Eponymous medical signs are those that are named after a person or persons, usually the physicians who first described them, but occasionally named after a famous patient. This list includes other eponymous entities of diagnostic significance; i.e. tests, reflexes, etc.
Sign | Name | Specialty | Associated conditions | External link (if no internal link) | Descriptor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aaron's sign | Charles Dettie Aaron | surgery | appendicitis | epigastric pain with pressure on McBurney's point | |
Abadie's sign | Jean Marie Charles Abadie | endocrinology | Graves' disease | levator palpebrae superioris spasm | |
Abadie's symptom | Joseph Louis Irenée Jean Abadie | neurology | tabes dorsalis | absence of pain on Achilles tendon pressure | |
Abderhalden reaction | Emil Abderhalden | obstetrics | pregnancy | serum reaction;obsolete | |
Abelin reaction | Isaak Abelin | infectious disease | syphilis | presence of arsenical anti-syphilitic;obsolete | |
Addis count | Thomas Addis | nephrology | pyelonephritis | quantitative cells and casts in 24hr. urine | |
Adie pupil | William John Adie | neurology | ciliary nerve damage | dilated pupil, poorly reactive but with normal near accommodation | |
Adson's sign | Alfred Washington Adson | vascular surgery | thoracic outlet syndrome | obliteration of radial pulse with manoeuvres | |
Alexander's law | Gustav Alexander | neurology, neurosurgery, ENT | vestibular lesions | describes nystagmus in vestibular lesions | |
Allen's test | Edgar Van Nuys Allen | vascular surgery, critical care [1] | arterial supply of the hand | tests for presence of palmar ulnar-radial anastomosis (palmar arch) | |
Apgar score | Virginia Apgar | obstetrics, pediatrics | assess health of newborn | ||
Apley grind test | Alan Graham Apley | orthopaedic surgery | meniscal lesions | manoeuvres to elicit knee pain | |
Argyll Robertson pupils | Douglas Moray Cooper Lamb Argyll Robertson | neurology | neurosyphilis [2] | light-near dissociation | |
Arneth count | Josef Arneth | haematology, nutrition | folate deficiency | lobulation of neutrophil nuclei | |
Asboe-Hansen sign | Gustav Asboe-Hansen | dermatology | bullae | extension of a blister to adjacent unblistered skin when pressed | |
Aschheim–Zondek test | Selmar Aschheim, Bernhard Zondek | obstetrics | normal pregnancy | synd/1834 at Who Named It? | oestral reaction in mouse injected with pregnant urine |
Aschoff body | Karl Albert Ludwig Aschoff | rheumatology, pathology | rheumatic fever | foci of interstitial inflammation in the myocardium and elsewhere | |
Ashby technique | Winifred Ashby | haematology, pathology | haemolysis | synd/233 at Who Named It? | agglutination test for erythrocyte survival |
Auberger's blood group | Auberger (patient) | haematology | normal physiology | synd/283 at Who Named It? | Aua antigen |
Auenbrugger's sign | Josef Leopold Auenbrugger | cardiology | pericardial effusion | synd/284 at Who Named It? | bulging epigastrium |
Auer rods | John Auer | hematology | acute myeloid leukemia | cytoplasmic inclusions in myeloblasts | |
Auspitz's sign | Heinrich Auspitz | dermatology | psoriasis | pinpoint bleeding when scales are removed from psoriasis or warts | |
Austin Flint murmur | Austin Flint | cardiology | aortic insufficiency | mid-diastolic rumble heard at apex | |
Babinski sign | Joseph Babinski | neurology | abnormal plantar reflex | Kumar SP, Ramasubramanian D (December 2000). "The Babinski sign—a reappraisal". Neurol India. 48 (4): 314–8. PMID 11146592 . Retrieved 13 April 2009. | dorsiflexion of the hallux with fanning of the remaining phalanges upon soft stimulation of the lateral plantar surface of the foot |
Bainbridge reflex | Francis Arthur Bainbridge | cardiology | normal physiology | increase in heart rate with increase in circulating blood volume | |
Balbiani rings | Edouard-Gérard Balbiani | genetics | RNA transcription | synd/601 at Who Named It? | large chromosome puff indicating site of RNA transcription |
Ballance's sign | Charles Alfred Ballance | general surgery | abdominal/splenic trauma | percussive dullness left flank, LUQ, percussive resonance right flank | |
Bancroft's sign | Joseph Bancroft | vascular medicine | deep vein thrombosis | pain on anterior, but not lateral, compression of calf | |
Bárány test | Robert Bárány | ENT, neurology | vertigo, vestibular dysfunction | synd/595 at Who Named It? | nystagmus elicited by hot or cold irrigation of ear canal |
Barlow's maneuver | Thomas Geoffrey Barlow, English Pediatric Orthopedist, (1915–1975) | paediatrics, orthopaedic surgery | hip dysplasia | dislocation on adduction of hip | |
Bart hemoglobin | Barts Hospital | Obstetrics, pathology | indicates a specific cause of death in some stillborns | Loss of all four alpha-globin genes (total alpha-thalassemia) leads to severely anemic stillborn babies with small amounts of an abnormal hemoglobin composed of four gamma sub-units (Bart's Hemoglobin) | |
Bastian–Bruns sign | Henry Charlton Bastian, Ludwig Bruns | neurology | spinal cord transection | loss of muscle tone and reflexes below lesion level | |
Battle's sign | William Henry Battle | neurosurgery/traumatology | basal skull fracture | mastoid ecchymosis | |
Beau's lines | Joseph Honoré Simon Beau | dermatology, internal medicine | multiple, including trauma | transverse ridges on nails | |
Beck's triad | Claude Schaeffer Beck | cardiology | cardiac tamponade | hypotension, increased central venous pressure (JVP), distant heart sounds | |
Becker's sign | Otto Heinrich Enoch Becker | ophthalmology, endocrinology | thyrotoxicosis | visible pulsation of retinal arteries | |
Beevor's sign | Charles Edward Beevor | neurology, neurosurgery | spinal trauma at T10 | cephalad movement of navel on cervical flexion | |
Bekhterev–Jacobsohn reflex | Vladimir Bekhterev, Louis Jacobsohn-Lask | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | stroking dorsal radial skin, with forearm in supination, elicits wrist and finger flexion | |
Bekhterev–Mendel reflex | Vladimir Bekhterev, Kurt Mendel | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | toe flexion on percussion of dorsum of foot | |
Bence Jones protein | Henry Bence Jones | hematology | multiple myeloma | ||
Benedict solution | Stanley Rossiter Benedict | endocrinology | diabetes mellitus | reagent for presence of monosaccharides | |
Berger wave (rhythm) | Hans Berger | neurology | normal physiology | electroencephalographic alpha wave | |
Bezold–Jarisch reflex | Albert von Bezold, Adolf Jarisch | pharmacology, toxicology | effect of certain alkaloids | apnea, bradycardia, hypotension | |
Bielschowsky's head tilt test | Alfred Bielschowsky | neurology, ophthalmology | lesions of cranial nerve IV | test for palsy of superior oblique muscle | |
Bing's sign | Paul Robert Bing | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | extension of the great toe on pricking the dorsum of the foot with a pin | |
Biot's respiration | Camille Biot | neurology | brain stem herniation | quick shallow respirations followed by period of apnea | |
Bitot's spots | Pierre Bitôt | ophthalmology | vitamin A deficiency | spots of keratin deposition in the conjunctiva | |
Bjerrum scotoma | Jannik Peterson Bjerrum | ophthalmology | glaucoma | comet shaped visual field defect, extending temporally from the physiological blind spot | |
Blumberg's sign | Jacob Moritz Blumberg | surgery | peritonitis | rebound tenderness | |
Boas' point | Ismar Isidor Boas | gastroenterology | gastric ulcer | dermal hyperaesthesia just left of T12 | |
