Here at the List Universe we have already covered many bizarre illnesses and medical conditions, but there is always room for one more! This list deals with odd diseases that have no known cause – or at least no consensus on cause. Most are rare, and they all share the common attribute of having unusual symptoms. Be sure to mention others you know in the comments.
Gulf War syndrome (GWS) is an illness reported by combat veterans of the 1991 Persian Gulf War typified by symptoms including immune system disorders and birth defects. It has not always been clear whether these symptoms were related to Gulf War service or whether the occurrence of illnesses in Gulf War veterans is higher than comparable populations. Symptoms attributed to this syndrome have been wide-ranging, including chronic fatigue, loss of muscle control, headaches, dizziness and loss of balance, memory problems, muscle and joint pain, indigestion, skin problems, shortness of breath, and even insulin resistance. While the cause of the syndrome is unknown, some theories put forth are anthrax vaccines given to soldiers, the use of depleted uranium for weaponry, or exposure to chemical weapons destroyed in various bombings. There is also speculation that it may be caused by an unknown bacteria.
Also known as multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS), Twentieth-Century Disease is described as a chronic condition characterized by adverse effects from exposure to low levels of chemicals or other substances in modern human environments. Suspected substances include smoke, pesticides, plastics, synthetic fabrics, scented products, petroleum products and paints. But here is the odd thing: blinded trials have shown that MCS patients do not actually react to chemicals, but they do react in unblinded tests when they believe they are being exposed to a trigger. The cause of the disease is unknown. It was the focus of the odd 1995 film “[SAFE]” featuring Julianne Moore.
Stiff person syndrome is a bizarre (and rare) disease which causes the sufferer to have random muscle spasms that can be so strong they cause the person to fall over – leading to broken bones. SPS is characterized by fluctuating muscle rigidity in the trunk and limbs and a heightened sensitivity to stimuli such as noise, touch, and emotional distress, which can set off muscle spasms. Abnormal postures, often hunched over and stiffened, are characteristic of the disorder. People with SPS can be too disabled to walk or move, or they can be afraid to leave the house because street noises, such as the sound of a horn, can trigger spasms and falls. SPS affects twice as many women as men.
Morgellons disease is characterized by symptoms including crawling, biting, and stinging sensations; finding fibers on or under the skin; and persistent skin lesions (e.g., rashes or sores). Current scientific consensus holds that Morgellons is not a new disorder and is instead a new and misleading name for known illnesses. Most doctors, including dermatologists and psychiatrists, regard Morgellons as a manifestation of known medical conditions, including delusional parasitosis, although some health professionals believe that Morgellons disease is a specific condition likely to be confirmed by future research. Researchers have found that affected skin when studied under a microscope can contain thousands of tiny hairs which may be being produced by the body (though they are not on record as being typical human hairs), but are not manmade or from plants. A New Mexico doctor reports that a former CIA agent told him the disease was caused by the French. “A botched government experiment contaminated the water. All Evian drinkers are at risk.”
Cyclic vomiting syndrome is a condition whose symptoms are recurring attacks of intense nausea, vomiting and sometimes abdominal pain and/or headaches or migraines. Cyclic vomiting usually develops during childhood; while it often ends during adolescence, it can persist into adult life. Onset of the condition is possible at any age but is seen to occur more often in a young age. Sufferers may vomit or retch six to twelve times an hour and an episode may last from a few hours to well over 3 weeks. Some people may find it hard to conceive how anyone can vomit after that length of time, as the stomach will have emptied after the first few instances of vomiting. Acid, bile and (if the vomiting is severe) blood may be vomited. It results in lack of sleep, normal eating, and concentration. The cause of CVS has not been determined, there are no diagnostic tests for it.
Electromagnetic hypersensitivity is a condition in which people experience medical symptoms that they believe are caused by exposure to electromagnetic fields. Although effects of electromagnetic fields on the body are established, sufferers of electromagnetic hypersensitivity report responding to electromagnetic radiation at intensities well below those permitted by international safety standards. The majority of trials to date have found that sufferers of electromagnetic hypersensitivity are unable to distinguish between the exposure to real and sham electromagnetic fields. Although individuals who report electromagnetic hypersensitivity believe that electromagnetic fields from common electrical devices trigger or exacerbate their symptoms, it has not been established that these fields play any role in the cause of sensitivity symptoms. In 2005 the World Health Organization concluded that there is no known scientific basis for the belief that electromagnetic hypersensitivity is caused by exposure to electromagnetic fields.
