SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.44 issue3Herpes virus infection and the Tzanck test author indexsubject indexarticles search
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

Related links

  • On index processCited by Google
  • Have no similar articlesSimilars in SciELO
  • On index processSimilars in Google

Share


Acta Medica Colombiana

Print version ISSN 0120-2448

Acta Med Colomb vol.44 no.3 Bogotá July/Sept. 2019

https://doi.org/10.36104/amc.2019.1587 

MEDICAL MISQUOTES

Hepatojugular reflux

ALFREDO PINZÓN-JUNCA1  * 

1 Especialista en Medicina Interna y Psicoanálisis. Hospital Universitario de La Samaritana y Hospital Simón Bolívar. Coordinador del Consejo de Acreditación y Recertificación de la ACMI®. Bogotá, D.C. (Colombia). E-mail: alfpin@hotmail.com


Occasionally, confusion is caused by the use of terms with phonetic similarity. This seems to be the case with the words reflux and reflex, which lead some to use the inaccurate expression: hepatojugular reflex.

Reflux: From the medieval Latin refluxum [re 'backward' 'with intensity'+ fluc 'to flow'+ sum]; (documented in Spanish since 1424 as refluxo [English: reflux]):

  1. noun Med. Retrograde flow, usually anomalous, of an organic fluid within a conduit or hollow organ.

  2. Movement of ebbing tide.

Reflex: From the Latin reflexus 'to move backward', 'reversal', 'bent backward' [re 'repetition' + flec(tere) 'to bend' 'to curve' + -sum]; (used in Spanish since 1508 [English: reflex]):

  1. noun. An involuntary response, simple or complex, to any tactile, sensory or mental stimulus.

  2. adj. Referring to a bodily movement, a secretion, an emotion, etc.: Something produced involuntarily or automatically in response to a stimulus.

According to this, the correct expression is hepatojugular reflux. It refers to the elevation of jugular venous pressure with compression of the right hypochondrium for anywhere from 10 to 30 seconds, evidenced by greater than 3-4 cm engorgement of the jugular veins which falls when the maneuver is stopped. This test was described by W. Pasteur in 1885 as a sign of tricuspid regurgitation, although in 1898, Rondot discovered that patients with a normal tricuspid valve could have it, and in 1925 other clinicians noted that pressure on any part of the abdomen, not just the hepatic area, could trigger it. Today, this maneuver is known as the hepatojugular or better, abdominojugular test, since there is no real reflux involved. In patients with dyspnea, it is useful for predicting left heart failure (LR+ 6.0; LR- 0.78) and suggests a pulmonary capillary wedge pressure greater than 15 mmHg (LR+ 6.7; LR- 0.08) [Sensitivity: 55-84%, specificity: 83-98%]. It should be clarified that this test is not specific for any disease, although the common causes for a positive finding include constrictive pericarditis, right ventricular infarction, and restrictive cardiomyopathy.

Sources:

  • McGee S. Evidence-based physical diagnosis. Elsevier Saunders. 2012; 301.

  • Wiese J. The abdominojugular reflux sign. Am J Med 2000; 109:59-61.

  • Pasteur W. Note on a new physical sign of tricuspid regurgitation. Lancet 1885; 2:524.

  • Real Academia Nacional de Medicina. Diccionario de Términos Médicos. Editorial Médica Panamericana. 2012.

  • Diccionario de la Real Academia Española de la Lengua, disponible en:www.rae.es

Received: September 17, 2019; Accepted: September 19, 2019

* Correspondence: contacto@actamedicacolombiana.com - alfpin@hotmail.com

Creative Commons License This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License