Lecture 3
... • May ‘take over’ from acute inflammation – if damage is too severe to be resolved within a few ...
... • May ‘take over’ from acute inflammation – if damage is too severe to be resolved within a few ...
Congential heart disease
... The guidelines, published in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association ,are based on a growing body of scientific evidence that shows that, for most people, the risks of taking prophylaxis antibiotics for certain procedures outweigh the benefits. These guidelines represent a major chang ...
... The guidelines, published in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association ,are based on a growing body of scientific evidence that shows that, for most people, the risks of taking prophylaxis antibiotics for certain procedures outweigh the benefits. These guidelines represent a major chang ...
right atrial thrombus, aortic regurgitation, coronary artery stenosis
... arterial thrombosis, recurrent miscarriage, thrombocytopenia, mitral or aortic valve dysfunction, intra cardiac thrombosis, and increased level of antiphospholipid antibodies(1,2,3). Secondary APS is defined when it occurs in the presence of predisposed condition such as known autoimmune disease (e. ...
... arterial thrombosis, recurrent miscarriage, thrombocytopenia, mitral or aortic valve dysfunction, intra cardiac thrombosis, and increased level of antiphospholipid antibodies(1,2,3). Secondary APS is defined when it occurs in the presence of predisposed condition such as known autoimmune disease (e. ...
Introduction to Biology II
... Chronic fatigue syndrome is a disorder whose primary symptom is usually intense fatigue. Though the syndrome likely has multiple causes, some maintain that autoimmune damage to the brain stem is the principal mechanism in a significant subset of cases. Dysautonomia is a malfunction of the autonomic ...
... Chronic fatigue syndrome is a disorder whose primary symptom is usually intense fatigue. Though the syndrome likely has multiple causes, some maintain that autoimmune damage to the brain stem is the principal mechanism in a significant subset of cases. Dysautonomia is a malfunction of the autonomic ...
Lab: Heart Dissection DATE: HOUR
... 12. Using your scissors and scalpel cut down the outer lateral surface from the atrium down to the ventricles, around the apex and up the other ventricle to the other atrium. Open the heart like a locket. Thickness of the left ventricular myocardium at the widest point: __________________________ [1 ...
... 12. Using your scissors and scalpel cut down the outer lateral surface from the atrium down to the ventricles, around the apex and up the other ventricle to the other atrium. Open the heart like a locket. Thickness of the left ventricular myocardium at the widest point: __________________________ [1 ...
Infectious Disease board review - the UNC Department of Medicine
... his trunk and abdomen. He had been previously healthy and has not had any contact with ill persons. He has had multiple male and female sexual partners and infrequently uses condoms. He has been tested for HIV infection several times, most recently 8 months ago; all results were negative. On physica ...
... his trunk and abdomen. He had been previously healthy and has not had any contact with ill persons. He has had multiple male and female sexual partners and infrequently uses condoms. He has been tested for HIV infection several times, most recently 8 months ago; all results were negative. On physica ...
What Is an Automated External Defibrillator?
... within minutes, it quickly leads to death. Most sudden cardiac arrests result from ventricular fibrillation. This is a rapid and unsynchronized heart rhythm starting in the heart’s lower pumping chambers (the ventricles). The heart must be “defibrillated” quickly, because a victim’s chance of surviv ...
... within minutes, it quickly leads to death. Most sudden cardiac arrests result from ventricular fibrillation. This is a rapid and unsynchronized heart rhythm starting in the heart’s lower pumping chambers (the ventricles). The heart must be “defibrillated” quickly, because a victim’s chance of surviv ...
Braunwald`s Heart Disease e-dition, 8th edition
... Saunders · Forthcoming Title (November 2007) Price: £ 149.00 Dr. Braunwald's masterwork returns … bringing you the definitive guidance you need to overcome any challenge in clinical cardiology today, using the best approaches available! Hundreds of world authorities, many of them new to this edition ...
... Saunders · Forthcoming Title (November 2007) Price: £ 149.00 Dr. Braunwald's masterwork returns … bringing you the definitive guidance you need to overcome any challenge in clinical cardiology today, using the best approaches available! Hundreds of world authorities, many of them new to this edition ...
Introduction: Basic Anatomy of the Heart
... Instructions: Working with a partner, can you describe the flow of blood through the heart? Start with the right atrium. List all the major structures along the way (chambers, valves, and vessels). Refer to the diagram on page 602. Example: Rt. atrium > ? valve> ? (chamber) > ? valve up the pulmonar ...
... Instructions: Working with a partner, can you describe the flow of blood through the heart? Start with the right atrium. List all the major structures along the way (chambers, valves, and vessels). Refer to the diagram on page 602. Example: Rt. atrium > ? valve> ? (chamber) > ? valve up the pulmonar ...
