Chvostek Sign: What is it, How to Perform

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Lindsay Smith
Last updated at November 30, 2021

The Chvostek sign is one of the best-known symptoms of latent tetany. It is also sometimes seen in patients in an anxious state. Learning to check for the sign and understanding its significance can make a big difference in your patient's health.

The Chvostek (pronounced “vos-tek”) sign is typically detected by registered nurses on their first encounter with a patient. Doctor's typically don't check for this sign, so if the sign is not checked for by a nurse and reported forward, the underlying issue may go unaddressed. 

We discuss all there is to know about Chvostek and its relation to the Trousseau sign in this post. You may also want to check out other nursing tips such as identifying HELLP syndrome or performing a BUBBLE HE assessment.

What is Chvostek's Sign?

A positive Chvostek sign is the spasm or twitching of the facial muscles when a healthcare professional gently taps on the patient's cheek. More specifically, the cheek is tapped about two centimeters from the ear. If twitching occurs, it is a clinical finding indicating low calcium levels in the patient's blood (hypocalcemia).

The idea behind the tapping of the cheek is to see if the facial nerve has an atypical reaction to the tapping. Normally, the facial nerves don't twitch on tapping. If there is no twitching, the Chvostek sign is negative for the patient. 

However, the pressure put on the facial nerve by the tapping can trigger involuntary contractions of muscles in the area. If the face muscles spasm, the patient has a positive Chvostek sign.

While our understanding of this phenomenon is still limited, what we do know is that ionized calcium controls the neuron's threshold potential. The threshold potential of a neuron is the point before which a neuron fires. 

When there is a low calcium level in a patient's blood, the threshold potential for neurons is decreased. In other words, neurons fire a lot more easily when stimulated. 

Hypocalcemia, therefore, increases the hyperexcitability of nerves in the body. This is what results in the spontaneous spasms of the facial nerves when stimulated by tapping.

Trousseau Sign vs Chvostek Sign 

In clinical medicine, Chvostek’s and Trousseau’s signs are the two of the most recognized signs of hypocalcemia.

While the Trousseau sign refers to the carpopedal spasm that appears when blood pressure is measured, the Chvostek sign refers to the twitching of the facial muscles when the patient’s cheek is tapped gently.

You can find images in clinical medicine of both of these signs on Google or in studies that appear in the Journal of Medicine.

How to Perform Chvostek Sign?

To check for the sign, you must tap the patient's cheek gently, about two centimeters in front of their ear. This spot is just over the facial nerve's route, and you will be stimulating the seventh cranial nerve.

If you see the periorbital and the mouth muscles, or the muscles close to the eyes twitching, on the same side of the face you're stimulating, you can consider the patient to have a positive Chvostek sign.

Types of Chvostek Sign

The sign is of two types:

Chvostek Sign: Type I

The type I Chvostek sign is the technique where you use a finger or a hammer to tap about 2cm in front of the ear. If you notice ipsilateral contraction in some or all the muscles that the facial nerve controls, the sign is positive. Bear in mind that the twitching appears on only the stimulated side of the face. 

Chvostek Sign: Type II

The type II Chvostek sign involves gently tapping the region between the middle and upper third of the line that joins the zygomatic process and the mouth. 

If the sign is positive, the muscles of the mouth and the nose contract involuntarily.

What Does a Positive Chvostek Sign Mean?

As mentioned earlier, a positive Chvostek sign is an indicator of low calcium levels in the body. Hypocalcemia can have several effects on the patient's body since calcium is responsible for regulating several cellular processes.

Besides neuronal activity, hypocalcemia can affect hormone secretion and blood coagulation. 

It is important to note that the parathyroid hormone (PTH), which is released by the body's parathyroid glands, is responsible for regulating the calcium levels in the body. When the calcium levels in the body drop, PTH is circulated in the body.

In simple words, hypocalcemia typically results due to hyperparathyroidism, which is the inadequate production of PTH in the body. Most commonly, this deficit in PTH is caused by the removal of the thyroid gland, which damages the supply of blood to the parathyroid glands.

However, hyperparathyroidism can also result from autoimmune disorders and genetic conditions that involve the parathyroid glands.

There are several other factors that can lead to a patient having a positive Chvostek sign:

  • Kidney failure
  • Acute pancreatitis
  • Respiratory alkalosis due to hyperventilation
  • Low vitamin D or magnesium levels in the body
  • Effect of medicine such as proton pump inhibitors and bisphosphonates

Reliability of Chvostek Sign

In 2013, a study by three researchers revealed that the sign is not a reliable indicator of hypocalcemia. One in four healthy subjects showed a positive sign, and 29% of patients with hypocalcemia did not show a positive sign.

Furthermore, a positive sign can appear due to reasons other than hypocalcemia. This contributes to its overall unreliability.

However, another study on the Chvostek sign showed that for every 1mg/dl increase in the calcium levels in the blood, there is a 4% increase in the chances of a positive sign. 

Therefore, there is definitively some correlation between hypercalcemia and facial nerve tetany when the nerve is stimulated.

How Did Chvostek Sign Get its Name?

Researcher Franz Chvostek first described this phenomenon in 1876. The tetany sign was named after him, and he stated that the twitching of the facial nerve is not a body reflex but rather a result of stimulation of the facial nerve.

Another researcher, Shultze, observed that the Chvostek's sign appears on another part of the face: between the zygomatic arch and the corner of the mouth. However, this mode of stimulation isn't given a name after its researcher. Instead, it is called Chvostek signs II and III, depending on the extensiveness of the response. 

A lot of the time, the Chvostek sign appears in patients in this mode only.