rubin test
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A medical diagnostic procedure used to assess the openness (patency) or blockage (occlusion) of the Fallopian tubes in a female patient. It involves introducing a gas, typically carbon dioxide, into the uterus and monitoring for its passage into the abdominal cavity, which indicates open tubes.
Usage
The term is used specifically in the context of gynecology and fertility testing. It names a specific, established medical test.
Examples
- The doctor recommended a Rubin test to investigate the cause of her infertility.
- A Rubin test confirmed that both Fallopian tubes were patent.
- Before undergoing the Rubin test, the patient was given a mild sedative.
Advanced Usage
- The procedure is formally known as tubal insufflation.
- While historically significant, the Rubin test has been largely superseded by more advanced imaging techniques like hysterosalpingography (HSG) and laparoscopy with chromotubation.
Variants and Related Words
- Tubal insufflation: The formal medical term for the Rubin test procedure.
- Hysterosalpingography (HSG): A more modern X-ray-based test that serves a similar diagnostic purpose.
- Fallopian tube patency test: A general descriptive term for procedures assessing tube openness.
Synonyms
- Tubal insufflation (direct synonym for the procedure)
- Tubal patency test (general descriptive synonym)
Notes
The term is an eponym, named after the American gynecologist Isidor Clinton Rubin (1883-1958), who pioneered the technique. It is typically capitalized as "Rubin test."
Noun
- test to determine the patency or occlusion of the Fallopian tubes