Boas' sign | Ismar Isidor Boas | gastroenterology | acute cholecystitis | dermal hyperaesthesia at inferior angle of R scapula | |
Bodansky unit | Aaron Bodansky | clinical chemistry | unit of alkaline phosphatase concentration in blood | ||
Boston's sign | Leonard N. Boston | ophthalmology, endocrinology | thyrotoxicosis | spasmodic ptosis on downward gaze | |
Bouchard's nodes | Charles-Joseph Bouchard | rheumatology | osteoarthritis | bony outgrowths on dorsa of proximal interphalangeal joints | |
Bracht–Wachter bodies | Erich Franz Eugen Bracht, Hermann Julius Gustav Wächter | cardiology | infective endocarditis | yellow-white spots in the myocardium | |
Branham's sign | Henry Branham | vascular surgery, nephrology | chronic kidney disease, hemodialysis | pressing on proximal portion of AV fistula results in bradycardia | |
Braxton Hicks contraction | John Braxton Hicks | obstetrics | normal pregnancy | "false labour". sporadic contractions beginning as early as mid 1st trimester | |
Brewer infarcts | George Emerson Brewer | nephrology, pathology | pyelonephritis | dark red wedge shaped areas on kidney section resembling infarcts | |
Brissaud's reflex | Édouard Brissaud | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | plantar stimulation elicits contraction of tensor fasciae latae | |
Broadbent inverted sign | Sir William Broadbent, 1st Baronet | cardiology | L atrial hypertrophy | systole palpable in posterior chest wall | |
Broadbent sign | Walter Broadbent | cardiology | adhesive pericarditis | recession of L inferior intercostal spaces | |
Broca aphasia | Paul Broca | neurology, neuropsychology | developmental or other pathology of various frontal cortical areas | expressive aphasia | |
Brodie–Trendelenburg percussion test | Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie, 1st Baronet, Friedrich Trendelenburg | general medicine, surgery | varicose veins | superficial vein is percussed proximally; if impulse is felt over vein distally, valvular incompetence is present | |
Budin's sign | Pierre-Constant Budin | surgery, obstetrics | suppurative mastitis | if breast milk flown into a sterile pad is mixed with pus (brown, yellow or bloody traces), mastitis may be present | |
Brodie–Trendelenburg test | Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie, 1st Baronet, Friedrich Trendelenburg | general medicine, surgery | varicose veins | identifies level of valvular incompetence | |
Brudziński neck sign | Józef Brudziński | neurology | meningitis | neck flexion elicits hip and knee flexion | |
Brudziński cheek sign | Józef Brudziński | neurology | meningitis | pressure beneath zygoma elicits flexion of forearm | |
Brudziński symphyseal sign | Józef Brudziński | neurology | meningitis | pressure over symphisis pubis elicits knee, hip flexion and leg abduction | |
Brudziński reflex | Józef Brudziński | neurology | meningitis | passive flexion of knee to abdomen elicits flexion of contralateral hip and knee | |
Bruit de Roger | Henri-Louis Roger | paediatric cardiology | ventricular septal defect | loud pansystolic murmur | |
Bruns ataxia | Ludwig Bruns | neurology | frontal lobe lesions | difficulty moving feet in contact with floor, tendency to fall backwards | |
Bruns nystagmus | Ludwig Bruns | neurology | cerebellopontine angle tumor, vestibular schwannoma | nystagmus that coarsens in amplitude on lateral gaze | |
Brushfield spots | Thomas Brushfield | ophthalmology, genetics | Downs' syndrome or non-pathological | greyish-white spots at periphery of iris | |
Buerger's test | Leo Buerger | general medicine, surgery | peripheral artery disease | pallor of the leg upon elevation | |
Burton line | Henry Burton | toxicology | lead poisoning | NEJM 354:e21 5/18/06 | blue discolouration of the gingival border |
Cabot rings | Richard Cabot | hematology | lead poisoning, anaemias | threadlike strands in erythrocytes | |
Caput medusae | Medusa | gastroenterology, surgery | portal hypertension | distended veins radiating from umbilicus | |
Cardarelli's sign | Antonio Cardarelli | cardiology, thoracic surgery | aortic arch dilatation or aneurysm, mediastinal tumour | left displacement of trachea elicits palpable pulsation of same | |
Carey Coombs murmur | Carey Coombs | cardiology, rheumatology | rheumatic fever | mid-diastolic rumble | |
Carnett's sign | John Berton Carnett | primary care, surgery | abdominal mass and/or pain | Am J Med Sci 174 (1927): 579–599 | supine patient lifts head from bed;↑ pain – abdominal wall ;↓ pain – intraperitoneal |
Carvallo's sign | José Manuel Rivero Carvallo | cardiology | tricuspid regurgitation | increase in volume of murmur on inspiration | |
Casal collar | Gaspar Casal | nutrition | pellagra (niacin deficiency) | Casal collar at Medscape | widely variable collar of dermatitis characteristically in c3,c4 dermatomes |
Casoni test | Tomaso Casoni | infectious disease, tropical medicine | hydatid disease | intradermal injection of hydatid fluid causing wheal | |
Celsus signs of inflammation | Aulus Cornelius Celsus | various | inflammation | 1. Rubor (redness) 2. Tumor (swelling)3. Calor (heat) 4. Dolor (pain) | |
Chaddock reflex | Charles Gilbert Chaddock | neurology | pyramidal lesions, corticospinal tract lesions | extension of big toe with stimulation of skin over lateral malleolus | |
Chadwick sign | James Read Chadwick | obstetrics | pregnancy | cyanosis of vulva, vagina and cervix | |
Chagas disease | Carlos Chagas | infectious disease, tropical medicine | heart failure | Heart failure, enlarged esophagus, enlarged colon | |
Charcot's triad | Jean-Martin Charcot | surgery | ascending cholangitis | jaundice, fever and chills, RUQ pain | |
Charcot's triad | Jean-Martin Charcot | neurology | multiple sclerosis | nystagmus, intention tremor, staccato speech | |
Charcot–Leyden crystals | Jean-Martin Charcot, Ernst Viktor von Leyden | pathology | any disorder characterized by eosinophil proliferation, e.g. ascariasis | lysophospholipase crystals in various tissues | |
Cheyne–Stokes respiration | John Cheyne, William Stokes | palliative care | respiratory center damage | fluctuation between apnoea and tachypnoea | |
Churchill–Cope reflex | Edward Delos Churchill, Oliver Cope | cardiology | heart failure | distension of pulmonary vascular bed causes tachypnoea | |
Chvostek sign | František Chvostek | endocrinology | hypocalcemia | tapping over facial nerve elicits abnormal muscle contraction(s) | |
Claybrook sign | Edwin Claybrook | emergency medicine, surgery | blunt abdominal trauma | heart and/or breath sounds heard through abdominal wall indicate rupture of viscus | |
Clutton's joints | Henry Hugh Clutton | paediatrics | congenital syphilis | painless symmetrical hydrarthroses, particularly of the knees | |
Codman's triangle | Ernest Codman | oncology, orthopaedic surgery, radiology | osteosarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma | triangular subperiosteal growth | |
Comby sign | Jules Comby | paediatrics | rubeola | whitish patches on gingiva and buccal mucosa | |
Comolli's sign | Antonio Comolli | Orthopaedic surgery | Scapular fracture | "Comolli's sign". The Free Dictionary. Retrieved 29 May 2013. | triangular swelling corresponding to the outline of the scapula |
Coombs test | Robin Coombs | hematology | hemolytic anemia | ||
Coons fluorescent antibody method | Albert Coons | immunology | Albert Coons at National Academies Press | detection of antibodies by fluorescence microscopy using fluorescein-labelled antibodies | |
