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Apex Nursing

Reference — Electrolytes

Chvostek & Trousseau Signs Reference

Two quick bedside tests for latent tetany — the hyperexcitable nerves of hypocalcemia (and hypomagnesemia). Chvostek is the cheek tap; Trousseau is the cuff-induced hand spasm.

Educational use only. These signs support, but do not replace, serum calcium/magnesium measurement and provider evaluation. This reference is an educational aid. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The Two Signs

SignHow to elicitPositive result
Chvostek's signTap over the FACIAL nerve just anterior to the ear (over the cheek/masseter)Twitching of the facial muscles, lip, or nose on that side
Trousseau's signInflate a BP cuff on the arm above systolic for ~3 minutesCarpal (hand/wrist) SPASM — flexed wrist, thumb drawn in (more specific)

Memory aid: Chvostek = Cheek; Trousseau = Trap the arm (BP cuff). Trousseau is generally the more specific sign.

What a Positive Sign Means

Both signs reflect neuromuscular hyperexcitability from low ionized calcium — “latent tetany” that can progress to overt tetany, laryngospasm, and seizures. Causes include hypocalcemia (hypoparathyroidism, post-thyroidectomy, vitamin D deficiency, CKD with high phosphate), hypomagnesemia, and respiratory alkalosis (hyperventilation lowers ionized calcium). A positive sign is a prompt to check calcium and magnesium and watch the airway.

Nursing Actions

If positive: notify the provider, check calcium/magnesium and an ECG (QT), and institute seizure and emergency airway precautions (laryngospasm risk). Anticipate calcium (and magnesium) replacement — IV calcium gluconate for severe/symptomatic hypocalcemia on a monitor. These signs are also the routine bedside check after thyroid/parathyroid surgery, where falling calcium is expected in the first days.

NCLEX Pearls

  • Chvostek = cheek/facial twitch when tapping the facial nerve; Trousseau = carpal spasm with a BP cuff.
  • Both indicate latent tetany — usually hypocalcemia (also hypomagnesemia, alkalosis).
  • Trousseau is the more specific of the two.
  • Positive sign → check Ca and Mg, watch the airway, seizure precautions, anticipate calcium replacement.
  • Routine check after thyroid/parathyroid surgery (post-op hypocalcemia).

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Infusion Nurses Society (INS) Standards of Practice · Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) · Standard laboratory reference ranges. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →