Create a high-yield, exam-oriented PDF titled: “Complete Eponyms of Obstetrics & Gynaecology – Standard Textbook Compilation” Goal Make a comprehensive yet concise PDF containing all important eponyms from the entire subject of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, collected from standard MBBS/UG and PG-level textbooks. The PDF should be useful for MBBS theory, viva, practicals, NEET PG, INI-CET, FMGE, and university exams. Core Instructions 1. Cover the entire subject of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, including both Obstetrics and Gynaecology. 2. Include all commonly asked and standard textbook eponyms from major OBG topics. 3. Use standard textbooks as the base, such as: * D.C. Dutta’s Textbook of Obstetrics * D.C. Dutta’s Textbook of Gynaecology * Williams Obstetrics * Williams Gynecology * Shaw’s Textbook of Gynaecology * Jeffcoate / standard recognized OBG references if needed for cross-checking 4. Do not invent eponyms. 5. If an eponym appears in more than one context, mention the most relevant OBG context. 6. Write very short, exam-friendly definitions — 1–3 lines maximum per eponym. 7. The language should be simple, crisp, and high-yield, not overly academic. 8. Ensure the list is broad and exhaustive, not just the famous 20–30 names. 9. If there are older historical eponyms that are still asked in viva or MCQs, include them too. 10. If an eponym is controversial / outdated / less commonly used but still seen in exams, mark it as “older term / historical eponym”. ⸻ Required structure of the PDF Section 1 — Obstetrics Eponyms Divide obstetrics eponyms into neat headings such as: A. Pregnancy & Antenatal Care Examples: signs, syndromes, diagnostic criteria, pregnancy-related conditions, placental findings, etc. B. Fetal Skull / Fetal Head / Fetal Attitude & Positions Include named diameters, landmarks, presentations, malpositions if eponymous. C. Mechanism of Labour / Normal Labour Include all eponymous manoeuvres, observations, mechanisms, named signs if relevant. D. Operative Obstetrics Forceps, vacuum, breech delivery, shoulder dystocia manoeuvres, destructive operations if any historical eponyms exist. E. Breech & Difficult Delivery Manoeuvres Very important: include all named manoeuvres with one-line purpose. F. Placenta / PPH / Third Stage / Obstetric Emergencies Include named methods, syndromes, signs, surgical procedures if eponymous. G. Fetal Monitoring / Obstetric Instruments / Special Tests If any named tests or patterns are standard. H. Obstetric Syndromes / Important Named Conditions Examples like HELLP, Sheehan, Asherman if overlapping relevance exists, etc. Put in the most appropriate OBG section. ⸻ Section 2 — Gynaecology Eponyms Divide gynaecology eponyms into headings such as: A. Congenital Anomalies / Developmental Disorders B. Menstrual Disorders / Endocrine / Reproductive Medicine C. Infertility / Ovulation / Hormonal Syndromes D. Benign Uterine / Cervical / Ovarian / Vulval Conditions E. Urogynaecology / Pelvic Floor / Fistula / Prolapse F. Gynae Oncology G. Named Operations / Procedures / Surgical Techniques H. Important Named Signs / Tests / Syndromes in Gynaecology ⸻ For every eponym, use this exact format Eponym name * Definition: very short definition in 1–3 lines * Topic/Context: where it belongs in OBG * Why important: one short phrase such as viva favourite / MCQ favourite / labour manoeuvre / infertility syndrome / obstetric emergency / gynae oncology, etc. Example format: Burns–Marshall manoeuvre * Definition: A method of delivering the after-coming head of breech by allowing the baby’s body to hang until the nape of the neck is visible, followed by upward lifting of the body. * Topic/Context: Breech delivery * Why important: Common viva and practical obstetrics question Pinard manoeuvre * Definition: Manoeuvre used in breech delivery to bring down an extended fetal leg by flexing the knee and abducting the thigh. * Topic/Context: Breech delivery * Why important: Classic obstetric manoeuvre ⸻ Important content requirements The PDF must try to include all major OBG eponyms, such as eponyms related to: Obstetrics * Signs of pregnancy / antenatal signs * Placental abnormalities * HELLP, Sheehan, Couvelaire uterus, Bandl ring, etc. * Breech manoeuvres (Pinard, Lovset, Mauriceau-Smellie-Veit, Burns-Marshall, Prague, etc.) * Shoulder dystocia manoeuvres if named * Forceps / operative delivery related names * PPH / retained placenta / uterine inversion / obstetric shock / obstetric complications * Fetal monitoring / fetal circulation / fetal skull landmarks if eponymous * Hypertensive disorders, trophoblastic disease, and postpartum complications with named syndromes Gynaecology * PCOS / Stein-Leventhal syndrome * Asherman syndrome * Sheehan syndrome if overlapping with reproductive endocrinology/postpartum amenorrhea * Turner, Rokitansky, Kallmann, Swyer, Savage, etc. where relevant to gynae/endocrine * Fitz-Hugh–Curtis, Meigs syndrome, Krukenberg tumour, Sister Mary Joseph nodule * Bartholin gland related eponyms if any * Named operations in prolapse / fistula / gynae surgery * Named tests in infertility / tubal patency / cervical factors if standard * Named signs in gynae malignancy / endometriosis / PID if present in textbooks ⸻ Add a final section: “Most Important Viva Eponyms to Revise One Day Before Exam” Make a shortlist of the top 40–60 highest-yield OBG eponyms most likely to be asked in viva/short notes/MCQs. For this section, make a rapid revision table with columns: * Eponym * One-line meaning * Subject area * Why high yield ⸻ Formatting instructions for the PDF 1. Make it look like a clean study PDF, not a blog article. 2. Use: * Title page * Table of contents * Clear section headings * Bullet points * Bold eponym names * Good spacing 3. Keep each definition concise and exam-focused. 4. Avoid unnecessary history of the person unless extremely relevant. 5. If there are synonyms / alternate spellings, mention them in brackets. 6. If a term is not a true eponym but commonly taught as a named syndrome/manoeuvre/sign in OBG, it may be included in a separate subsection called: “Commonly used named terms often revised with eponyms” ⸻ Output style * Output directly as a well-formatted PDF-ready document * Use standard medical spelling * Make the content fact-checked and internally organized * Prefer completeness + accuracy + exam utility * Avoid missing classic named manoeuvres, syndromes, signs, tumours, tests, and operations from OBG

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