Cornell's sign | Ethel L. Cornell, American Neuropsychologist and Psychiatrist, Columbia University NY (1882–1972) | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | The Babinski sign – a reappraisal Neurol India48 (4): 314–8. | scratching alongside big toe extensor tendon elicits an extensor plantar response |
Corrigan pulse | Dominic John Corrigan | cardiology | aortic insufficiency | carotid pulsations with abrupt ascending and descending phases | |
Councilman body | William Thomas Councilman | infectious disease | yellow fever, viral haemorrhagic fevers | eosinophilic globules in liver | |
Courvoisier's law | Ludwig Georg Courvoisier | gastroenterology | obstructive jaundice | palpable gall bladder w/ painless jaundice unlikely to be cholelithiasis | |
Crichton-Browne sign | Sir James Crichton-Browne | neuropsychiatry | 'general paresis' | tremor at corners of mouth and of outer canthus | |
Crowe sign | Frank W. Crowe | dermatology | neurofibromatosis type I | axillary freckling | |
Cruveilhier–Baumgarten bruit | Jean Cruveilhier, Paul Clemens von Baumgarten | hepatology | Cruveilhier–Baumgarten disease | bruit around the umbilicus | |
Cullen's sign | Thomas S. Cullen | surgery, obstetrics | intra-abdominal haemorrhage, ectopic pregnancy | ecchymosis around umbilicus predicts onset of acute pancreatitis | |
Curschmann spirals | Heinrich Curschmann | pulmonology | asthma | spiral mucus plugs found in sputum | |
Cushing's triad | Harvey Cushing | neurology | raised intracranial pressure | elevated systolic bp, bradycardia, irregular respiration | |
Dagher Maneuver | Nabil Dagher | trauma surgery | penetrating pelvic trauma | bimanual palpation of foreign object lodged in pelvis with one digit in an incision lateral to the anus and the other digit inserted in the rectum | |
Dahlén–Fuchs nodules | Johan Dahlén, Ernst Fuchs | ophthalmology | sympathetic ophthalmia | granulocytic infiltrate of the uvea | |
Dahl's sign | K.V. Dahl | pulmonology | COPD | pigmented calluses on anterior surface of thighs (from leaning on elbows) | |
Dalrymple sign | John Dalrymple | ophthalmology, endocrinology | thyrotoxicosis | synd/494 at Who Named It? | widened palpebral opening |
Dance's sign | Jean Baptiste Hippolyte Dance | (paediatric)surgery | ileo-cecal intussusception | synd/3355 at Who Named It? | empty RLQ (retracted right iliac fossa) |
Darier's sign | Ferdinand-Jean Darier | allergy, dermatology | urticaria pigmentosa | dermatographia | |
Dawson's fingers | James Walker Dawson | neurology | multiple sclerosis | characteristic fingerlike appearance of lateral ventricle on mri, ct, or at autopsy | |
De Musset's sign | Alfred de Musset | cardiology | aortic insufficiency | head nodding in time with heartbeat | |
Dennie–Morgan fold | Charles Clayton Dennie DB Morgan | dermatology | atopic dermatitis | Dennie's line at TheFreeDictionary.com | accentuated fold below the lower eyelid |
Destot's sign | Etienne Destot | orthopaedic surgery | pelvic fracture | ecchymosis superior to inguinal ligament, in scrotum or of thigh | |
Dix–Hallpike test | Margaret R. Dix, Charles Skinner Hallpike | otolaryngology | Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo | synd/3615 at Who Named It? | Elicitation of extreme vertigo upon lateral movement of a patient's head when lying in a supine position |
Döhle bodies | Karl Gottfried Paul Döhle | pathology | various including trauma and neoplasm | basophilic inclusions in peripheral cytoplasm of neutrophils | |
Doi's sign | Hitoka Doi | neurology | Eaton–Lambert syndrome | reappearance of absent deep tendon reflexes after short period of maximal muscle contraction | |
Dunphy's sign | Osborne Joby Dunphy | surgery | appendicitis | increase in abdominal pain on coughing | |
Duroziez's sign | Paul Louis Duroziez | cardiology | aortic insufficiency | double bruit heard over femoral artery when it is compressed distally (see Traube's sign) | |
Elschnig spots | Anton Elschnig | ophthalmology | hypertensive retinopathy | ||
Epstein's pearls | Alois Epstein | paediatrics | normal newborn | cystic papules on palate | |
Ewart's sign | William Ewart | cardiology | pericardial effusion | percussive dullness, aegophony and bronchial breath sounds at L scapular tip | |
Faget sign | Jean-Charles Faget | infectious disease | yellow fever Typhoid Fever tularaemia brucellosis others | Faget's sign at Who Named It? | the unusual constellation of fever and bradycardia |
Finkelstein's test | Harry Finkelstein | rheumatology | DeQuervain's tenosynovitis | ||
Forchheimer spots | Frederick Forchheimer | paediatrics | rubella | small red spots on the soft palate | |
Fothergill's sign | John Fothergill | surgery | rectus sheath hematoma | anterior abdominal mass which does not cross the midline and is still palpable when abdominal wall muscles are tensed | |
Fox's sign | George Henry Fox | gastroenterology | haemorrhagic pancreatitis | ecchymosis of inguinal ligament (blood tracks retroperitoneally) | |
Frank's sign | Sanders T. Frank | cardiology | ischaemic heart disease | ear crease indicating risk of heart disease (disputed) | |
Friedreich's sign | Nikolaus Friedreich | cardiology | constrictive pericarditis, tricuspid insufficiency | collapse of distended neck veins in diastole | |
Froment's sign | Jules Froment | neurology | ulnar nerve palsy | patient required to hold paper between thumb and palm (against attempt to withdraw);ability to do so is assessed | |
Gallavardin phenomenon | Louis Gallavardin | cardiology | aortic stenosis | dissociation of musical and noisy elements in ejection murmur | |
Gamna–Favre bodies | Carlos Gamna, Maurice Favre | histology | lymphogranuloma venereum | Gamna-Favre bodies at Who Named It? | basophilic cytoplasmic inclusion bodies |
Gandy–Gamna nodules | Charles Gandy, Carlos Gamna | histology | splenomegaly due to portal hypertension and sickle cell disease | Gandy-Gamna bodies at Who Named It? | small yellow-brown foci in the spleen |
Garrod's pads | Archibald Garrod | dermatology | repeated extreme tension of extensor tendon in interphalangeal joint | thickening of skin and tissue over interphalangeal joint | |
Gerhardt's sign | Carl Jakob Adolf Christian Gerhardt | Gerhardt's sign at Who Named It? http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/omd?Biermer's+sign | controversial[ permanent dead link ]: see references | ||
Glasgow Coma Scale | Glasgow | neurology | A neurological scale which aims to give a reliable and objective way of recording the conscious state of a person for initial as well as subsequent assessment. | The sum of Eye, Motor and Verbal responses. | |
Goetz sign | Robert H. Goetz | Patent Ductus Arteriosus | Seen during right ventriculography in the setting of a patent ductus arteriosus, the Goetz sign refers to the negative contrast effect seen in the pulmonary artery from non-contrast enhanced blood shunting left to right from the aorta | ||
Gonda's sign | Viktor Gonda, Ukrainian Neuropsychiatrist, (1889–1959) | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | The Babinski sign – a reappraisal Neurol India48 (4): 314–8. | flexing then suddenly releasing the 4th toe elicits an extensor plantar response |
Goodell's sign | William Goodell | obstetrics | pregnancy | softening of the vaginal part of the cervix during the first trimester | |
Goodsall's rule | David Henry Goodsall | gastroenterology, general surgery | anal fistula | anatomical relationships, differentiation of fistula types | |
Gordon's sign | Alfred Gordon | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | The Babinski sign – a reappraisal Neurol India48 (4): 314–8. | squeezing the calf muscle elicits an extensor plantar response |
