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Heart Failure Devices: Staying Connected
Heart Failure Devices: Staying Connected

... • Important to keep follow-up with your heart failure and device provider • Timing of device may need to be adjusted • Continue with lifestyle measures (daily weights, exercise) ...
ANATOMY I, CHAPTER 18, STUDY GUIDE Read: pages: 661 to 673
ANATOMY I, CHAPTER 18, STUDY GUIDE Read: pages: 661 to 673

... Read: pages: 661 to 673 (up to, “Mechanisms and Events of Contractions”) The student should be able to: 1. State what two divisions make up the cardiovascular system 2. Describe the function of the heart.. 3. Describe the size, shape, locationand orientation of the heart in the thorax (chest cavity) ...
Inflammation & the Immune Response Unit VIII
Inflammation & the Immune Response Unit VIII

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Vorlage Web-Dokus
Vorlage Web-Dokus

... left half pumps blood through the body, where it provides organs and cells with oxygen and nutrients before flowing back into the right half. 7. When does the heart of a human being begin to beat for the first time? It already begins to beat in the fifth week of pregnancy. 8. What are the difference ...
Prefixes
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...  HDN (Hemolytic disease of Newborn): RHwoman and RH+ man have baby. Hemolysis causes the destruction of RBC’s. Hemoglobin is is then converted into bilirubin. (During delivery some of the baby’s antigens may escape into mother’s blood)  Prevention test at 28 wks: mother given RH immune globulin wh ...
Heart Failure
Heart Failure

... Clinical presentation How to treat ◦ Acute cardiac failure ◦ Chronic cardiac failure ...
Chapter 5: Age-Related Changes of the Cardiovascular System
Chapter 5: Age-Related Changes of the Cardiovascular System

... The veins also lose elasticity. Due to reduced activity in older adults, the pumping action usually caused by muscle motion of the calf muscles is lessened. The veins dilate causing pooling of blood in dependent areas, such as the lower legs and feet, leading to edema. ...
Fifth Disease
Fifth Disease

... in late winter, spring and early summer months. The rates of infection may also increase every three to four years. ...
Subaortic Stenosis in Dogs
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... and cost to the owner. Less invasive catheter-based therapies such as balloon valvuloplasty have only shown short-term success to date and are not routinely performed for this reason. Investigation of more advanced forms of balloon valvuloplasty is currently underway. ...
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What is Dilated Cardiomyopathy (DCM
What is Dilated Cardiomyopathy (DCM

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Yannick Morias Human African trypanosomias (HAT), also
Yannick Morias Human African trypanosomias (HAT), also

... infection, these parasites stay extracellular, exposing them to immune attacks by antibodies and microbicidal compounds released by myeloid cells. However, African trypanosomes have developed mechanisms to escape the immune system, causing chronic infection. Moreover, the immune response elicited to ...
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Cow Heart Lab - dsapresents.org
Cow Heart Lab - dsapresents.org

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Antibiotics!
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HEART DISSECTION LAB
HEART DISSECTION LAB

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Key Questions about the Physiology of the Heart
Key Questions about the Physiology of the Heart

...  Resting heart rate is fastest in the fetus, then gradually decreases throughout life  The average heart rate is about 8 beats per minute higher in women than men ...
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... hip circumference values showed significant correlations with these echocardiographic variables. Systolic and diastolic functions of the left ventricle were normal in both groups, although stroke volume was high the obese one. The right ventricle tissue Doppler parameters were similar in both groups ...
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Cardiophysiology(Josh`s partial notes missing stuff

... skeletal muscle. Since the distance from Z-Line to Z-line is less, the muscle can be stretched more than the average muscle cell while still retaining its contractile ability. Myocardial cells are short, branched, and interconnected. There are intercallated discs, or gap junctions which are areas of ...
apch20.ppt
apch20.ppt

... tissue and fat • Myocardium – muscle (much of wall thickness) • Endocardium – a layer of simple squamous epithelium. (This is continuous with the endothelium of blood vessels) • Trabeculae Carnae – raised projections on the inner surface of the heart wall ...
PDF 2 MB
PDF 2 MB

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Patients First - Northwestern Memorial Hospital
Patients First - Northwestern Memorial Hospital

... Para asistencia en español, por favor llamar a el departamento de representantes para pacientes al 312-926-3112. Northwestern Memorial is an equal opportunity employer that welcomes, respects and serves with dignity all people and does not discriminate, including in hiring, or employment, or admissi ...
MY HEART SKIPS A BEAT - Cardiology at Concorde
MY HEART SKIPS A BEAT - Cardiology at Concorde

... The complaint of “extra” or “skipped beats” is a common one and is taken seriously by cardiologists. The sense of skipping or dropping of the heart is may be benign. After evaluation, the source commonly turns out to be related to lifestyle issues rather than any serious underlying heart disease. Th ...
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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.
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