No Slide Title
... • extra pressure forces fluids into surrounding tissues • nearby tissue is inflamed and tender ...
... • extra pressure forces fluids into surrounding tissues • nearby tissue is inflamed and tender ...
Circulatory Failure after Anesthesia Induction
... Heart Association functional class.2 Although anticoagulants, calcium-channel blockers and prostacyclin have shown great promise, lung transplantation remains the only viable treatment option in patients who remain symptomatic and deteriorate during treatment.3 We describe a patient with severe PPH ...
... Heart Association functional class.2 Although anticoagulants, calcium-channel blockers and prostacyclin have shown great promise, lung transplantation remains the only viable treatment option in patients who remain symptomatic and deteriorate during treatment.3 We describe a patient with severe PPH ...
Arrhythmias An arrhythmia is a condition caused by a problem with
... A heart rate of over 100 beats per minute is called tachycardia. It can produce palpitations (a feeling in the chest that the heart is pounding or beating very fast), chest pain, dizziness, swooning and fainting if the heart beats too fast for the blood to circulate well. The heartbeats may have a r ...
... A heart rate of over 100 beats per minute is called tachycardia. It can produce palpitations (a feeling in the chest that the heart is pounding or beating very fast), chest pain, dizziness, swooning and fainting if the heart beats too fast for the blood to circulate well. The heartbeats may have a r ...
PureMedSim Live PureMedSim Live
... PureMedSim Live With PureMedSim Live software, you can replicate many different bodily processes in all capacities from respiratory systems, cardiac cycles, pupillary responses, and integumentary systems to perspiration and speech functions, all of which are presented virtually, without the use for ...
... PureMedSim Live With PureMedSim Live software, you can replicate many different bodily processes in all capacities from respiratory systems, cardiac cycles, pupillary responses, and integumentary systems to perspiration and speech functions, all of which are presented virtually, without the use for ...
Intro to Cardiovascular System
... Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings ...
... Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings ...
Coronary CT Angiography
... • The Examination procedure and the effects of breath holding should be explained to the patients. • The breath holding should be exercised with the patients for at least 2 times. ...
... • The Examination procedure and the effects of breath holding should be explained to the patients. • The breath holding should be exercised with the patients for at least 2 times. ...
Chest pain workup
... c/c: “I feel like I’m dying.” HPI: Pt arrived in ER with a 1 inch stab wound sustained to the left side of his chest which doesn’t appear to have penetrated very deeply. Pt reports he was stabbed with a knife by a mugger while outside an ATM. Pain is rated 10/10. Pt has not experienced much in t ...
... c/c: “I feel like I’m dying.” HPI: Pt arrived in ER with a 1 inch stab wound sustained to the left side of his chest which doesn’t appear to have penetrated very deeply. Pt reports he was stabbed with a knife by a mugger while outside an ATM. Pain is rated 10/10. Pt has not experienced much in t ...
docx 3.3.4.1 transport in animals notes Student notes for
... The human heart has four chambers: two thin-walled atria on top, which receive blood, and two thick-walled ventricles underneath, which pump blood. Veins carry blood into the atria andarteries carry blood away from the ventricles. Between the atria and the ventricles are atrioventricular valves, whi ...
... The human heart has four chambers: two thin-walled atria on top, which receive blood, and two thick-walled ventricles underneath, which pump blood. Veins carry blood into the atria andarteries carry blood away from the ventricles. Between the atria and the ventricles are atrioventricular valves, whi ...
PULMONARY ATRESIA WITH INTACT VENTRICULAR SEPTUM
... Venous blood is shunted from the right to the left side of the heart at atrial level, usually, as in the present patient, through a patent foramen ovale. The lungs receive their blood supply through a patent ductus arteriosus. Greenwold et at. (1956) have stressed that there are two types of this ...
... Venous blood is shunted from the right to the left side of the heart at atrial level, usually, as in the present patient, through a patent foramen ovale. The lungs receive their blood supply through a patent ductus arteriosus. Greenwold et at. (1956) have stressed that there are two types of this ...
pulse oximeter and cardiac monitor handout
... hemoglobin that is bound to O2 divided by the amount of total hemoglobin that is available to bind with O2. Pulse oximetry has become widely accepted as a means of measuring O2 saturation. It uses two wavelengths of light to measure the saturation of oxygen. The lights shine through the vascular bed ...
