Physical Examination

DrPhil
16,129 Views · 2 years ago

Observation of both jugular veins can provide a reliable indication of the volume and pressure in the right side of the heart since internal jugular veins pulsate in response to phasic changes in right atrial pressure. Proper positioning of the patient to increase the effects of gravity enhances distention of the jugular veins and, therefore, increases the ability to observe venous pulsations.

DrPhil
22,906 Views · 2 years ago

Full complete clinical examination of the chest, lungs and respiration with breath sounds

DrPhil
20,357 Views · 2 years ago

Complete examination of the back

DrPhil
24,321 Views · 2 years ago

Complete clinical assessment and examination of the neck

DrPhil
23,712 Views · 2 years ago

Clinical complete examination of the mouth and throat

DrPhil
39,850 Views · 2 years ago

Complete clinical examination of the ears with all the associated tests

DrPhil
30,834 Views · 2 years ago

Examination of the eye,vision,retina and field of vision

DrPhil
40,563 Views · 2 years ago

Examination of the lymph nodes of the head

DrPhil
60,161 Views · 2 years ago

Optimal blood pressure typically is defined as 120 mm Hg systolic — which is the pressure as your heart beats — over 80 mm Hg diastolic — which is the pressure as your heart relaxes. For your resting heart rate, the target is between 60 and 100 beats per minute (bpm)

neal
32,484 Views · 2 years ago

The Motor Assessment Scale (MAS) is a performance-based scale that was developed as a means of assessing everyday motor function in patients with stroke (Carr, Shepherd, Nordholm, & Lynne, 1985). The MAS is based on a task-oriented approach to evaluation that assesses performance of functional tasks rather than isolated patterns of movement

Mohamed Ibrahim
31,409 Views · 5 years ago

Examination of a patient with post-enucleation socket syndrome.




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