The symptoms of nodding disease are very peculiar. When a child is affected by it, his/her growth appears to be completely and permanently stunted. The growth of the brain is also stunted, leading to mental retardation of the victim. The disease is named nodding disease since it causes pathological nodding. This is a seizure which begins when the victim begins to eat food, or when he/she feels cold. As soon as either of these conditions is met, the afflicted will immediately begin to nod. These seizures are brief and halt after the child stops eating or when they feel warm again. However, this symptom is very unusual as the victims don’t appear to suffer from seizures when they are given an unfamiliar food, for example a candy bar. The seizures can be severe and cause the child to collapse, leading to further injury.
The Peruvian Meteorite Illness occurred when the Carancas meteorite fell on September 15, 2007. A large chondritic meteorite crashed near the village of Carancas in Peru, close to the Bolivian border and to Lake Titicaca. The impact created a crater and scorched earth around its location. A local official, Marco Limache, said that “boiling water started coming out of the crater, and particles of rock and cinders were found nearby”, as “fetid, noxious” gases spewed from the crater. After the impact, villagers who had approached the impact site grew sick from a then-unexplained illness, with a wide array of symptoms including vomiting. While some speculate that the illness may have been caused by arsenic poisoning as arsenic in the local water was evaporated by the hot meteorite (quite unusual as most meteors are cold upon collision), there is no scientific evidence or consensus on what the cause of this mysterious and brief illness was.
Sweating sickness was a mysterious and highly virulent disease which struck England and later Europe in a series of epidemics, the first beginning in 1485 and the last in 1551, afterwards apparently vanishing. The onset of symptoms was dramatic and sudden, with death often occurring within hours. The cause is the most mysterious aspect of the disease. Commentators then and now put much blame on the general dirt and sewage of the time which may have harboured the source of infection. The first outbreak at the end of the Wars of the Roses means that it may have been brought over from France by the French mercenaries whom Henry VII used to gain the English throne, particularly as they seem to have been immune. The fact that the disease seems to have been more virulent among the rich than the poor suggests why it was judged noteworthy in comparison to the other illnesses of the time. Pictured above is Charles Brandon, Third Duke of Suffolk who died together with his brother of the sweating sickness.
Exploding head syndrome is a condition that causes the sufferer to occasionally experience a tremendously loud noise as originating from within his or her own head, usually described as the sound of an explosion, roar, waves crashing against rocks, loud voices, or a ringing noise. This noise usually occurs within an hour or two of falling asleep, but is not the result of a dream and can happen while awake as well. Perceived as extremely loud, the sound is usually not accompanied by pain. Attacks appear to change in frequency over time, with several attacks occurring in a space of days or weeks followed by months of remission. Sufferers often feel a sense of fear and anxiety after an attack, accompanied by elevated heart rate. The cause of the exploding head syndrome is not known, though some physicians have reported a correlation with stress or extreme fatigue. The condition may develop at any time during life and women are slightly more likely to suffer from it than men. Attacks can be one-time events, or can recur.
This article is licensed under the GFDL because it contains quotations from Wikipedia.
Contributor: JFrater






























Number One would explain the loud ‘bangs’ I feel/hear in my head and make me feel dizzy afterwards – sometimes they wake me up but mostly they occur when I am really *****ed off!
#3 was a defined case of mass hysteria
I have heard loud noises that were not there on occasion. But only once in a great while. So I think I am safe, there.
OK, I’m pretty sure I have exploding head syndrome. About every 6 months, if I’m reading in bed, every thought I have, it is as if my inner voice is screaming at me at the top of it’s lungs. If I fall asleep, it is gone by the time I wake up, but it sounds exactly like what I have. I mentioned it to my psych class a few years ago and everyone looked at me like I was crazy!! Good to know I’m not.
I like this list. I had a co-worker who had Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome. That was a pain in the ass…let me tell you.