... hemoglobin that is bound to O2 divided by the amount of total hemoglobin that is available to bind with O2. Pulse oximetry has become widely accepted as a means of measuring O2 saturation. It uses two wavelengths of light to measure the saturation of oxygen. The lights shine through the vascular bed ...
Neurogenic heart
... are normally present in invertebrates with open circulatory system. • The hearts are either sac like or tubular with lateral ostia. • This heart when relaxed produce vaccum due to which the haemolymphy is sucked in and then pumped. Hence these hearts are known as suction pump. • Ex. Heart of Daphnia ...
... are normally present in invertebrates with open circulatory system. • The hearts are either sac like or tubular with lateral ostia. • This heart when relaxed produce vaccum due to which the haemolymphy is sucked in and then pumped. Hence these hearts are known as suction pump. • Ex. Heart of Daphnia ...
File - Respiratory Therapy Files
... • Ischemia secondary to embolism, thrombus, or arterial spasm evidenced by pallor distal to the insertion site and usually accompanies by pain and paresthesis • Hemorrhage if disconnect or open stop cock • Infection as with all invasive lines, risk increases dramatically after 4 days • Fever in any ...
... • Ischemia secondary to embolism, thrombus, or arterial spasm evidenced by pallor distal to the insertion site and usually accompanies by pain and paresthesis • Hemorrhage if disconnect or open stop cock • Infection as with all invasive lines, risk increases dramatically after 4 days • Fever in any ...
Hemodynamic Monitoring - respiratorytherapyfiles.net
... • Ischemia secondary to embolism, thrombus, or arterial spasm evidenced by pallor distal to the insertion site and usually accompanies by pain and paresthesis • Hemorrhage if disconnect or open stop cock • Infection as with all invasive lines, risk increases dramatically after 4 days • Fever in any ...
... • Ischemia secondary to embolism, thrombus, or arterial spasm evidenced by pallor distal to the insertion site and usually accompanies by pain and paresthesis • Hemorrhage if disconnect or open stop cock • Infection as with all invasive lines, risk increases dramatically after 4 days • Fever in any ...
Supporting Patients with CHF-Maureen Claflin, MSN, RN
... cannot pump efficiently, causing fluid to accumulate in the veins, which may cause lower extremity edema. ...
... cannot pump efficiently, causing fluid to accumulate in the veins, which may cause lower extremity edema. ...
Atrial Septal Defect Presenting in a 70-Year
... entry of the inferior vena cava (IVC) into the RA (IVC type).2 ASDs often go unrecognized for the first 2 decades and initial diagnosis in adulthood is common. Although patients survive into adulthood, life expectancy is not Access this article online ...
... entry of the inferior vena cava (IVC) into the RA (IVC type).2 ASDs often go unrecognized for the first 2 decades and initial diagnosis in adulthood is common. Although patients survive into adulthood, life expectancy is not Access this article online ...
Figure ll-4 Superior vena cava Left atrium 7. z. 4.
... Draw the pathway of the oxygen-rich blood with red arrows, and trace the pathway of oxygen-poor blood with blue arrows. Second, identify each of the elements of the intrinsic conduction system (numbers 1-5 on the figure) by inserting the appropriate terms in the blanks left of the figure. Then, indi ...
... Draw the pathway of the oxygen-rich blood with red arrows, and trace the pathway of oxygen-poor blood with blue arrows. Second, identify each of the elements of the intrinsic conduction system (numbers 1-5 on the figure) by inserting the appropriate terms in the blanks left of the figure. Then, indi ...
Cardiac Catheterisation
... This may ultimately include the possibility of surgery. Cardiac catheter procedures fall into two categories: diagnostic and interventional procedures. “Diagnostic cardiac catheters” get information about your child’s heart function and diagnosis. “Interventional procedures” are procedures using spe ...
... This may ultimately include the possibility of surgery. Cardiac catheter procedures fall into two categories: diagnostic and interventional procedures. “Diagnostic cardiac catheters” get information about your child’s heart function and diagnosis. “Interventional procedures” are procedures using spe ...
Skills Lab # 5: Notes - LSU School of Medicine
... hemoglobin that is bound to O2 divided by the amount of total hemoglobin that is available to bind with O2. Pulse oximetry has become widely accepted as a means of measuring O2 saturation. It uses two wavelengths of light to measure the saturation of oxygen. The lights shine through the vascular bed ...
