Tribule Sample

The Triboulet test is a method for assessing the state of the cardiovascular system in children, which was developed by the French pediatrician and hygienist Jean-Baptiste Triboulet in the 19th century. This test is one of the most common methods for assessing cardiovascular function in children.

The tribuule test is performed by measuring the blood pressure at the child's wrist while standing and lying on his back. The obtained pressure values ​​are then compared between the two positions. If the difference in pressure is more than 10 mm Hg. Art., this may indicate a problem with the cardiovascular system.

This test has a number of advantages, such as ease of administration, accessibility and information content. However, it also has some limitations, such as the possibility of false results if the test is not performed correctly or if there are other medical conditions that may affect the results.

Despite these limitations, the tribuule test remains one of the most commonly used methods for assessing cardiovascular function in children worldwide. It helps identify possible health problems in the early stages and allows timely treatment.



The so-called Probe, surname Triboul, is a French pediatrician, hygienist, founder of the “gunpowder disease” and one of the methods of its treatment. In 1889, the method was proposed by the French pediatrician Aimé Triboul, whose lifestyle became the cause of his own illness. His path to medicine began by chance: his medical diploma, which he planned to obtain at the age of 16, was revoked for unknown reasons, as a result of which Aimé was unable to become an apprentice in clinics.

After spending several months as an assistant to his mother's personal physician, Aimé successfully passed his examinations for a medical degree, and in January 1875 he was accepted as a pediatrician in Bordeaux. While still a student, Aimé conducted a large study that showed a connection between inhaling gunpowder and the appearance of bronchitis and gunpowder stains on the skin of children, but it did not receive much publicity. However, at the beginning of the twentieth century, Wilhelm Riklin described in detail gunpowder disease, which he himself called “periodic bronchopulmonary carcinoma” and proposed the use of paraffin as a local treatment. Riglin has conducted many studies on the powder and the skin changes caused by this chemical element. However, in the USSR, Nikolai Sokolov first drew attention to bronchial manifestations, after in 1913 he observed bronchitis in women who worked at a gunpowder factory. After the second year of work, Triboul created books on the diagnosis of lung diseases, they were very popular and were published in a circulation of one hundred thousand copies. In the works he wrote, Triboul suggested calling the affected bronchus in one word - “aspiration.”