Exploding head syndrome…in my case, that’s a migrane.
mental guns on the list, g – belated day belongs to you, take with you all that you can.
Happy b-day, jadude!
yo
I also thought exploding head syndrome was when your dome blew up like in Scanners. It`s just hearing loud ***** wake you up while sleeping.
Exploded head guns on the list,g. not something to wish on your mother in law,yo.
Now Jfray I know u carefully choose the order in which you publish lists. The last list was about mass hysteria and this one is talking about wierd diseases.
Are u trying to create mass hysteria amongst the readers of this list who will start to relate thmeselves to some disease or the other??
Last semester I took a Plagues and Pestilence course, and when i told my aunt she asked about the sweating sickness.
I told her i had never heard of it.
the following exchange took place:
Aunt: “Oh, you should know. It’s the one where you feel real hot, you freak out, and then you DIE!!!
“So they thought freaking out was why you died, and they told everyone to just stop freaking out, and maybe they wouldnt die.”
Me: “did it work?”
A: “Nobody knows, everyone just kept freaking out.”
I honestly thought she had made it up or confused it with some other disease, but I guess not!
number one is more stress related than anything serious, too much stress can confused and literally tired your brain inner signals, it´s nothing to worry about.
As tinnitus goes there was the Heller and Bergman (1953)experiment, where they conducted a study of 80 tinnitus-free university students placed in an anechoic chamber and found that..get this…. 93%!! reported hearing a buzzing, pulsing or whistling sound, they were asked to pay attention to sounds the Mr. Heller and Bergan were gonna give them…they lied ehehe, the students told them what they heard, not knowing it was they´re our brain making the noises. So everyone has tinnitus, because thats the sound (literally) of our brain working.
As long is not followed by hearing loss (turn the ipod down!!) tinnitus is more than a psychology problem, your brain telling you that he´s tired and needs to rest, no wonder the best therapy in the world for tinnitus is Habituation therapy.
Best regards!.
Adrian.
I think ive got that Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity. Cant explain why i do i just have this strange feeling …
I too, have exploding head syndrome. I’ve had it for years and only affects me sometimes. It usually occurs when i first fall asleep and to me it’s like someone pounding a desk i have my head down on, or a firecracker set off next to my head. It’s EXTREMELY startling and does cause a bit of panic for about a minute afterward. It sucks, and they have NO idea what causes it. It’s often listed as a symptom of night terrors, but i don’t believe it’s the same thing.
108. IntercomTwinkie: It’s NEVER lupus.
http://image.hazardstrip.com/ico/sprays/neverlupus_2.gif
132. kowzilla: It’s NEVER lupus.
****
Except when it is, and then your secret stash is discovered….ooops!
I say false advertising for number 10. seriously I thought that exploding head was actually about peoples heads exploding. Boy was I disappointed!
134. Maggie:..seriously I thought that exploding head was actually about peoples heads exploding. Boy was I disappointed!
****
So. Did you also think people with chicken pox had chickens popping out of them?
135. segue: hahahaha…omg…..I just remembered an episode of The Kids Next Door. My kid loves that cartoon. One of the kids gets chicken pox and it really is little chickens popping out of thier faces. That was hilarious! sorry had to share that.
oouchan! manOhman! My mind is as warped as that? lol!
you missed perhaps the number one disease, FOP.
I might have explosing thingy syndrom but i usually only hear it when there is no noise around me at all.
There`s a rare disease that started in Hawaii called Lakanukie.
A cure has been found but the name escapes me.
I think there’s a syndrome that cause s persistent arousal and can actually cause spontaneous orgasms. The name escapes me though.
I’ve actually experienced the first one quite a few times, over random intervals, for years now. For me it’s like the sound of a muffled “doppler effect-like” explosion that wakes me up from sleep. I’ve never felt the fear, anxiety or elevated heart rate though.
I have Exploding Head Syndrome! I swear to God, I have it. It’s the weirdest thing I’ve ever experienced. I’ve had it all my life. I’ve NEVER said a word about it to anybody, untill now. But after reading about it here, I know I have it. It can happen to me twice in one week, or not again for six months.
I’ve had the exploding head syndrome since I was little, im not sure if that’s it, I think it was in another list, but when im sleeping, I dream of a person I know, and they start screaming or shouting, and they get bigger and tower over me, its quite frightening.
