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Lab Rats In Lab Coats
ساجدة عبيد – عاين يدكتور
It's actually an important part of medical training
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This is a normal 12-lead ECG.
Take a good look, because making sense of the normal is hard on its own
Take a good look, because making sense of the normal is hard on its own
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The bright side is that when you understand it, you'll feel so damn smart... for about a day or so.
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An echo of mitral valve regurgitation (due to infective endocarditis)
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An echo of mitral valve regurgitation (due to infective endocarditis)
You can see mobile or (oscillating) vegetations of IE on the valve leaflets
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The arrow points to a perivalvular abcess near the aortic valve due to IE (Infective Endocarditis)
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When your P and QRS waves are regular, but are dissociated and do not sync together (كلٌّ يغني على ليلاه) this is 3rd degree AV block.
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In the early 20th century, the physician was equipped primarily with a keen sense of observation and a compassionate heart; effective medications, and diagnostic laboratory tests; reliable imaging techniques were still to come. During house calls, the physician used his observational skills to evaluate both the surroundings and family members with respect to their limitations and benefits in regard to the patient. The observational skills of vision, hearing, touch, smell, and taste were well developed in most doctors. These skills were honed to razor-sharpness in the “diagnostician,” a term of honor applied to any physician, specialist, or nonspecialist, who was able to decipher complex clinical problems.
With the development of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as well as more sensitive and reliable laboratory tests in the late 1970s, the learned observational skills of physicians began to decline from disuse as reliance on these modalities for establishing diagnoses increased. Clinical medical decision making became unduly influenced by the tyranny of the tests, even though for many medical conditions—endocrine, infectious, malignant, and rheumatic, among others—the use of the eye and ear was sufficient to make the correct diagnosis or arrive at a limited group of diagnoses more rapidly and at much less cost.
With the development of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as well as more sensitive and reliable laboratory tests in the late 1970s, the learned observational skills of physicians began to decline from disuse as reliance on these modalities for establishing diagnoses increased. Clinical medical decision making became unduly influenced by the tyranny of the tests, even though for many medical conditions—endocrine, infectious, malignant, and rheumatic, among others—the use of the eye and ear was sufficient to make the correct diagnosis or arrive at a limited group of diagnoses more rapidly and at much less cost.
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In the early 20th century, the physician was equipped primarily with a keen sense of observation and a compassionate heart; effective medications, and diagnostic laboratory tests; reliable imaging techniques were still to come. During house calls, the physician…
It's important for those interested in medicine, read it
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B symptoms
(Low-grade fever, night sweats, unintentional weight loss)
(Low-grade fever, night sweats, unintentional weight loss)
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B symptoms (Low-grade fever, night sweats, unintentional weight loss)
This is usually in the context of lymphoma staging. But this constellation of symptoms can appear in other diseases.
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Post-Myocardial Infarction Syndrome (PMIS, or Dressler's syndrome) can sometimes be associated with pleural effusion as well as pericardial effusion
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Post-Myocardial Infarction Syndrome (PMIS, or Dressler's syndrome) can sometimes be associated with pleural effusion as well as pericardial effusion
Some sources say that you can't treat Dressler's with NSAIDs or glucocorticoids, but others say that you can... Idk really