Trousseau sign
The Trousseau's sign is a clinical indication of a tetany , for example in the context of hypoparathyroidism .
If, after inflating a blood pressure cuff above the systolic blood pressure , the hand is in a pawl position , latent tetany due to calcium deficiency ( hypocalcemia ) can be assumed. The paw position consists of a spastic contraction of the finger flexors and hand muscles.
The Trousseau's sign has low sensitivity and specificity , but it is very easy to check and, like the Chvostek's sign and the Faust sign , can be used for medical monitoring of the patient, for example after resection of the thyroid gland .
It is named after the French internist Armand Trousseau (1801–1867).
literature
- John Edwin Jesus, Alden Landry: Chvostek's and Trousseau's Signs. In: New England Journal of Medicine. 367, 2012, p. E15, doi: 10.1056 / NEJMicm1110569 . (Video of the Trousseau sign)
- Michael E. Meininger, Jason S. Kendler: Trousseau's Sign. In: New England Journal of Medicine. 343, 2000, pp. 1855-1855, doi: 10.1056 / NEJM200012213432506 .
- Armand Trousseau: Clinique médicale de l'Hôtel-Dieu de Paris. Volume 2, Paris 1861, pp. 112-114. (Initial description)