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Crackles الخشخشة
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1. Inspiratory Crackles per breath) had negative polarity, and all expiratory Crackles (total of 55 Crackles or 13.8 expiratory Crackles per breath) had positive polarity.Bottom, C: Vertically flipped expiratory Crackles have waveforms nearly identical to that of inspiratory Crackles
2. Crackles - Fine (Rales) Fine Crackles are brief, discontinuous, popping lung sounds that are high-pitched
3. Crackles are also known as rales
4. Breath Sounds - Crackles You are now listening to a typical example of breath sounds with scattered wet Crackles
5. What does Crackles mean? Information and translations of Crackles in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web.
6. Definition of Crackles in the Definitions.net dictionary
7. There are coarse Crackles, which are loud, low-pitched, and fewer in number per breath, and fine Crackles, which are …
8. Fine Crackles: Fine Crackles are a short, higher-pitched sound that is often compared to hair being rubbed between the fingers
9. Late inspiratory Crackles may mean pneumonia, CHF, or atelectasis
10. His radio crackles back with nothing but static.
11. Two issues often cause bibasilar Crackles. One is …
12. A nurse Auscultates a client's lungs and hears fine crackles
13. Chest auscultation usually reveals scattered to diffuse crackles and rhonchi .
14. Early inspiratory and expiratory Crackles are the hallmark of chronic bronchitis
15. It is an anthology that crackles with wit and wisdom.
16. These observations were typical of the Crackles detected in our
17. Above the noise a voice crackles over the public address system.
18. When a flash of lightening shatters the dark, the radio crackles.
19. Crackles, previously termed rales, can be heard in both phases of respiration
20. Crackles, previously termed rales, can be heard in both phases of respiration.
21. Crackles are abnormal lung sounds characterized by discontinuous clicking or rattling sounds. Crackles can sound like salt dropped onto a hot pan or like cellophane being crumpled or like velcro being torn open
22. Lung sounds are Auscultated for sounds such as wheezes, rhonchi and crackles (rales)
23. See 7 authoritative translations of Crackles in Spanish with example sentences, conjugations and audio pronunciations.
24. Pulmonary Crackles medically referred to as rales are quite common in the elderly population
25. Bibasilar crackles are a bubbling or Crackling sound originating from the base of the lungs
26. This is the first study to examine the relationship between specific added lung sounds (Crackles…
27. Fine Crackles (aka Rales) are high pitched sounds mostly heard in the lower lung bases
28. Bibasilar Crackles are a bubbling or crackling sound originating from the base of the lungs
29. C . Chest. Auscultation of the lungs for wheezes and crackles may indicate asthma or heart failure.
30. [Crows Cawing, electricity crackles] [Graznido de cuervos, electricidad crepita]What is worse, he is producing a
31. 5 These Crackles have a distinctive “Velcro-like” character and are heard during middle to late inspiration
32. Crackles may be differentiated by their quality (fine versus coarse) or by where they fall in inspiration
33. However, no studies have been carried out to assess the association of Velcro Crackles with other cli …
34. Lung Crackles will often mean the presences of a respiratory condition such as pneumonia, bronchitis among others
35. Crackles, still often referred to as “rales” in the United States and “Crepitations” in Great Britain, consist of a series of short, explosive, nonmusical sounds that punctuate the underlying breath sound; fine crackles (Audio 16-4) are softer, shorter in duration, and higher in …
36. Crackles - Coarse (Rales) Auscultation Reference This website is intended for use by medical professionals for educational purposes only
37. The story of the Unabomber crackles with the raw mystery and tension of a cops-and-robbers potboiler.
38. Crackles (often referred to as Crepitations in the UK and as rales in the USA), best detected during slow, deep breaths , are discontinuous, short explosive non-musical sounds predominating during inspiration and best heard over dependent lung regions [10, 11] and sometimes associated with expiratory crackles .
39. Bibasilar Crackles are abnormal sounds from the base of the lungs. They indicate that something is interfering with airflow
40. The Crackles will usually reflect a buildup of mucus, pus or fluids in the small airways in your lungs
41. Advanced Asbestosis may cause clubbing, dry bibasilar crackles, and, in severe cases, symptoms and signs of right ventricular failure (cor pulmonale).
42. Advanced Asbestosis may cause clubbing, dry bibasilar crackles, and, in severe cases, symptoms and signs of right ventricular failure (cor pulmonale).
43. Coarse Crackles are low pitched lungs sounds heard in pathologies such as chronic bronchitis, bronchiectasis, pneumonia, and severe pulmonary edema
44. Thomas Watson spent hours listening to the strange crackles and hisses and chirps and whistles that his accidental antenna detected.
45. Crackles, on the other hand, are only heard by a stethoscope and are a sign of too much fluid in the lung
46. Breath Sounds of Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF) Bilateral fine Crackles on chest auscultation are detected in 60% of patients with IPF
47. Another cause for Crackles is when air enters the lung and bubbles in secretions, either fluid in the lungs or mucus
48. Crackles (rales) in the interstitial pulmonary diseases There is renewed interest in the classification and methods of recording adventitious pulmonary sounds
49. The nurse Auscultates bibasilar inspiratory crackles in a newly admitted 68 year-old client with a diagnosis of congestive heart disease
50. Crepitations are usually divided into 'coarse' and 'fine', and may occur during inspiration or expiration, although expiratory crackles/Crepitations are more common