Updated
Updated · HuffPost · Jun 6
Cardiologists Warn Thumb Test Misses Most Aortic Aneurysms Despite 2021 Link
Updated
Updated · HuffPost · Jun 6

Cardiologists Warn Thumb Test Misses Most Aortic Aneurysms Despite 2021 Link

2 articles · Updated · HuffPost · Jun 6

Summary

  • Cardiologists said the thumb-palm test should not be used to screen for aortic aneurysms because many aneurysm patients test negative and some healthy people test positive.
  • The maneuver checks whether a thumb extends past the palm’s edge, a sign of joint laxity tied to connective-tissue disorders such as Marfan and Ehlers-Danlos that can raise aneurysm risk.
  • A 2021 study found a positive thumb sign was linked to a higher likelihood of ascending aortic aneurysm, but the same research noted most aneurysm patients did not show the sign.
  • Doctors said imaging—echocardiography, CT or ultrasound—remains the diagnostic gold standard, and a positive thumb test should prompt a discussion of risk factors rather than urgent conclusions.
  • Risk factors that matter more include age over 65, male sex, smoking, high blood pressure, family history, bicuspid aortic valves and known connective-tissue disease.

Insights

Why do cardiologists downplay a simple test that could hint at a deadly, silent aneurysm?
With screening failing many, what new tech will find the hidden aneurysms the thumb test misses?