Gottron's papules | Heinrich Adolf Gottron | rheumatology | dermatomyositis | Pathologic Basis of Disease (8th Ed), Robbins & Cotran | Scaling, erythematous eruption or dusky red patches over the knuckles, elbows and knees |
Gowers' sign [3] | William Richard Gowers | neurology | muscular dystrophy | ||
Graham Steell murmur | Graham Steell | cardiology | mitral stenosis | pulmonary regurgitation murmur in patients with pulmonary hypertension secondary to mitral stenosis | |
Grey Turner's sign | George Grey Turner | surgery | retroperitoneal hemorrhage | flank ecchymosis | |
Griffith's sign | Alexander Hill Griffith, Scottish Ophthalmologist, Manchester (1858–1937) | endocrinology | Graves' ophthalmopathy | (needed) | lid lag of the lower eyelid on upward eye movement |
Grisel's syndrome | Pierre Grisel | rheumatology | non-traumatic subluxation of the atlanto-axial joint caused by inflammation of the adjacent tissues | ||
Gunn's sign | Robert Marcus Gunn | ophthalmology | hypertension | Gunn's sign at Who Named It? | AV "nicking" or "nipping" in hypertensive retinopathy |
Hamman's sign | Louis Hamman | thoracic surgery | oesophageal perforation w/ pneumomediastinum | crepitus in sync w/ heartbeat but not respiration | |
Hampton's hump | Aubrey Otis Hampton | pulmonology, radiology | pulmonary embolus with infarct | Hampton's hump at Who Named It? | wedge shaped consolidation at periphery with base on the pleura |
Hampton's line | Aubrey Otis Hampton | radiology, gastroenterology | peptic ulcer | Hampton's line at Who Named It? | line on barium meal indicating mucosal oedema associated with ulcer |
Hannington-Kiff sign | John G. Hannington-Kiff | general surgery | obturator hernia | absent thigh adductor reflex with positive patellar reflex | |
Harrison's groove | Edward Harrison | internal medicine | rickets | Harrison's sulcus at Who Named It? | rib deformity at the lower thorax |
Hatchcock's sign | ? | paediatrics, infectious disease | mumps | (needed) | tenderness behind angle of jaw (typically before swelling is evident) |
Heberden's node | William Heberden | rheumatology | osteoarthritis | same as bouchard's nodes, but over dip joints | |
Hegar's sign | Ernst Ludwig Alfred Hegar | obstetrics | normal pregnancy | softening of cervical isthmus appearing between 4th and 6th weeks (usually) | |
Hess test | Alfred Fabian Hess | internal medicine | capillary fragility | Rumpel-Konchalevskii-Leede phenomenon or sign at Who Named It? | appearance of petechiae after compression of arm by bandage or blood pressure cuff |
Hildreth's sign | DH Hildreth | dermatology | glomus tumor | Relief of pain at tumor site upon vascular occlusion of limb, with acute return of pain on reperfusion | |
Hippocratic face | Hippocrates | palliative care | impending death | ||
Hippocratic fingers | Hippocrates | pulmonary medicine | chronic hypoxia | clubbing of distal phalanges | |
Hirschberg test | Julius Hirschberg | ophthalmology | strabismus | corneal reflection centred (-) or not centred (+) on pupil | |
Hoffmann's sign | Johann Hoffmann | neurology | corticospinal tract lesions | tapping distal phalanx of 3rd or 4th finger elicits flexion of same in thumb | |
Hollenhorst plaque | Robert Hollenhorst | ophthalmology | hypertension, coronary artery disease, and/or diabetes | cholesterol embolus(i) of retinal artery(ies) | |
Homans' sign | John Homans | thrombosis | deep venous thrombosis | knee bent, ankle abruptly dorsiflexed, popliteal pain | |
Hoover's sign (leg paresis) | Charles Franklin Hoover | neurology, psychiatry | lower extremity paresis | differentiates organic from non-organic etiology | |
Hoover's sign (pulmonary) | Charles Franklin Hoover | pulmonology | COPD | inward movement of lower ribs during inspiration | |
Howship–Romberg sign | John Howship, Moritz Heinrich Romberg | surgery | obturator hernia | Howship's syndrome at Who Named It? | pain from an obturator hernia radiating to knee |
Hutchinson's freckle | Sir Jonathan Hutchinson | dermatology | melanoma | Hutchinson's freckle at Who Named It? | precancerous facial pigmentation |
Hutchinson's pupil | Sir Jonathan Hutchinson | neurology | oculomotor nerve lesion | Hutchinson's pupil at Who Named It? | dilated pupil on the side of an intracranial lesion due to IIIrd nerve compression |
Hutchinson's sign | Sir Jonathan Hutchinson | ophthalmology | herpes zoster | Hutchinson's sign 2 at Who Named It? | lesion on tip of the nose which can presage ocular herpes zoster |
Hutchinson's teeth [4] | Sir Jonathan Hutchinson | pediatrics | congenital syphilis | small, widely spaced incisors with notched biting surfaces | |
Hutchinson's triad | Sir Jonathan Hutchinson | pediatrics | congenital syphilis | interstitial keratitis, nerve deafness, Hutchinson's teeth | |
Janeway lesion | Theodore Caldwell Janeway | cardiology | infective endocarditis | palmar or plantar erythematous or haemorrhagic papules | |
Jendrassik maneuver | Ernő Jendrassik | neurology | hyporeflexia | compares patellar reflex w/ and w/o distraction | |
Jobe's relocation test | Christopher Jobe | orthopedics | |||
Joffroy's sign | Alexis Joffroy | endocrinology | exophthalmos in Graves disease | Joffroy's sign I at Who Named It? | lack of forehead wrinkling when patient looks up with head bowed |
Jolly's test | Friedrich Jolly | neurology | myasthenia gravis or Eaton–Lambert syndrome | electromyography test using repeated stimuli to show fatiguability in myasthenia | |
Jones criteria | T. Duckett Jones | rheumatology | rheumatic fever | criteria used to diagnose rheumatic fever | |
Kanavel's sign | Allen B. Kanavel | orthopedics, rheumatology | tenosynovitis of flexor digitorum tendon | http://www.emedicine.com/orthoped/TOPIC97.HTM | (1) finger held in slight flexion, (2) fusiform swelling, (3) tenderness along the flexor tendon sheath, and (4) pain with passive extension of the digit. |
Kayser–Fleischer ring | Bernhard Kayser, Bruno Fleischer | neurology, gastroenterology | Wilson's disease (hepatolenticular degeneration) | ring of brownish copper deposit at corneo-scleral junction | |
Kehr's sign | Hans Kehr | trauma surgery | ruptured spleen | referred pain to L shoulder | |
Kelly's sign | Howard Atwood Kelly | surgery, urology | visible response of ureter when touched (means of identifying same) | ||
Kerley lines | Peter Kerley | radiology | pulmonary edema | ||
Kernig's sign | Woldemar Kernig | neurology | meningism, meningitis, subarachnoid haemorrhage | synd/2200 at Who Named It? | hip and knee fully flexed, extension of knee elicits pain and/or opisthotonus |
Kocher's sign | Emil Theodor Kocher | ophthalmology, endocrinology | Hyperthyroidism, Basedow's disease, | In fixation on a fast upwards movement there occurs a convulsive retraction of the eyelid | |
Koebner's phenomenon | Heinrich Koebner | dermatology | various conditions | ||
Koeppe's nodules | Leonhard Koeppe | ophthalmology | uveitis | granulomatous nodules at pupillary margin | |
Koplik's spots | Henry Koplik | pediatrics | measles | ||
Korotkoff sounds | Nikolai Korotkov | cardiology | auscultatory sphygmomanometry | Korotkov described 5 sounds. Only the first (the onset of audible sound, and corresponding to systolic pressure) and the fifth (sound becomes inaudible, corresponding to diastolic pressure) are of practical clinical significance (however, see:Auscultatory gap) | |
Kussmaul breathing [5] | Adolph Kussmaul | endocrinology | metabolic acidosis | laboured deep breathing with normal or reduced frequency | |
