- Shuffle
Toggle OnToggle Off
- Alphabetize
Toggle OnToggle Off
- Front First
Toggle OnToggle Off
- Both Sides
Toggle OnToggle Off
Front
How to study your flashcards.
Right/Left arrow keys: Navigate between flashcards.right arrow keyleft arrow key
Up/Down arrow keys: Flip the card between the front and back.down keyup key
H key: Show hint (3rd side).h key
![]()
PLAY BUTTON
![]()
PLAY BUTTON
![]()
2 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
|
a severelyasphyxiatednewborn appears with heart murmur at birth or within first few hours of life, but murmur improves or disappears after 24-36 hours, diagnosis is
|
|
|
tricuspid regurgitation. remember, a severely asphyxiated newborn appears with heart murmur at birth or within first few hours of life, but murmur improves or disappears after 24-36 hours, diagnosis is tricuspid regurgitation. (Very, very important for Board examination
|
An asphyxiated full-term newborn was intubated in delivery room, appears at birth with grade 2-3/6 systolic murmur in lower sternal border. CXR reveals mild cardiomegaly. Reexamination at 12 hours of age reveals louder murmur and progressive deterioration of clinical condition. After 24-36 hours of age clinical condition improves and heart murmur disappears. EKG may reveal S-T and T-wave changes; cardiac-specific creatine kinase (MB fraction) may be elevated Most likely diagnosis: tricuspid regurgitation. Etiology: transient papillary muscle dysfunction is due to ischemia. Key words: please remember, a severely asphyxiated newborn appears with heart murmur at birth or within first few hours of life, but murmur improves or disappears after 24-36 hours, diagnosis is tricuspid regurgitation. (Very, very important for Board examination
|