Also, curious to know, does anyone else wake up after feeling the sensation of falling, without dreaming, ie falling down stairs suddenly? When I get this I actually fling my hands out in front of me to break my fall…but im in bed, my other half gets this too?
M.E. is not on here?
Hahahaha, Lake Titicaca
I think I’ve had the explody head thing happen to me once…
I thought someone had shot me through the back of my head >__
146. bosoxrule148927: Hahahaha, Lake Titicaca
****
What does does a lake on the border of Bolivia and Peru have to do with Odd Diseases without known cures? And what makes it funny?
Do the grammar schools have a day off?
I also have the exploding head syndrome, 20-30 minutes after I have fallen asleep an extremely loud bang wakes me up.
All these years I have always thought it was imagination.
no love for the dirty dirty French in this list eh?
I’m aware of the exploding head syndrome. Before I learned that it was an actual condition, I suspected that I was going somewhat nuts. Along with the bangs are the occassional sounds like someone is whispering right next to my ear. It always sounds like a one-syllable word and is never clear enough to understand. Now that I know it’s physical, and not psychological or supernatural, I can slee p better at night.
god dammit i have dat exploding head syndrome i always hear loud ringing noises in my ears for no reason i think i took too much dmx and percocet
#1 creeps me out for some reason. What a freakish thing!
there’s nothing to worry about number one, making yourself feel even more scared it’s only make it worse people..
@25. As a fellow sufferer of Meniere’s Disease,it’s wild to see another victim of it Smurff 2. As was noted by another reader, I also had the surgery to relieve some of the symptoms but was told that it was not a guarantee it would work, aftetr years of dizziness,vertigo,nausea, and unreal pain attacks I was willing to try. I was lucky it did work. I have complete hearing loss in my right ear and have had constant ringing for 18 years now but I am able to live a little closer to normal. I still get attacks but I can make it thru them now. Now, I was told there is no known cause but I may be wrong. Sorry to ramble on but it’s rare to be able to find anyone who understands. Thanks all!
PoisonDUst BABY: Aren’t you just a bunch of fun.
I was expecting to see Cluster Headaches (Suicide headaches) in the list.
May be we can include it as bonus?;)
Here’s the link for more info:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluster_headache
Good to know there’s such a thing as the Exploding Head Syndrome. Wihout reading what it’s all about, it sounds actually funny. I’ve had this a couple of times and I was freakin’ scared. I really thought the noises were coming outside my head. I seriously believed it was supernatural. It’s nice to know that though there is no known cause, it’s scientific enough to verify.
Here’s another – Behcet’s Syndrome
I have a friend who has this – it will cause him to eventually go blind, his doctor has told him.
I’ve read somewhere that uranium weapons which was used extensively in Gulf War is responsible for Gulf War Syndrome.
Poison: How about you try that whole “breathing” thing and calm down. I’m not busting on you for talking about GWS. I’ve seen it, I’ve meet the soldiers, I’ve been to the hospitals.
What I was commenting on was your Incredible pessimism about your condition without being anywhere close to informative. I feel for you, thank you for what you’ve done. But do try to keep in mind that not Everyone here has the condition and aren’t as quick to jump on the subject.
The comment was a bit of a bummer, and for some reason has been moderated out. That should tell you something.
I think bosoxrule was just laughing about the titi (breast) and caca (slang for *****).
That might be funny to say on a odd disease list.
161. PoisonDUst BABY: My husband was wounded and got two different kinds of cancer from exposure to Agent Orange in a country in a war we weren’t fighting.
The thing is though, he used his intellect, calm, cool, never backed down until he got exactly what he was entitled to…no more, no less. He kept his cool at every turn, anger does no good; it only makes you forget part of what you wanted and needed to say and do.
Take Crimamon’s advice, take a deep breath and calm down. Things will work out. It may take a little while, things this big and this bulky always do, but you will be taken care of.
163. bigski : I think bosoxrule was just laughing about the titi (breast) and caca (slang for *****).
****
Oh, I see, he has the sense of humor of a five year-old.
It seems that way.
Personally I don`t see how the two connect. One`s good the other not so much.
Yeah, what exactly is the sweating disease? Do you just sweat to death?