Kussmaul's sign | Adolph Kussmaul | cardiology | various, including right side failure | increased jugular distension on inspiration | |
Kveim test | Morten Ansgar Kveim | pulmonary medicine | sarcoidosis | intradermal injection of lymphatic extract from known sufferer; obsolete | |
Lachman maneuver | John Lachman | orthopedic surgery | anterior cruciate ligament injury | modified anterior drawer test with knee in less flexion | |
Ladin's sign | Louis Julius Ladin, Lithuanian-American Gynecologist, (1862–1951) | obstetrics | normal pregnancy | (needed) | softening of uterus; similar to Hegar's sign |
Lancisi's sign | Giovanni Maria Lancisi | cardiology | tricuspid regurgitation | giant v-wave in seen in jugular vein | |
Landau–Kleffner syndrome | William Landau, Frank Kleffner | neurology, psychiatry | aphasia | aphasia and an abnormal EEG | |
Larrey's sign | Dominique Larrey | rheumatology | sacroiliitis | pain in sacroiliac area on sitting down on hard chair | |
Lasègue's sign | Charles Lasègue | neurosurgery, orthopaedic surgery | lumbar disc lesions, sciatica | better known as straight leg raise test | |
Leopold's maneuver | Christian Gerhard Leopold | obstetrics | Leopold's maneuver at Who Named It? | determination of fetal lie | |
Leser–Trélat sign | Edmund Leser, Ulysse Trélat | oncology | malignant neoplasm | Leser-Trélat sign at Who Named It? | sudden onset of multiple pruritic seborrheic keratoses |
Levine's sign | Samuel A. Levine | cardiology | myocardial infarction | patient clenches fist over chest when asked to describe pain | |
Lhermitte's sign | Jean Lhermitte | neurology | lesions of cervical cord dorsal columns or caudal medulla, MS, chemotherapy, Behçet's disease | electrical sensation down the back and into limbs with neck flexion or extension | |
Liebermeister's rule | Carl von Liebermeister | internal medicine | Liebermeister's rule at Who Named It? | For each fever degree Celsius an increase of 8 beats per minute in cardiac frequency | |
Lisch nodule | Karl Lisch | ophthalmology | type I neurofibromatosis | yellow brown hamartomata on iris | |
Lisker's sign | ? | internal medicine | deep venous thrombosis | (needed) | tenderness on percussion of antero-medial tibia |
Litten's sign | Moritz Litten | cardiology | infective endocarditis | eMedicine | cotton-wool exudate in the retina |
Lombard effect | Étienne Lombard | psychiatry | malingering due to simulated deafness | automatic rise in the loudness of a person's voice when they speak in noise | |
Louvel's sign | ? | internal medicine | deep venous thrombosis | (needed) | increased pain along vein with Valsalva; proximal pressure prevents this |
Lowenberg's sign | Robert I. Lowenberg | vascular medicine | deep vein thrombosis | (needed) | immediate pain on inflating blood pressure cuff around calf |
MacDonald triad | John M. MacDonald | psychiatry | sociopathic personality disorder | eneuresis, firesetting and animal torture predictive of future criminal behaviour | |
Macewen's sign | Sir William Macewen | neurology, neurosurgery | hydrocephalus, brain abscess | resonance on percussion of fronto-temporo-parietal suture | |
Magnan's sign | Valentin Magnan | addiction medicine | cocaine dependence | Magnan's sign at Who Named It? | feeling of moving foreign body under the skin |
Mantoux test | Charles Mantoux | infectious disease | tuberculosis | intradermal protein derivative – diameter of wheal evaluated | |
Marcus Gunn pupil | Robert Marcus Gunn | ophthalmology, neurology | severe retinal disease, lesion of optic nerve anterior to chiasm | Gunn's pupillary phenomenon at Who Named It? | Relative pupil dilatation when light swings to the affected side |
Markle's sign | George Bushar Markle IV | surgery | appendicitis | (needed) | RLQ pain on dropping from standing on toes to heels |
Massouh's sign | Farouk Massouh | surgery | appendicitis | (needed) | grimace of the patient upon a right sided (and not left) sweep. |
Mayne's sign | ? | cardiology | aortic insufficiency | (needed) | diastolic blood pressure drop of >15mmHg on raising arm |
McBurney's point | Charles McBurney | surgery | appendicitis | 2/3 of the way lateral on a line from umbilicus to anterior superior iliac spine (corresponds to junction of vermiform appendix and cecum) | |
McConnell's sign | M.V. McConnell | cardiology | pulmonary embolism | echocardiography finding of akinesia of the mid-free wall of the right ventricle but normal motion of the apex | |
McMurray test | Thomas Porter McMurray | orthopaedics | meniscal tear | McMurray's sign at Who Named It? | knee extended, valgus stress applied, leg rotated produces palpable or audible click |
Means–Lerman scratch | J. Lerman, J.H. Means | endocrinology | hyperthyroidism | systolic heart murmur similar to pericardial rub | |
Mees' lines | R.A. Mees | toxicology | arsenic or heavy metal poisoning | transverse white lines across the nails | |
Meigs' syndrome | Joe Vincent Meigs | gynecology | ascites with hydrothorax | [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10996681 | Triad of ascites, hydrothorax and benign ovarian tumor |
Mellinghoff's sign | Karl Hermann Mellinghoff, German Endocrinologist, (1908–1967) | hyperbaric medicine | cutaneous decompression sickness | coughing or Valsalve accentuates the venous markings of an erysipeloid rash | |
Mentzer index | William C. Mentzer Jr. | hematology | microcytic anemia | differentiates iron deficiency anaemia from beta thalassaemia | |
Miller Fisher test | C. Miller Fisher | neurology | normal pressure hydrocephalus | Improvement in cognitive function after withdrawal of CSF during lumbar puncture used to confirm diagnosis | |
Moniz sign | António Egas Moniz | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | The Babinski sign – a reappraisal Neurol India48 (4): 314–8. | forceful plantar flexion of the ankle elicits an extensor plantar response |
Möbius sign | Paul Julius Möbius | endocrinology | thyrotoxicosis | Möbius sign at TheFreeDictionary.com | inability to maintain convergence of eyes |
Muehrcke's lines | Robert C. Muehrcke | nephrology, oncology | hypoalbuminaemia, chemotherapy | paired transverse white lines on nail bed | |
Mulder's sign | Jacob D. Mulder | neurology, podiatry | Morton's neuroma | transverse compression of the forefoot elicits pain in the distribution of the affected nerve | |
Müller's maneuver | Johannes Peter Müller | pulmonology | collapsed section of airway | patient attempts to breathe in with nose and mouth closed (opposite of Valsalva maneuver) | |
Müller's sign | Friedrich von Müller | cardiology | aortic insufficiency | Müller's sign at Who Named It? | visible pulsation or bobbing of uvula |
Murphy's punch sign | John B. Murphy | urology | perinephric abscess | Murphy's punch at Who Named It? | punch tenderness at the costovertebral angle |
Murphy's sign | John B. Murphy | surgery | cholecystitis | Murphy's sign at Who Named It? | hesitation on inspiration while gall bladder is palpated |
Myerson's sign | Abraham Myerson | neurology | Parkinson's disease | inability to resist blinking when glabella is percussed | |
Naegele's rule | Franz Karl Naegele | gynecology | gestation | method of estimating due date | |
Nardi test | George Nardi | gastroenterology | dysfunction of sphincter of Oddi | administration of morphine and neostigmine reproduces sharp LUQ pain; not in general use | |
Nikolsky's sign | Pyotr Nikolsky | dermatology | various, including pemphigus vulgaris | shearing of epidermis under pressure | |
O'Brien's test | ? | https://mskmedicine.com/clinical_skills/obriens-test/ | Assesses the integrity of the glenoid labrum and AC joint | ||
