Lisker's sign is a clinical sign in which there is tenderness when the front, middle (anteromedial) part of the tibia is percussed. It can be found in people who have deep venous thrombosis.[1]
Systolic heart murmur: benign paediatric heart murmur (Still's murmur)
rheumatic fever: Anitschkow cell · Aschoff body
EKG (Osborn wave)
angina pectoris (Levine's sign)
aortic aneurysm (Cardarelli's sign, Oliver's sign) · pulmonary embolism (McConnell's sign) · radial artery sufficiency (Allen's test) · pseudohypertension (Osler's sign) · thrombus (Lines of Zahn)
M: HRT
anat/phys/devp
noco/cong/tumr, sysi/epon, injr
proc, drug (C1A/1B/1C/1D), blte
M: VAS
anat(a:h/u/t/a/l,v:h/u/t/a/l)/phys/devp/cell/prot
noco/syva/cong/lyvd/tumr, sysi/epon, injr
proc, drug(C2s+n/3/4/5/7/8/9)