Clark's Symptom

English doctor Claire Clicton Simcott - this is the full name of this great doctor. This medical thesis was named by his colleague on the study of Clark's symptom, John Rowdy Robertson in 1924. This symptom represents three angles that are formed by vessels passing nearby and intersecting at the back of the head above the common trunk of the vein. That is, if you look standing and from the side, then these angles are a) occipital, b) occipital minor and c) occipital major. We will see below how these three angles intersect over a common trunk and form this symptom. Often in medical practice we hear that the above-described angles are shifted to one or two (sometimes three angles at once). This is considered to be a pathology. In this article, we will try to figure out whether this is so, and why this symptom is dangerous for humans... Term: Clarke's symptom. - James Clark (1806–64) - English doctor - Studied and was the first to describe pain syndrome with otitis media in children And so let's begin... What happens when a child has a runny nose? The auditory tube, in which there are hairs supporting the eardrum, becomes inflamed, which complicates its tension and the process of sound transmission to the inner ear. Thus, when the nasal cavity becomes infected with bacteria, the auditory tube becomes inflamed, the auditory ossicles lose mobility and fall



Clarke Symptom is a symptom that was named after the American physician Clarke

Clark's symptom is a laboratory sign indicating an increase in the properties of amino acids and an increase in serotonin metabolism. The test has a very high sensitivity to malignant formations • The presence of this sign in patients suffering from mastopathy significantly increases the likelihood of a malignant process. For example, when this symptom is detected in a woman with cysts, neoplasms are affected with a 50% probability.