. Medical diagnosis for the student and practitioner. 0> j r~ ^ _. r- 3- —-* . E Pause. Fig. Fig. 167.—Division and reduplication of the heart sounds. Upper figure.—Splittingof first sound (blup dwp). Mid-figure.—Division of the first sound apex (lupup dup).Lower figure.—division of second sound (Lub letup). adjacent excavation. Sounds are occasionally transmitted loudly and overwide areas by such pulmonary consolidations or cavities. Reduplication of Heart Sounds.—The normal heart sounds consist of twosystolic and two diastolic sounds so blended as to form on


. Medical diagnosis for the student and practitioner. 0> j r~ ^ _. r- 3- —-* . E Pause. Fig. Fig. 167.—Division and reduplication of the heart sounds. Upper figure.—Splittingof first sound (blup dwp). Mid-figure.—Division of the first sound apex (lupup dup).Lower figure.—division of second sound (Lub letup). adjacent excavation. Sounds are occasionally transmitted loudly and overwide areas by such pulmonary consolidations or cavities. Reduplication of Heart Sounds.—The normal heart sounds consist of twosystolic and two diastolic sounds so blended as to form one systolic and onediastolic tone because of the synchronous closure of the valves of the right andleft heart. Under many conditions this synchronism is so interfered with as toproduce splitting or actual reduplication of either sound. In true reduplication the elements of the double sound are clear and well-defined though short. In other words, a third sound appears in the cycle. The triplerhythm. 448 MEDICAL DIAGNOSIS Curiouslycircumscribed. The split sound elements are less clearly separated and sometim


Size: 2866px × 872px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectdiagnos, bookyear1922