Cullen's sign
Cullen's sign | |
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File:Cullen's sign.jpg
Cullen's sign
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Classification and external resources | |
Specialty | Lua error in Module:Wikidata at line 446: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). |
DiseasesDB | 17313 |
Patient UK | Cullen's sign |
Cullen's sign is superficial edema and bruising in the subcutaneous fatty tissue around the umbilicus.
It is named for Thomas Stephen Cullen (1869–1953),[1] gynecologist who first described the sign in ruptured ectopic pregnancy in 1916.[2]
This sign takes 24–48 hours to appear and can predict acute pancreatitis, with mortality rising from 8–10% to 40%. It may be accompanied by Grey Turner's sign[3] (bruising of the flank), which may then be indicative of pancreatic necrosis with retroperitoneal or intraabdominal bleeding.
Causes
Causes include:
- acute pancreatitis, where methemalbumin formed from digested blood tracks around the abdomen from the inflamed pancreas
- bleeding from blunt abdominal trauma
- bleeding from aortic rupture
- bleeding from ruptured ectopic pregnancy
Importance of the sign is on a decline since better diagnostic modalities are now available.
References
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Parikh RP, Upadhyay KJ. Cullen's sign for acute haemorrhagic pancreatitis. Indian J Med Res [serial online] 2013 [cited 2013 Jul 4];137:1210 http://www.ijmr.org.in/text.asp?2013/137/6/1210/114397
External links
- ↑ synd/1386 at Who Named It?
- ↑ E. Cullen. Embryology, anatomy, and diseases of the umbilicus together with diseases of the urachus. Philadelphia, Saunders, and London, 1916.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.