Auenbrugger's sign is a bulging of the epigastrium seen in cases of severe pericardial effusion. It is often not spotted because pericardial effusion can be caught on echocardiography before it progresses this far.[1] It is named after Joseph Leopold Auenbrugger.[citation needed]
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ADSON'S TEST & AUENBRUGGER'S SIGN / NAMED MEDICINE SIGNS/MBBS MADE EASY/UNACADEMY/NEET/Dr.Capricorn
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BEEVOR'S SIGN/FSHD/ALS/NAMED MEDICINE SIGNS /MBBS MADE EASY/AIIMS/NEET-PG/NEUROLOGY/Doctor Capricorn
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All PERIPHERAL SIGNS OF AORTIC REGURGITATION | DE MUSSET'S SIGN | DUROZIEZ SIGN | WATER HAMMER PULSE
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References
- ^ Orient, Jane M. (2012). Sapira's Art and Science of Bedside Diagnosis (4th ed.). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 367. ISBN 978-1451159486.
External links
Auenbrugger's sign at Who Named It?