It doesn’t ever really say…
My sister has CVS. Thank you for including this on the list. My family volunteers for CVSA, trying to raise awareness in the medical community. For nearly two years, no doctor could figure out what was wrong with her. She suffered episodes that sometimes lasted for more than a month. It wasn’t until a doctor over heard my parents discussing it that had seen a similar case while in med school that my sister was finally diagnosed.
Thank you so much for helping to spread awareness of Morgellons disease and posting such a good piece on the matter. If your readers would like more info on Morgellons, they can check out morgellons
The Gulf War Syndrome is most probably caused by the use of ammunition with depleted uranium by the United States Armed Forces during the 1991 Iraq War. The military knows this but conceals the facts because it would put a lot of shame on the Armed Forces and the victims would claim enormous amounts of money.
A similar thing happened, on a smaller scale, in the Netherlands. On October 4th, 1992, an El Al cargo plane, taking off from Schiphol International Airport, crashed about 15 minutes later on an appartment building in Amsterdam, and immediately caught fire. Depleted uranium was used in the plane, so because of the fire some depleted uranium was released. The same symptoms suffered by United States and British servicemembers who served in the 1991 Iraq War, were later found among residents who lived around the site of the plane crash and among firemen. The Dutch authorities know this but still deny the facts.
What about Foreign Accent Syndrome?
… and btw, Exploding Head Syndrome feels like a single bomb going off in your head.
170. LMS: Foreign Accent Syndrome was dealt with in an earlier list.
so much to the point that Evian is unreasonably priced compared to the average mineral water brand.
#99..No jfrater. I’m not implying you have autism. I assuming you’ve never HEARD of it. There’s NO other way to explain why you don’t have it on this list.
174. dave4248 : There are just too many odd diseases with no known cause for all to be included. I’m sure there will be another list, sometime down the road, and autism will be included.
I have a disease which falls into the category too, but because it’s incidence is only
1 in 1,700,000 it’s too rare to be bothered with. Autism OTOH is fairly common, so I’m sure it will make the next list, or the one after…as I said, there are so many diseases.
I am assuming, since I did not write the list and can only speak for myself, thatit was not on this list because it is looked at as a developmental disability than as a disease. I have worked with autistic children and can not think of a time autism was referred to as a disease.
look up gynecomastia. its a weird disease with no cause
I actually have a disease called juvenile idiopathic arthritis, “idiopathic” meaning “unknown cause.” It’s like rheumatoid arthritis in that it causes inflammation of the joints and eventual destruction of your cartilage and after that, fusing of your joints. It also deforms your joints and if you look up “rheumatoid arthritis” on Google Images you’ll see pictures of deformation. My hands and elbows are deformed along with my feet which turn out away from eachother. However it also affects the organs (mine affects all my joints and my organs), including the eyes and the heart. There is no cure, only treatment to stop the disease from doing further damage. In fact, one of the meds I’m currently on for it called methotrexate is used for treating cancer as well.
Luckily for most kids the disease goes into remission around the age of 13-16, sometimes earlier – it mainly depends on when they stop growing. However it doesn’t always, for example I have stunted growth from it and stopped growing before I was even a teenager but my disease is still extremely active (without my meds I stay in flare-up 24/7). At first the doctors believed my case was from genetics (as rheumatoid runs in my father’s family) but after discovering that him and his mother only have it in their hands and knees they don’t know what caused it because of how severe my case is. I’ve had it since Kindergarten and my doctor still tells me I’m “weird.”
When the disease is allowed to run it’s course the affected joints bend in all sorts of ways. I’ve even heard of people whose feet bent in so far they walked on their ankles. I’ve lost my cartilage in my joints so my bones are grinding on bone, and I’m at the stage where my bones are fusing together (already happened in both wrists and an elbow) and deforming. What I find most interesting is how hopeless the disease is considering our other advancements in medicine.
Hmmm…I sometimes hear noises like snaps or cracks inside my head, but I’ve never heard anything like rocks falling or anything so loud that it hurt. Either I have a mild version of ‘Exploding Head syndrome’ or I’m just crazy.
P.S.-I do always hear the noises when in bed, and the list says that people hear the noises after falling asleep but before dreaming.