@mo_abdalfttah: Replying to @Mahira Makhlof.7 ازاي بقرأ الابحاث بشكل محاني#ثانوية_عامة #biotechnology

mo_abdalfttah
mo_abdalfttah
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Sunday 06 October 2024 19:19:23 GMT
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mariam.7ossam2
Mariam.7ossam :
PubMed Scopus google scholar EKB
2024-10-16 09:44:54
3
hayam.mostafa646
Hayam Mostafa :
google scholar
2024-10-13 18:32:22
1
biotechnologist33
biotechnology nerd :
طب لو دكتور الجامعه اقترح اننا نعمل teams ويبعتلنا researches نقراها وندور وكدا و اصحابي عايزيني ف اخش و لا اركز في دراستي و دي اكتفيتي عاديه اطنشها و خلاص
2024-10-06 21:40:54
2
sebastian1.michaelis
Sebastian Michaelis 💫✨ :
ايه علاقه البايو بالطاقة أو الأسلحة أو مفيش?!?
2024-10-06 19:23:42
2
matrixhalamadrid
Hazem×〽️atrix :
كلية الزراعة طلعت كلية عظيمة وجامدة في الدراسة جداً طالع ٦ الصبح راجع ٧ المغرب وقربت انام اهو😂
2024-10-07 17:34:08
2
christenramy2
christen Ramy :
ازاي اقدر افهم البحث علشان حاولت اقرا ابحاث او reviews ومش بفهم جزء كبير منه🙂
2024-10-06 21:22:36
1
basmalaelhawary
Basmala El-Hawary :
ممكن لينك اكونت تويتر او اليوزر لان مش قادره اوصل لحاجه عليه
2024-10-31 08:36:59
0
mery39464
mery :
اكتب اسم الموقع التاني
2024-10-14 11:30:52
0
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Ready to put your auscultation skills to the test?🩺 Let me know if you got them right! Need help in med school? Comment “help” for FREE resources and summary guides! 📚 👉🏼Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA): Listen for that continuous “machinery-like” murmur, best at the left upper sternal border. This persists across the cardiac cycle, varying in intensity.✨ 👉🏼Pericardial Friction Rub: Imagine two pieces of leather rubbing together—a high-pitched, scratchy sound heard best at the left lower sternal border. It occurs due to inflammation of the pericardium, the sac surrounding the heart✨ 👉🏼Pulmonic Stenosis: A harsh crescendo-decrescendo, mid-systolic murmur with a systolic ejection click. This sound happens when the pulmonary valve is narrowed, increasing turbulence from the right ventricle to the pulmonary artery!✨ 👉🏼S1 and S2: This is the classic “lub-dub”! S1 marks the closure of the mitral and tricuspid valves, starting systole. While S2 signals the aortic and pulmonic valves, beginning diastole✨ 👉🏼S3 (Ventricular Gallop): Is a low-pitched sound occurring right after S1 & S2 — blood flows rapidly into the ventricles during early diastole. While normal in kids, athletes and pregnant people, it could imply heart failure or valve issues for older adults.✨ 👉🏼S4 (Atrial Gallop): Occurring just before S1, this low-pitched sound suggests a stiff or hypertrophic left ventricle, commonly seen in conditions like hypertension or aortic stenosis!✨ 👉🏼Split S2: A distinct “split” sound occuring when the aortic (A2) and pulmonary (P2) valves close at different times. It’s a normal finding, best heard at the left upper sternal border, especially in younger hearts.✨ 👉🏼Ventricular Septal Defect (VSD): A loud, harsh holosystolic murmur at the lower left sternal border, caused by a hole in the heart’s septum, allowing blood to flow between the left and right ventricles!✨ . . . [tags 🏷️] #heartmurmurs #heartmurmur #cardiology #medicalstudent #murmur #heartsounds #medstudent #medschool #medicalquiz #study #premed #nursingschool #medicine #nursing #futuredoctors  #medicalstudentquiz #anatomyquiz #medicalschoolquiz #anatomy  #medicalstudent #nursingstudent #medicina #nursing #nurse
Ready to put your auscultation skills to the test?🩺 Let me know if you got them right! Need help in med school? Comment “help” for FREE resources and summary guides! 📚 👉🏼Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA): Listen for that continuous “machinery-like” murmur, best at the left upper sternal border. This persists across the cardiac cycle, varying in intensity.✨ 👉🏼Pericardial Friction Rub: Imagine two pieces of leather rubbing together—a high-pitched, scratchy sound heard best at the left lower sternal border. It occurs due to inflammation of the pericardium, the sac surrounding the heart✨ 👉🏼Pulmonic Stenosis: A harsh crescendo-decrescendo, mid-systolic murmur with a systolic ejection click. This sound happens when the pulmonary valve is narrowed, increasing turbulence from the right ventricle to the pulmonary artery!✨ 👉🏼S1 and S2: This is the classic “lub-dub”! S1 marks the closure of the mitral and tricuspid valves, starting systole. While S2 signals the aortic and pulmonic valves, beginning diastole✨ 👉🏼S3 (Ventricular Gallop): Is a low-pitched sound occurring right after S1 & S2 — blood flows rapidly into the ventricles during early diastole. While normal in kids, athletes and pregnant people, it could imply heart failure or valve issues for older adults.✨ 👉🏼S4 (Atrial Gallop): Occurring just before S1, this low-pitched sound suggests a stiff or hypertrophic left ventricle, commonly seen in conditions like hypertension or aortic stenosis!✨ 👉🏼Split S2: A distinct “split” sound occuring when the aortic (A2) and pulmonary (P2) valves close at different times. It’s a normal finding, best heard at the left upper sternal border, especially in younger hearts.✨ 👉🏼Ventricular Septal Defect (VSD): A loud, harsh holosystolic murmur at the lower left sternal border, caused by a hole in the heart’s septum, allowing blood to flow between the left and right ventricles!✨ . . . [tags 🏷️] #heartmurmurs #heartmurmur #cardiology #medicalstudent #murmur #heartsounds #medstudent #medschool #medicalquiz #study #premed #nursingschool #medicine #nursing #futuredoctors #medicalstudentquiz #anatomyquiz #medicalschoolquiz #anatomy #medicalstudent #nursingstudent #medicina #nursing #nurse

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