O'Donoghue's triad | D. O'Donoghue | orthopaedics, sports medicine | knee injury | coincidence of anterior cruciate injury, medial collateral injury and meniscal tear | |
Oliver's sign | William Silver Oliver | cardiology | aortic arch aneurysm | caudal movement of trachea with systole | |
Oppenheim's sign | Hermann Oppenheim | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | Oppenheim's reflex at Who Named It? | irritation downward of the medial tibia causes dorsiflexion of big toe |
Ortolani test | Marino Ortolani | pediatrics & orthopedics | congenital hip dislocation | Ortolani's sign and test at Who Named It? | palpable clunk on moving hip |
Osborn wave | John Jay Osborn | cardiology, emergency medicine | hypothermia | positive deflection at QRS-ST junction | |
Osler's node | Sir William Osler | internal medicine | various, including SBE and SLE | painful red lesions on the pads of the fingers and plantar surfaces | |
Osler's sign | Sir William Osler | internal medicine | atherosclerosis | falsely elevated bp reading due to incompressibility of calcified vessels | |
Palla's sign | Antonio Palla | internal medicine | pulmonary embolism | Pulmonary embolism at Merck Manual online | enlarged right descending pulmonary artery on chest x-ray |
Pastia's sign | Constantin Chessec Pastia | pediatrics | scarlet fever | Pastia's sign at Who Named It? | lines of confluent petechiae in skin creases (associated with Scarlatiniform rash and strep pyogenes) |
Patrick's test | Hugh Talbot Patrick | rheumatology | sacroiliitis | Patrick's test at Who Named It? | external rotation of the hip causes pain |
Peabody's sign | C.N. Peabody | internal medicine | deep vein thrombosis | calf muscle spasm when raising the affected leg with the foot extended | |
Pemberton's sign | Hugh Pemberton | thoracic surgery | retrosternal mass with superior vena cava syndrome | arms elevated over head elicits facial plethora, distended neck veins and inspiratory stridor | |
Phalen's maneuver | George S. Phalen | rheumatology, hand surgery | carpal tunnel syndrome | 30–60 seconds of full forced flexion of wrist elicits symptoms | |
Piskaçek's sign | Ludwig Piskaçek | obstetrics | normal pregnancy | Piskaçek's sign at Who Named It? | palpable lateral bulge at tubal-uterine junction; present at 7–8 weeks |
Plummer's nail | Henry Stanley Plummer | endocrinology | thyrotoxicosis | Plummer's nail at Who Named It? | onycholysis especially of ring and little fingers |
Pratt's sign | Gerald H. Pratt | internal medicine | deep venous thrombosis | pain elicited by compression of posterior calf | |
Prehn's sign | Douglas T. Prehn | urology | testicular torsion | no pain relief with lifting the affected testicle suggests testicular torsion | |
Queckenstedt's maneuver | Hans Heinrich Georg Queckenstedt | neurology | spinal stenosis | Queckenstedt's phenomenon at Who Named It? | bilateral jugular vein pressure during lumbar puncture causes sudden rise in CSF pressure |
Quincke's sign | Heinrich Irenaeus Quincke | cardiology | aortic insufficiency | Quincke's capillary pulse at Who Named It? | visible pulsation in ungual capillary bed |
Reynolds' pentad | B.M. Reynolds | gastroenterology | ascending cholangitis | Reynold's pentad at Who Named It? | Charcot's triad + hypotension and altered mental state |
Riesman's sign | David Riesman | endocrinology | thyrotoxicosis | bruit over globe of the eye | |
Rigler's sign [6] | Leo George Rigler | radiology, abdominal surgery | pneumoperitoneum | Rigler's sign at Who Named It? | gas outlines both mucosal and serosal surfaces of bowel |
Rinne test | Heinrich Adolf Rinne | ENT, neurology, audiometry | hearing impairment | Rinne's test at Who Named It? | comparison of air conduction to bone conduction differentiates sensorineural from conductive deafness |
Romaña's sign | Cecilio Romaña | tropical medicine | Chagas' disease | Romaña's sign at Who Named It? | painless unilateral periorbital swelling |
Romberg test | Moritz Heinrich Romberg | neurology | dorsal column lesions, cerebllar lesions, alcohol intoxication | Romberg's sign at Who Named It? | inability to maintain posture with eyes closed |
Rose's sign | ? | vascular medicine | deep vein thrombosis | (needed) | Warm, stiff feeling of skin when affected leg is pinched |
Rosenbach's test | Ottomar Rosenbach | clinical chemistry | bilirubinuria | Rosenbach's test at Who Named It? | colour produced on addition of nitric acid |
Rosenstein's sign | Paul Rosenstein | general surgery | appendicitis | Advances in Pediatrics. JP Medical Ltd. p. 1432. ISBN 978-93-5025-777-7. | tenderness in the right lower quadrant increases when the patient moves from the supine position to a recumbent posture on the left side |
Rossolimo's sign | Grigory Ivanovich Rossolimo | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | The Babinski sign – a reappraisal Neurol India48 (4): 314–8. | percussion of the tips of the toes causes exaggerated flexion of the toes |
Rotch sign | Thomas Morgan Rotch | cardiology | pericardial effusion | Rotch sign. (n.d.) Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing. (2012). Retrieved September 6 2023 from https://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Rotch+sign | percussion dullness in the fifth intercostal space on the right |
Roth's spots | Moritz Roth | ophthalmology, internal medicine | various, including SBE and systemic vasculitides | Roth's spot at Who Named It? | retinal haemorrhages with pale centres seen at fundoscopy |
Rovsing's sign | Niels Thorkild Rovsing | general surgery | appendicitis | Rovsing's sign at Who Named It? | palpation of LLQ elicits pain in RLQ |
Rumpel–Leede sign | Theodor Rumpel, Carl Stockbridge Leede | haematology | capillary fragility | Rumpel-Leede test at Who Named It? | petechiae seen after compression by tourniquet |
Russell's sign | Gerald Russell | psychiatry | bulimia nervosa | scarring of the dorsum of one hand (contact with incisors when purging) | |
Salus's sign | Robert Salus | ophthalmology | hypertension | Hypertension at Medscape | deflection of retinal veins at right angle junctions due to elongation or shortening of connected arterioles |
Schaeffer's sign | Max Schaeffer | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | Schäffer's reflex at Who Named It? | squeezing the Achilles tendon elicits an extensor plantar response |
Schamroth's window test | Leo Schamroth | pulmonology, cardiology | chronic hypoxia | identifies clubbing of distal phalanges | |
Schiller's test | Walter Schiller | gynecology | cervical cancer | Schiller's test at Who Named It? | affected areas of cervix fail to stain brown with iodine solution |
Schilling test | Robert F. Schilling | internal medicine | pernicious anaemia, coeliac disease, other malabsorption disorders | B12 radioassay; rare | |
Schirmer's test | Otto Schirmer | ophthalmology | keratoconjunctivitis sicca, as in Sjögren's syndrome | quantifies lacrimal secretion | |
Schober test | Paul Schober | physiatry, rheumatology, orthopaedics | various disorders of lumbar vertebrae | Schober's sign at Who Named It? | quantifies lumbar flexion |
Sherren's triangle | James Sherren | surgery | appendicitis | Sherren's triangle at Who Named It? | area of hyperaesthesia over the right lower abdomen |
Shone's complex | John D. Shone | cardiology | congenital heart defect | supravalvular mitral ring, parachute deformity of mitral valve, subaortic stenosis and coarctation of the aorta | |
Siegrist streaks | August Siegrist | ophthalmology | malignant hypertension | hyperpigmented streaks parallel to choroidal vessels | |
