Semiologie Medicale- L-apprentissage Pratique D... Info

An MRI confirmed it that evening. M. Leblanc had a slow bleed over the left hemisphere. He underwent a burr hole drainage the next day. Within a week, his hand relaxed. He smiled fully for the first time in a month.

“Sémiologie,” Dr. Rivière said on the first day, pacing in front of six terrified students, “is not a checklist. It is a conversation. The patient’s body is always speaking. Your job is to learn its dialect.”

She wrote in the margin: “The body doesn’t lie. It just whispers. Semiology is learning to lean in.” Semiologie medicale- L-apprentissage pratique d...

And she would tell them the story of a baker who almost went home with “non-specific symptoms”—saved not by a machine, but by the oldest tool in medicine: the attentive, curious, human eye.

“Chronic subdural hematoma,” she whispered. “The weakness was subtle, gradual. No headache. But the signs… they were all there.” An MRI confirmed it that evening

Dr. Rivière turned to Clara. “What do you think?”

Upper motor neuron lesion.

Dr. Rivière set down his cup. He walked with her to Room 12, said nothing, and simply watched M. Leblanc for a full minute. Then he asked one question: “Have you fallen lately, even a little?”

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