The Ciba Collection of Medical Illustrations, Volume 5CIBA, 1966 - Anatomy, Pathological |
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Page 43
... Frequently , the cathe- ter is wedged , being cautiously advanced into the most - peripheral branch of the pulmonary artery that will accept the catheter tip . A pressure recorded from the wedge position has essentially the same mean ...
... Frequently , the cathe- ter is wedged , being cautiously advanced into the most - peripheral branch of the pulmonary artery that will accept the catheter tip . A pressure recorded from the wedge position has essentially the same mean ...
Page 74
... frequently louder over the aortic and pulmonary areas ( base ) . The first sound is a long noise of lower tonal- ity ; the second sound is shorter and sharper . In normal adolescents or young people , the first sound may be split . The ...
... frequently louder over the aortic and pulmonary areas ( base ) . The first sound is a long noise of lower tonal- ity ; the second sound is shorter and sharper . In normal adolescents or young people , the first sound may be split . The ...
Page 90
... frequently . There may be epi- sodes of paroxysmal dyspnea or pulmonary edema . The patients are pale . They have a small ( often rather slow ) radial pulse , and their blood pressure is on the low side , with a reduced pulse pressure ...
... frequently . There may be epi- sodes of paroxysmal dyspnea or pulmonary edema . The patients are pale . They have a small ( often rather slow ) radial pulse , and their blood pressure is on the low side , with a reduced pulse pressure ...
Common terms and phrases
A-V node aneurysm aortic arch aortic valve apex arrhythmias ascending aorta atrial atrioventricular block blood flow branch bundle cardiac output cardinal veins catheter cause cavity cells chordae tendineae circulation clinical common Continued conus coronary artery CUSP depolarization diastolic digitalis dilatation dorsal drugs edema electrocardiogram embryo endocardial enlargement fibers fibrillation heart disease heart failure hypertension increase INFERIOR VENA CAVA lead left atrium left ventricle left ventricular lesions lung medial membrane mitral insufficiency mitral stenosis mitral valve murmur myocardial infarction myocardium Netter M.D. OCIBA normal occur orifice oxygen pacemaker PAPILLARY MUSCLE patients pericardial pericardium peripheral PLATE portion posterior pulmonary artery PULMONARY TRUNK PULMONARY VEINS QRS complex renal result rheumatic right atrium right ventricle right ventricular S-T segments SECTION II-PLATE SECTION V-PLATE shunt sinus sound SUPERIOR VENA CAVA suture sympathetic systolic tachycardia thoracic tion tissue tricular tricuspid valve usually vagal valvular vascular venous vessels wall wave