Simmonds' test | Franklin Adin Simmonds | orthopaedics | Achilles tendon rupture | squeezing of calf fails to produce plantar flexion | |
Sims–Huhner test | Harry M. Sims, Max Huhner | reproductive medicine | infertility | Sims-Huhner test at Who Named It? | determination of sperm count and motility in a sample taken from the cervical canal within an hour of intercourse |
Sister Mary Joseph nodule [7] | Sister Mary Joseph Dempsey (born Julia Dempsey) | oncology | various abdominal malignancies | palpable lymph node in the umbilicus | |
Spurling's test | Roy Glenwood Spurling | neurology | cervical radiculopathy | Spurling's manoeuvre and sign at Who Named It? | axial compression and rotation of cervical spine to the side of symptoms causes pain |
Stellwag's sign | Karl Stellwag von Carion | endocrinology | thyrotoxicosis | infrequent and/or incomplete blinking, accompanied by Dalrymple's sign | |
Still's murmur | Sir George Frederick Still | paediatric cardiology | subaortic stenosis, small Ventricular septal defect | Still's mmurmur at Who Named It? | systolic ejection sound ; vibratory/musical; best heard at left lower sternal border |
Stransky's sign | ? | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | The Babinski sign – a reappraisal Neurol India48 (4): 314–18. | sudden abduction and release of little toe causes extensor plantar response |
Stroop test | John Ridley Stroop | neuropsychology | various, including ADHD and schizophrenia | reaction times for incongruent stimuli (e.g., word red printed in blue) | |
Strümpell's sign | Adolph Strümpell | neurology | spastic pareses of the lower extremity | Strümpell's sign I at Who Named It? | failure of abrupt passive flexion of the hip and/or knee to elicit dorsiflexion and adduction of foot |
Ten Horn's sign | Carel Hendrik Leo Herman ten Horn | surgery | appendicitis | pain in the right iliac fossa after traction of spermatic cord | |
Terry's nails | R. Terry | internal medicine | various including hepatic failure | white 'ground glass' nails;absence of lunula | |
Terry Thomas sign | Terry-Thomas | Orthopaedics | Scapho-lunate dissociation | Atlas of Signs in Musculoskeletal Radiology | Gap between the scaphoid and lunate bones on AP wrist radiograph |
Thomas test | Hugh Owen Thomas | Orthopaedics | Fixed flexion deformity of hip | Supine patient flexes one hip whilst keeping other leg flat; back arches if flexion deformity is present | |
Throckmorton's reflex | Tom Bentley Throckmorton | neurology | pyramidal tract lesions | The Babinski sign – a reappraisal Neurol India48 (4): 314–8. | pressure over dorsal big toe MTP joint elicits an extensor plantar response |
Tinel's sign | Jules Tinel | neurology | neuritis, compression disorders | 'DTP' – distal tingling on percussion | |
Todd's paresis | Robert Bentley Todd | neurology | seizure disorders | focal weakness for as much as 48 hours after seizure | |
Traube's sign | Ludwig Traube | various | splenomegaly | dull percussion sound over Traube's space | |
Trendelenburg's sign | Friedrich Trendelenburg | neurology | inferior gluteal palsy, other causes of hip abductors weakness | pelvic tilt contralateral to 'stance leg' | |
Troisier's sign | Charles Emile Troisier | internal medicine, oncology | Various abdominal malignancies, especially stomach cancer | Troisier's node or sign at Who Named It? | Enlargement of the left supraclavicular lymph node (=Virchow's node) |
Trousseau's sign of malignancy | Armand Trousseau | internal medicine | various malignancies, including pancreatic | spontaneous thrombosis of multiple veins, including portal circulation | |
Trousseau's sign of latent tetany | Armand Trousseau | internal medicine, endocrinology | hypocalcaemia | Trendelenburg's phenomenon at Who Named It? | in hypocalcaemia, occlusion of brachial artery induces carpal spasm |
Uhthoff's phenomenon | Wilhelm Uhthoff | neurology | multiple sclerosis | Uhthoff's symptom at Who Named It? | ↑ in neurological symptoms with exercise or other increase in body temperature |
Unterberger test | Siegfried Unterberger | neurology, ENT | vestibular lesions | patient walks in place with eyes closed;direction of rotation indicates vestibular lesion on that side | |
Virchow's node | Rudolf Virchow | internal medicine, oncology | Various abdominal malignancies, especially stomach cancer | Virchow's node at Who Named It? | Enlargement of the left supraclavicular lymph node (=Troisier's sign) |
Virchow's triad | Rudolf Virchow | hematology | etiology of thrombosis | Hypercoagulability, Hemodynamic changes (stasis, turbulence) and Endothelial injury/dysfunction | |
Von Braun-Fernwald's sign | Karl von Braun-Fernwald | obstetrics | pregnancy | softening of the uterine fundus at the site of implantation at 4–5 weeks gestation | |
Von Graefe sign | Albrecht von Graefe | endocrinology | Graves' disease | ' lid lag'; immobility of upper lid on downward gaze | |
Wada test | Juhn Atsushi Wada | neurology | epilepsy, anatomical lesions of cerebrum | Wada's test at Who Named It? | short acting barbiturate injected in internal carotid; lateralizes language function |
Waddell's signs | G. Waddell | primary care, psychiatry | chronic pain | identify non-organic sources of low back pain | |
Waddell's triad | J.P. Waddell | paediatric trauma | child pedestrian struck by motor vehicle | Head trauma, thoracic and/or abdominal trauma, femoral fracture | |
Watson's water hammer pulse | Sir Thomas Watson, 1st Baronet | cardiology | aortic regurgitation | J. Suvarna Watson's water hammer pulse Journal of Postgraduate Medicine 2008-04-01 | bounding forceful pulse elicited with postural manoeuvres |
Wellens' sign or warning | Hein Wellens | cardiology | severe stenosis of LAD | characteristic ekg changes | |
Wernicke encephalopathy | Carl Wernicke | neurology, psychiatry | thiamine deficiency | neurological symptoms caused by biochemical lesions of the central nervous system after exhaustion of B-vitamin reserves, in particular thiamine | |
Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome | Carl Wernicke, Sergei Korsakoff | neurology, psychiatry | Wernicke encephalopathy, Korsakoff syndrome | combined presence of Wernicke encephalopathy (WE) and Korsakoff syndrome | |
Westermark sign | Nils Westermark | pulmonology | pulmonary embolism | Area of oligaemia on chest x-ray | |
Whipple's triad | Allen Whipple | endocrinology | hypoglycemia | 1.symptoms associated with hypoglycaemia 2. measured low serum glucose 3. relief of symptoms with administration of glucose p.o. or iv | |
Wickham's striae | Louis Frédéric Wickham | dermatology | lichen planus | white or greyish lines on the lichen planus lesions | |
Widal test | Georges-Fernand Widal | microbiology | enteric fever | serum agglutination; obsolete(?) | |
Winterbottom's sign | Thomas Masterman Winterbottom | tropical medicine | trypanosomiasis | posterior cervical chain adenopathy | |
Wolff–Parkinson–White triad | Sir John Parkinson, Paul Dudley White, Louis Wolff | cardiology | supraventricular tachycardia | Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome at Who Named It? | pre-excitation on ECG |
Wright's maneuver | ? | (needed) | |||
Yeoman's test | ? | rheumatology | sacroiliitis | (needed) | sacroiliac pain on rotation of ilium and extension of hip |
Yergason's test | ? | orthopedic surgery | bicipital tendinitis | anterior shoulder pain with resisted supination of the forearm |
Numerous additional signs can be found for Graves disease under Graves' ophthalmopathy.
