver–Russell dwarfism) – Henry Silver, Alexander Russell * Simmonds' syndromeMoritz Simmonds * Sipple's syndromeJohn H. Sipple * Sjögren syndromeHenrik Sjögren * Sjögren–Larsson syndromeTorsten Sjögren, Tage Konrad Leopold Larsson * Skumin syndromeVictor Skumin * Smith–Lemli–Opitz syndromeDavid Weyhe Smith * Stargardt diseaseKarl Stargardt * Steele–Richardson–Olszewski syndrome – * Stein-Leventhal Syndrome - Irving F. Stein, Sr. and Michael L. Leventhal (Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, PCOS) * Stevens–Johnson syndromeAlbert Mason Stevens, Frank Chambliss Johnson * Sturge–Weber syndromeWilliam Allen Sturge, Frederick Parkes Weber * Still's disease – Sir George Frederic Still * Susac's syndromeJohn Susac * Sutton's diseaseRichard Lightburn Sutton

===T=== * TAN syndromeTan Aik Kah * Takayasu's arteritisMikito Takayasu * Tatton-Brown–Rahman syndromeKatrina Tatton-Brown, Nazneen Rahman * Tay–Sachs diseaseWarren Tay, Bernard Sachs * Theileriosis – Sir Arnold Theiler * Thomsen's diseaseJulius Thomsen * Tietz syndromeWalter Tietz * Tietze syndromeAlexander Tietze * Temple–Baraitser syndrome – Karin Temple and Michael Baraitser * Timothy syndrome - Katherine W. Timothy * Todd syndrome (a.k.a. Alice in Wonderland syndrome) – John Todd * Tourette syndromeGeorges Albert Édouard Brutus Gilles de la Tourette * Treacher Collins syndromeEdward Treacher Collins * Turcot syndromeJacques Turcot * Turner syndromeHenry Turner

===U=== * Unverricht–Lundborg diseaseHeinrich Unverricht, Herman Bernhard Lundborg * Usher syndromeCharles Usher

===V=== * Valentino syndromeRudolph Valentino * Verner Morrison syndromeJ. V. Verner, A. B. Morrison * Vincent's anginaHenri Vincent * Virchow's syndromeRudolf Virchow * Vogt–Koyanagi–Harada diseaseAlfred Vogt, Yoshizo Koyanagi, Einosuke Harada * Von Gierke's diseaseEdgar von Gierke * Von Hippel–Lindau diseaseEugen von Hippel, Arvid Vilhelm Lindau * Von Recklinghausen's diseaseFriedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen * Von Willebrand's diseaseErik Adolf von Willebrand * Von Zumbusch (acute) generalized pustular psoriasis) – (a.k.a. Zumbusch psoriasis) Leo Ritter von Zumbusch * Von Zumbusch syndrome (a.k.a. Csillag disease, Hallopeau disease, Zumbusch syndrome) – Leo Ritter von Zumbusch

===W=== * Waardenburg syndromePetrus Johannes Waardenburg * Waldenstrom–Kjellberg syndromeJan G. Waldenström, S. R. Kjellberg * Waldenstrom macroglobulinaemiaJan G. Waldenström * Warkany syndrome 1Joseph Warkany * Warkany syndrome 2Joseph Warkany * Warthin's tumorAldred Scott Warthin * Waterhouse–Friderichsen syndromeRupert Waterhouse, Carl Friderichsen * Watson syndromeG.H.Watson * Weber–Christian diseaseFrederick Parkes Weber, Henry Asbury Christian * Wegener's granulomatosis – Friedrich Wegener (This usage is now formally discouraged by professional medical societies due to the Nazi associations of the eponymous physician. The disease is now known as granulomatosis with polyangiitis.) * Weil's diseaseAdolf Weil * Welander distal myopathyLisa Welander * Wells syndromeGeorge Crichton Wells * Wellens' syndromeHein Wellens * Werdnig–Hoffmann diseaseGuido Werdnig, Johann Hoffmann * Wermer's syndromePaul Wermer * Werner's syndromeOtto Werner * Wernicke's AphasiaCarl Wernicke * Wernicke's encephalopathyCarl Wernicke * Wernicke–Korsakoff syndromeCarl Wernicke, Sergei Korsakoff * Westerhof syndromeWiete Westerhof * Westerhof–Beemer–Cormane syndromeWiete Westerhof, Frederikus Antonius Beemer, R. H.Cormane * Whipple's diseaseGeorge Hoyt Whipple * Williams syndromeJ. C. P. Williams * Wilms tumorMax Wilms * Wilson's diseaseSamuel Alexander Kinnier Wilson * Willis–Ekbom syndromeThomas Willis, Karl-Axel Ekbom * Wiskott–Aldrich syndromeAlfred Wiskott, Robert Aldrich * Wittmaack–Ekbom syndromeTheodur Wittmaack, Karl-Axel Ekbom * Wohlfart–Kugelberg–Welander diseaseKarl Gunnar Vilhelm Wohlfart, Erik Klas Henrik Kugelberg, Lisa Welander * Wolff–Parkinson–White syndromeLouis Wolff, John Parkinson, Paul Dudley White

* Wolman diseaseMoshe Wolman

===X=== ===Y=== * Yesudian syndromePaul Yesudian

===Z=== * Zahorsky syndrome IJohn Zahorsky * Zahorsky syndrome II (a.k.a. Mikulicz' Aphthae, Mikulicz' Disease, Sutton disease 2, Mikulicz' Aphthae, Zahorsky disease) – John Zahorsky * Zellweger syndromeHans Ulrich Zellweger * Zenker diverticulumFriedrich Albert von Zenker * Zenker paralysisFriedrich Albert von Zenker * Zieve syndromeLeslie Zieve * Zimmermann–Laband syndrome (a.k.a. Laband syndrome, Laband–Zimmermann syndrome) – Karl Wilhelm Zimmermann * Zollinger–Ellison syndromeRobert Zollinger, Edwin Ellison * Zondek–Bromberg–Rozin syndrome (a.k.a. Zondek syndrome) – Bernhard Zondek, Yehuda M. Bromberg, R.Rozin * Zuelzer syndromeWolf William Zuelzer * Zuelzer–Kaplan syndrome II (a.k.a. Crosby syndrome) – Wolf William Zuelzer, E. Kaplan * Zuelzer–Ogden syndromeWolf William Zuelzer, Frank Nevin Ogden * Zumbusch psoriasis (a.k.a. von Zumbusch (acute) generalized pustular psoriasis) – Leo Ritter von Zumbusch * Zumbusch syndrome (a.k.a. Csillag disease, Hallopeau disease, von Zumbusch syndrome) – Leo Ritter von Zumbusch

==See also== * List of eponymous medical signs, a list of medical signs named after people

== References == {{reflist|2}}

==External links== * [http://www.whonamedit.com Whonamedit?], a site dedicated to medical eponyms and their namesakes. {{Medical terms to describe disease conditions}}

Diseases Eponymous diseases