What Is An Echocardiogram? An echocardiogram (also called "echo
... During the test, a small microphone-like device, called a transducer, Is held against the chest. The transducer sends ultrasound waves that bounce off the various parts of the heart. A computer uses the information coming from the transducer to construct an image of the heart. The Image Is displayed ...
... During the test, a small microphone-like device, called a transducer, Is held against the chest. The transducer sends ultrasound waves that bounce off the various parts of the heart. A computer uses the information coming from the transducer to construct an image of the heart. The Image Is displayed ...
DISEASES OF THE HEART
... • Volume-overload causes eccentric hypertrophy with an increase in both wall thickness & cavity diameter due to LV dilatation. • The causes are MR,AR ,dilated cardiomyopathy. • Cardiac dysfunction follows both these types of hypertrophy. ...
... • Volume-overload causes eccentric hypertrophy with an increase in both wall thickness & cavity diameter due to LV dilatation. • The causes are MR,AR ,dilated cardiomyopathy. • Cardiac dysfunction follows both these types of hypertrophy. ...
Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiology - Dartmouth
... about 20% of healthy implantable defibrillator (ICD) Each day the average adults are likely to have heart beats (expands frequent or multiple types and contracts) 100,000 of premature ventricular heartbeats. In the United States moretimes than and pumps about 2,000 gallons of blood. 850,000 people a ...
... about 20% of healthy implantable defibrillator (ICD) Each day the average adults are likely to have heart beats (expands frequent or multiple types and contracts) 100,000 of premature ventricular heartbeats. In the United States moretimes than and pumps about 2,000 gallons of blood. 850,000 people a ...
Pediatric Fever - Indiana University
... may have bacteremia. Because of the high rate of systemic infection in these patients, these infants require IV antibiotics and hospitalization initially ...
... may have bacteremia. Because of the high rate of systemic infection in these patients, these infants require IV antibiotics and hospitalization initially ...
What is rheumatoid arthritis ?
... • HLA class II is strongly linked to RA. • HLA DR4 is the major halo-type in ethnic group, HLA DR1 in Indians and HLA DW15 in Japanese. N.B : • 50-70 % of caucasian RA patients are HLA DR4, Compared to 2025 % of the population at large. • 1st degree relatives of RA patients are 4x ...
... • HLA class II is strongly linked to RA. • HLA DR4 is the major halo-type in ethnic group, HLA DR1 in Indians and HLA DW15 in Japanese. N.B : • 50-70 % of caucasian RA patients are HLA DR4, Compared to 2025 % of the population at large. • 1st degree relatives of RA patients are 4x ...
Heart murmurs
... for example, if the valve is narrowed, prolapsed (weak or floppy) or leaking. Will I need treatment? Whether you need treatment will depend on the cause of your murmur and your symptoms. If your doctor hears a murmur, he or she will generally arrange for you to have an echocardiogram (an ultrasound ...
... for example, if the valve is narrowed, prolapsed (weak or floppy) or leaking. Will I need treatment? Whether you need treatment will depend on the cause of your murmur and your symptoms. If your doctor hears a murmur, he or she will generally arrange for you to have an echocardiogram (an ultrasound ...
ANPS 020 01-23
... The rest of the pericardium sticks to the fibrous sac as the parietal pericardium The heart is not IN the cavity, but is surrounded by it on all sides There is no space in the cavity, but there is a thin layer of fluid that allows the visceral and parietal pericardial layers to slide against o ...
... The rest of the pericardium sticks to the fibrous sac as the parietal pericardium The heart is not IN the cavity, but is surrounded by it on all sides There is no space in the cavity, but there is a thin layer of fluid that allows the visceral and parietal pericardial layers to slide against o ...
Cardiovascular System PPT
... Pericardium – a double-walled sac around the heart composed of: 1. A superficial fibrous pericardium 2. A deep two-layer serous pericardium a. The parietal layer lines the internal surface of the fibrous pericardium b. The visceral layer or epicardium lines the surface of the heart ...
... Pericardium – a double-walled sac around the heart composed of: 1. A superficial fibrous pericardium 2. A deep two-layer serous pericardium a. The parietal layer lines the internal surface of the fibrous pericardium b. The visceral layer or epicardium lines the surface of the heart ...
Immune System - World of Teaching
... Macrophage ingests antigen and displays portion on its surface. Helper T- Cell recognizes antigen on the surface of the macrophage and becomes active. Active Helper T-Cell activates Cytotoxic T-Cells and B-Cells. Cytotoxic T-Cells divide into Active Cytotoxic T-cells and Memory ...
... Macrophage ingests antigen and displays portion on its surface. Helper T- Cell recognizes antigen on the surface of the macrophage and becomes active. Active Helper T-Cell activates Cytotoxic T-Cells and B-Cells. Cytotoxic T-Cells divide into Active Cytotoxic T-cells and Memory ...
