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Why medical fiction privileges certain disease manifestations

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Published: 15 May 2026
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Medical fictions - across novels, television series, and cinema - have become a powerful cultural lens through which the public understands diseases, physicians, hospitals, and the practice of medicine. The prominence of visually striking illnesses in these narratives stems from a convergence of aesthetic necessity, psychological impact, and cultural habit. In particular, skin manifestations - especially those linked to thrombo-hemorrhagic or inflammatory processes - provide an immediate and compelling visual language, enabling writers to portray the body’s internal disorder and the inherent fragility of life. By contrast, invisible diseases - hypertension, insomnia, chronic fatigue, neurochemical imbalances - remain more complex and less thrilling to represent. Our future challenge, as clinicians and science communicators, will be to develop ways to render the invisible suffering - mental, metabolic, immunologic - as narratively and visually comprehensible as the classic rash or bruise.

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Citations

1. Landolfi R. A case of thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura presented in a popular TV series. Bleeding Thromb Vasc Biol 2025;2:181. DOI: https://doi.org/10.4081/btvb.2025.181
2. de Gaetano G. The importance of rigorous and engaging scientific communication. Bleeding Thromb Vasc Biol 2025; 2:191. DOI: https://doi.org/10.4081/btvb.2025.191

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How to Cite



1.
Landolfi R. Why medical fiction privileges certain disease manifestations. Bleeding Thromb Vasc Biol [Internet]. 2026 May 15 [cited 2026 May 18];5(2). Available from: https://www.btvb.org/btvb/article/view/562