Clinical meaning
Clinical pattern recognition is a critical diagnostic skill where clusters of physical examination findings point to specific diagnoses. In cardiovascular assessment: elevated JVP + bilateral crackles + S3 gallop + peripheral edema = decompensated heart failure; new harsh systolic murmur radiating to carotids + delayed carotid upstroke + pulsus parvus et tardus = aortic stenosis; wide pulse pressure + bounding pulses + Austin Flint murmur + head-bobbing (de Musset sign) = chronic aortic regurgitation; pulsus paradoxus >10 mmHg + muffled heart sounds + JVD (Beck triad) = cardiac tamponade. In respiratory assessment: barrel chest + hyperresonance + decreased breath sounds + prolonged expiration = COPD/emphysema; bronchial breath sounds + egophony + dullness to percussion + tactile fremitus = consolidation/pneumonia; absent breath sounds + hyperresonance + tracheal deviation = tension pneumothorax; stony dullness + decreased breath sounds + decreased tactile fremitus = pleural effusion. In neurological assessment: unilateral upper motor neuron signs (hyperreflexia, spasticity, Babinski positive, clonus) = contralateral cortical or subcortical lesion; lower motor neuron signs (hyporeflexia, flaccidity, fasciculations, atrophy) = anterior horn cell, nerve root, or peripheral nerve lesion; cerebellar signs (intention tremor, dysmetria, dysdiadochokinesia, wide-based gait, nystagmus) = cerebellar pathology. In abdominal assessment: Cullen sign (periumbilical ecchymosis) + Grey Turner sign (flank ecchymosis) = retroperitoneal hemorrhage (hemorrhagic pancreatitis); Murphy sign (inspiratory arrest during RUQ palpation) = acute cholecystitis; McBurney point tenderness + psoas sign + obturator sign + Rovsing sign = acute appendicitis.