Emma Goldman was a Lithuanian-born anarchist revolutionary, political activist, and writer. She played a pivotal role in the development of anarchist political philosophy in North America and Europe in the first half of the 20th century.
An eponym is a person, a place, or a thing after whom or which someone or something is, or is believed to be, named. The adjectives which are derived from the word eponym include eponymous and eponymic.
Graves' disease, also known as toxic diffuse goiter, is an autoimmune disease that affects the thyroid. It frequently results in and is the most common cause of hyperthyroidism. It also often results in an enlarged thyroid. Signs and symptoms of hyperthyroidism may include irritability, muscle weakness, sleeping problems, a fast heartbeat, poor tolerance of heat, diarrhea and unintentional weight loss. Other symptoms may include thickening of the skin on the shins, known as pretibial myxedema, and eye bulging, a condition caused by Graves' ophthalmopathy. About 25 to 30% of people with the condition develop eye problems.
A syndrome is a set of medical signs and symptoms which are correlated with each other and often associated with a particular disease or disorder. The word derives from the Greek σύνδρομον, meaning "concurrence". When a syndrome is paired with a definite cause this becomes a disease. In some instances, a syndrome is so closely linked with a pathogenesis or cause that the words syndrome, disease, and disorder end up being used interchangeably for them. This substitution of terminology often confuses the reality and meaning of medical diagnoses. This is especially true of inherited syndromes. About one third of all phenotypes that are listed in OMIM are described as dysmorphic, which usually refers to the facial gestalt. For example, Down syndrome, Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome, and Andersen–Tawil syndrome are disorders with known pathogeneses, so each is more than just a set of signs and symptoms, despite the syndrome nomenclature. In other instances, a syndrome is not specific to only one disease. For example, toxic shock syndrome can be caused by various toxins; another medical syndrome named as premotor syndrome can be caused by various brain lesions; and premenstrual syndrome is not a disease but simply a set of symptoms.
James Parkinson was an English surgeon, apothecary, geologist, palaeontologist and political activist. He is best known for his 1817 work An Essay on the Shaking Palsy, in which he was the first to describe "paralysis agitans", a condition that would later be renamed Parkinson's disease by Jean-Martin Charcot.
Ronald Lyle Goldman was an American restaurant waiter and aspiring actor.
Body snatching is the illicit removal of corpses from graves, morgues, and other burial sites. Body snatching is distinct from the act of grave robbery as grave robbing does not explicitly involve the removal of the corpse, but rather theft from the burial site itself. The term 'body snatching' most commonly refers to the removal and sale of corpses primarily for the purpose of dissection or anatomy lectures in medical schools. The term was coined primarily in regard to cases in the United Kingdom and United States throughout the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries. However, there have been cases of body snatching in many countries, with the first recorded case dating back to 1319 in Bologna, Italy.
Jean-Jacques Goldman is a French retired singer-songwriter and record producer whose work remains hugely popular in the French-speaking world. Since the death of Johnny Hallyday in 2017 he has been the highest grossing living French pop rock act. Born in Paris and active on the music scene from 1975, he had a highly successful solo career in the 1980s, before he was part of the trio Fredericks Goldman Jones, releasing another string of hits in the 1990s.
The Lanterman–Petris–Short (LPS) Act regulates involuntary civil commitment to a mental health institution in the state of California. The act set the precedent for modern mental health commitment procedures in the United States. The bipartisan bill was co-authored by California State Assemblyman Frank D. Lanterman (R) and California State Senators Nicholas C. Petris (D) and Alan Short (D), and signed into law in 1967 by Governor Ronald Reagan. The Act went into full effect on July 1, 1972. It cited seven articles of intent:
Adolf Kussmaul was a German physician and a leading clinician of his time. He was born as the son and grandson of physicians at Graben near Karlsruhe and studied at Heidelberg. He entered the army after graduation and spent two years as an army surgeon. This was followed by a period as a general practitioner before he went to Würzburg to study for his doctorate under Virchow.
Medical eponyms are terms used in medicine which are named after people. In 1975, the Canadian National Institutes of Health held a conference that discussed the naming of diseases and conditions. The conclusion, as summarized in The Lancet, was this: "The possessive use of an eponym should be discontinued, since the author neither had nor owned the disorder."
Lloyd Craig Blankfein is an American investment banker who has served as senior chairman of Goldman Sachs since 2019, and chairman and chief executive from 2006 until the end of 2018. Before leading Goldman Sachs, he was the company's president and chief operating officer (COO) from 2004 to 2006, serving under then-CEO Henry Paulson.
Toxic multinodular goiter (TMNG), also known as multinodular toxic goiter (MNTG), is an active multinodular goiter associated with hyperthyroidism.
Carl Adolph von Basedow was a German physician most famous for reporting the symptoms of what could later be dubbed Graves-Basedow disease, now technically known as exophthalmic goiter.
Harper is a 1966 American mystery film based on Ross Macdonald's 1949 novel The Moving Target and adapted for the screen by novelist William Goldman, who admired MacDonald's writings. The film stars Paul Newman as Lew Harper, and was directed by Jack Smight, with a cast that includes Robert Wagner, Julie Harris, Janet Leigh, Shelley Winters, Lauren Bacall, and Arthur Hill.
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to medicine:
John Benjamin Murphy, born John Murphy was an American physician and abdominal surgeon noted for advocating early surgical intervention in appendicitis appendectomy, and several eponyms: Murphy’s button, Murphy drip, Murphy’s punch, Murphy’s test, and Murphy-Lane bone skid. He is best remembered for the eponymous clinical sign that is used in evaluating patients with acute cholecystitis. His career spanned general surgery, orthopedics, neurosurgery, and cardiothoracic surgery, which helped him to gain international prominence in the surgical profession. Mayo Clinic co-founder William James Mayo called him "the surgical genius of our generation".
The Manifesto of the Sixteen, or Proclamation of the Sixteen, was a document drafted in 1916 by eminent anarchists Peter Kropotkin and Jean Grave which advocated an Allied victory over Germany and the Central Powers during the First World War. At the outbreak of the war, Kropotkin and other anarchist supporters of the Allied cause advocated their position in the pages of the Freedom newspaper, provoking sharply critical responses. As the war continued, anarchists across Europe campaigned in anti-war movements and wrote denunciations of the war in pamphlets and statements, including one February 1916 statement signed by prominent anarchists such as Emma Goldman and Rudolf Rocker.
Hypertrophic osteoarthropathy is a medical condition combining clubbing and periostitis of the small hand joints, especially the distal interphalangeal joints and the metacarpophalangeal joints. Distal expansion of the long bones as well as painful, swollen joints and synovial villous proliferation are often seen. The condition may occur alone (primary), or it may be secondary to diseases like lung cancer. Among patients with lung cancer, it is most associated with adenocarcinoma and least associated with small cell lung cancer. These patients often get clubbing and increased bone deposition on long bones. Their presenting signs and symptoms are sometimes only clubbing and painful ankles.