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Anatomy of The Peritoneal Cavity
Anatomy of The Peritoneal Cavity Anatomy_Videos 7,512 Views • 2 years ago

Anatomy of The Peritoneal Cavity

bone cancer Signs and symptoms
bone cancer Signs and symptoms samer kareem 1,795 Views • 2 years ago

Bone cancer symptoms. Possible symptoms of bone cancer include: Bone pain: Pain is the most common sign of bone cancer, and may become more noticeable as the tumor grows. Bone pain can cause a dull or deep ache in a bone or bone region (e.g., back, pelvis, legs, ribs, arms).

Histology of Spongy Bone
Histology of Spongy Bone Histology 5,857 Views • 2 years ago

Histology of Spongy Bone

mouth ulcers
mouth ulcers samer kareem 1,860 Views • 2 years ago

Scientists don't know what causes canker sores. Most believe that there is a problem with the body's immune system. Emotional stress, menstruation or injury to the mouth are common triggers for simple canker sores. Certain foods such as citrus or acidic foods may trigger a canker sore or make one more uncomfortable.

Histology of Large Artery
Histology of Large Artery Histology 4,646 Views • 2 years ago

Histology of Large Artery

Infrared Vein Finder
Infrared Vein Finder Scott 18,557 Views • 2 years ago

Infrared Vein Finder

Histology of Secretory Endometrium
Histology of Secretory Endometrium Histology 4,577 Views • 2 years ago

Histology of Secretory Endometrium

Reduce the pain of vaccination in babies
Reduce the pain of vaccination in babies samer kareem 1,490 Views • 2 years ago

Management of COPD
Management of COPD samer kareem 1,968 Views • 2 years ago

The goal of COPD management is to improve a patient’s functional status and quality of life by preserving optimal lung function, improving symptoms, and preventing the recurrence of exacerbations. Currently, no treatments aside from lung transplantation have been shown to significantly improve lung function or decrease mortality; however, oxygen therapy (when appropriate) and smoking cessation may reduce mortality. Once the diagnosis of COPD is established, it is important to educate the patient about the disease and to encourage his or her active participation in therapy.

Histology of Vas Deferens
Histology of Vas Deferens Histology 12,515 Views • 2 years ago

Histology of Vas Deferens

Basic Respiratory Clinical Exam Video
Basic Respiratory Clinical Exam Video Harvard_Student 10,278 Views • 2 years ago

Basic Respiratory Clinical Exam Video

Breast Lift / Mastopexy Surgery
Breast Lift / Mastopexy Surgery Scott 8,535 Views • 2 years ago

This is a breast life surgery. Over the years, factors such as pregnancy, nursing and the force of gravity take their toll on a woman's breasts. As the skin loses its elasticity, the breasts often lose their shape and firmness and begin to sag. Breast lift is a surgical procedure to raise and reshape the breasts (at least for a time). If your breasts are small or have lost volume (for example from pregnancy) breast implants inserted in conjunction with mastopexy can increase both their firmness and their size.

Drawing from an Ampoule
Drawing from an Ampoule Harvard_Student 7,600 Views • 2 years ago

Drawing from an Ampoule

Gitelman and Bartter  Syndrome
Gitelman and Bartter Syndrome samer kareem 1,278 Views • 2 years ago

Gitelman and Bartter Presentation and Magnesium Supplementation

Marfan Syndrome Diagnosis and Treatment
Marfan Syndrome Diagnosis and Treatment samer kareem 9,804 Views • 2 years ago

Marfan syndrome is a genetic disorder that affects the body’s connective tissue. Connective tissue holds all the body’s cells, organs and tissue together. It also plays an important role in helping the body grow and develop properly. marfan_general_2.jpg What is Marfan Syndrome?Connective tissue is made up of proteins. The protein that plays a role in Marfan syndrome is called fibrillin-1. Marfan syndrome is caused by a defect (or mutation) in the gene that tells the body how to make fibrillin-1. This mutation results in an increase in a protein called transforming growth factor beta, or TGF-β. The increase in TGF-β causes problems in connective tissues throughout the body, which in turn creates the features and medical problems associated with Marfan syndrome and some related disorders. Because connective tissue is found throughout the body, Marfan syndrome can affect many different parts of the body, as well. Features of the disorder are most often found in the heart, blood vessels, bones, joints, and eyes. Some Marfan features – for example, aortic enlargement (expansion of the main blood vessel that carries blood away from the heart to the rest of the body) – can be life-threatening. The lungs, skin and nervous system may also be affected. Marfan syndrome does not affect intelligence.

Signs and symptoms of bone cancer
Signs and symptoms of bone cancer samer kareem 1,627 Views • 2 years ago

Pain in the affected bone is the most common complaint of patients with bone cancer. At first, the pain is not constant. It may be worse at night or when the bone is used (for example, leg pain when walking). As the cancer grows, the pain will be there all the time. The pain increases with activity and the person might limp if a leg is involved.

Robot-Assisted Hysterectomy Procedure
Robot-Assisted Hysterectomy Procedure samer kareem 7,040 Views • 2 years ago

Drainage of a Submandibular Mouth Abscess
Drainage of a Submandibular Mouth Abscess Scott 40,567 Views • 2 years ago

Drainage of a Submandibular Mouth Abscess

Journey for the Sperm to the Egg
Journey for the Sperm to the Egg Alicia Berger 18,474 Views • 2 years ago

Each month inside your ovaries, a group of eggs starts to grow in small, fluid-filled sacs called follicles. Eventually, one of the eggs erupts from the follicle (ovulation). It usually happens about 2 weeks before your next period. Hormones Rise After the egg leaves the follicle, the follicle develops into something called the corpus luteum. The corpus luteum releases a hormone that helps thicken the lining of your uterus, getting it ready for the egg. The Egg Travels to the Fallopian Tube After the egg is released, it moves into the Fallopian tube. It stays there for about 24 hours, waiting for a single sperm to fertilize it. All this happens, on average, about 2 weeks after your last period.

Deep Tendon Reflexes Exam
Deep Tendon Reflexes Exam samer kareem 6,813 Views • 2 years ago

In a normal person, when a muscle tendon is tapped briskly, the muscle immediately contracts due to a two-neuron reflex arc involving the spinal or brainstem segment that innervates the muscle. The afferent neuron whose cell body lies in a dorsal root ganglion innervates the muscle or Golgi tendon organ associated with the muscles; the efferent neuron is an alpha motoneuron in the anterior horn of the cord. The cerebral cortex and a number of brainstem nuclei exert influence over the sensory input of the muscle spindles by means of the gamma motoneurons that are located in the anterior horn; these neurons supply a set of muscle fibers that control the length of the muscle spindle itself.

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