... hemoglobin that is bound to O2 divided by the amount of total hemoglobin that is available to bind with O2. Pulse oximetry has become widely accepted as a means of measuring O2 saturation. It uses two wavelengths of light to measure the saturation of oxygen. The lights shine through the vascular bed ...
Lecture I (PowerPoint) "The Circulatory System"
... Cell Requirements: 3. In all animals that have a transport system, two parts are essential: (1) Circulating Fluid (2) One or more hearts to pump the blood. ...
... Cell Requirements: 3. In all animals that have a transport system, two parts are essential: (1) Circulating Fluid (2) One or more hearts to pump the blood. ...
UNIT 7 BLOOD AND CIRCULATION REVIEW
... A. Veins. B. Nodes. C. Arteries. D. Capillaries. 46. Which of the following would occur as a result of the oval opening in the heart remaining open after birth? A. Blood pressure in the lungs would increase. B. Impulses from the sinoatrial (SA) node would stop. C. Blood in the right atrium would mix ...
... A. Veins. B. Nodes. C. Arteries. D. Capillaries. 46. Which of the following would occur as a result of the oval opening in the heart remaining open after birth? A. Blood pressure in the lungs would increase. B. Impulses from the sinoatrial (SA) node would stop. C. Blood in the right atrium would mix ...
Respiratory Dynamics - Blyth-Exercise
... • Each molecule can bond to and transport four oxygen molecules. • The amount of oxygen that is carried by the blood is dependent upon the partial pressure of oxygen (PO2). • The difference in the amount of oxygen that is present in the blood as it leaves the lungs and the amount of oxygen that is p ...
... • Each molecule can bond to and transport four oxygen molecules. • The amount of oxygen that is carried by the blood is dependent upon the partial pressure of oxygen (PO2). • The difference in the amount of oxygen that is present in the blood as it leaves the lungs and the amount of oxygen that is p ...
UNIT 7 BLOOD AND CIRCULATION REVIEW
... A. Veins. B. Nodes. C. Arteries. D. Capillaries. 46. Which of the following would occur as a result of the oval opening in the heart remaining open after birth? A. Blood pressure in the lungs would increase. B. Impulses from the sinoatrial (SA) node would stop. C. Blood in the right atrium would mix ...
... A. Veins. B. Nodes. C. Arteries. D. Capillaries. 46. Which of the following would occur as a result of the oval opening in the heart remaining open after birth? A. Blood pressure in the lungs would increase. B. Impulses from the sinoatrial (SA) node would stop. C. Blood in the right atrium would mix ...
UNIT 7 BLOOD AND CIRCULATION REVIEW
... A. Veins. B. Nodes. C. Arteries. D. Capillaries. 46. Which of the following would occur as a result of the oval opening in the heart remaining open after birth? A. Blood pressure in the lungs would increase. B. Impulses from the sinoatrial (SA) node would stop. C. Blood in the right atrium would mix ...
... A. Veins. B. Nodes. C. Arteries. D. Capillaries. 46. Which of the following would occur as a result of the oval opening in the heart remaining open after birth? A. Blood pressure in the lungs would increase. B. Impulses from the sinoatrial (SA) node would stop. C. Blood in the right atrium would mix ...
worksheet unit 2 transport
... 11- The substance that is deposited on the cellulosic wall of xylem vessels and tracheids, and which is impermeable to water and solutes. (----------------------). 12- The structures that scattered all over the walls of xylem vessels and tracheids where the primary wall is left without thickening th ...
... 11- The substance that is deposited on the cellulosic wall of xylem vessels and tracheids, and which is impermeable to water and solutes. (----------------------). 12- The structures that scattered all over the walls of xylem vessels and tracheids where the primary wall is left without thickening th ...
Dextro-Transposition of the great arteries
dextro-Transposition of the great arteries (d-Transposition of the great arteries, dextro-TGA, or d-TGA), sometimes also referred to as complete transposition of the great arteries, is a birth defect in the large arteries of the heart. The primary arteries (the aorta and the pulmonary artery) are transposed.It is called a cyanotic congenital heart defect (CHD) because the newborn infant turns blue from lack of oxygen.In segmental analysis, this condition is described as ventriculoarterial discordance with atrioventricular concordance, or just ventriculoarterial discordance.d-TGA is often referred to simply as transposition of the great arteries (TGA); however, TGA is a more general term which may also refer to levo-transposition of the great arteries (l-TGA).Another term commonly used to refer to both d-TGA and l-TGA is transposition of the great vessels (TGV), although this term might have an even broader meaning than TGA.