Abstract
The second edition of Thomas Kuhn's “Structure of Scientific Revolutions” that captivated one of us in college was published in 1970.1 In the book, Kuhn argues that progress in science is made not by the step-by-step building of incremental ideas or experiments, but by paradigm shifts – whole new ways of looking at phenomena using novel tools (the telescope for Galileo) or concepts (a heliotropic, rather than a geotropic solar system for Copernicus). Our current paradigm about misdiagnosis of patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is that patients who were misdiagnosed on a first visit to a physician who are then correctly diagnosed on a subsequent visit have worse outcomes than patients who are correctly diagnosed in the first place. Now, new data challenge this time-honored concept.
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