What is Heart Disease?
... more noticeable when lying down in bed, such that a patient may start to sleep with more pillows than before. The most common cause of breathlessness is ischaemic heart disease. Other causes of breathlessness include high blood pressure (hypertension), malfunctioning heart valves and various abnorma ...
... more noticeable when lying down in bed, such that a patient may start to sleep with more pillows than before. The most common cause of breathlessness is ischaemic heart disease. Other causes of breathlessness include high blood pressure (hypertension), malfunctioning heart valves and various abnorma ...
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction in rheumatoid arthritis
... Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) patients are at risk of developing cardiovascular diseases due to the high inflammatory burden that leads to accelerated atherosclerosis and increased morbidity and mortality [1]. Tumor necrosis factors alpha (TNF-α) is an important cytokine in the pathogenesis of both RA a ...
... Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) patients are at risk of developing cardiovascular diseases due to the high inflammatory burden that leads to accelerated atherosclerosis and increased morbidity and mortality [1]. Tumor necrosis factors alpha (TNF-α) is an important cytokine in the pathogenesis of both RA a ...
imunity-skin-and-soft-tissue-infection-copy
... Inflammation of hair aureus follicles Immunocompromised patients: gram-negative Purulence limited to organisms (e.g., ...
... Inflammation of hair aureus follicles Immunocompromised patients: gram-negative Purulence limited to organisms (e.g., ...
1 Diseases: what can go wrong with the cardiovascular system? The
... The following are just a few of the many diseases and disorders that can impair the cardiovascular system or its parts. Atherosclerosis is a general term for hardening of the arteries. Atherosclerosis is a condition in which fatty material and other substances accumulate on and in the walls of large ...
... The following are just a few of the many diseases and disorders that can impair the cardiovascular system or its parts. Atherosclerosis is a general term for hardening of the arteries. Atherosclerosis is a condition in which fatty material and other substances accumulate on and in the walls of large ...
Immunity
... Macrophage ingests antigen and displays portion on its surface. Helper T- Cell recognizes antigen on the surface of the macrophage and becomes active. Active Helper T-Cell activates Cytotoxic T-Cells and B-Cells. Cytotoxic T-Cells divide into Active Cytotoxic T-cells and Memory ...
... Macrophage ingests antigen and displays portion on its surface. Helper T- Cell recognizes antigen on the surface of the macrophage and becomes active. Active Helper T-Cell activates Cytotoxic T-Cells and B-Cells. Cytotoxic T-Cells divide into Active Cytotoxic T-cells and Memory ...
Rheumatic fever
Rheumatic fever, also known as acute rheumatic fever (ARF), is an inflammatory disease that can involve the heart, joints, skin, and brain. The disease typically develops two to four weeks after a throat infection. Signs and symptoms include fever, multiple painful joints, involuntary muscle movements, and a characteristic but uncommon non itchy rash known as erythema marginatum. The heart is involved in about half of cases. Permanent damage to the heart valves, known as rheumatic heart disease (RHD), usually only occurs after multiple attacks but may occasionally occur after a single case of ARF. The damaged valves may result in heart failure. The abnormal valves also increase the risk of the person developing atrial fibrillation and infection of the valves.Acute rheumatic fever may occur following an infection of the throat by the bacteria Streptococcus pyogenes. If it is untreated ARF occurs in up to three percent of people. The underlying mechanism is believed to involve the production of antibodies against a person's own tissues. Some people due to their genetics are more likely to get the disease when exposed to the bacteria than others. Other risk factors include malnutrition and poverty. Diagnosis of ARF is often based on the presence of signs and symptoms in combination with evidence of a recent streptococcal infection.Treating people who have strep throat with antibiotics, such as penicillin, decreases their risk of getting ARF. This often involves testing people with sore throats for the infection, which may not be available in the developing world. Other preventative measures include improved sanitation. In those with ARF and RHD prolonged periods of antibiotics are sometimes recommended. Gradual return to normal activities may occur following an attack. Once RHD develops, treatment is more difficult. Occasionally valve replacement surgery or repair is required. Otherwise complications are treated as per normal.Acute rheumatic fever occurs in about 325,000 children each year and about 18 million people currently have rheumatic heart disease. Those who get ARF are most often between the ages of 5 and 14, with 20% of first-time attacks occurring in adults. The disease is most common in the developing world and among indigenous peoples in the developed world. In 2013 it resulted in 275,000 deaths down from 374,000 deaths in 1990. Most deaths occur in the developing world where as many as 12.5% of people affected may die each year. Descriptions of the condition are believed to date back to at least the 5th century BCE in the writings of Hippocrates. The disease is so named because its symptoms are similar to those of some rheumatic disorders.