Results 221 to 230 of about 14,690 (252)
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Experimental studies on auricular flutter and auricular fibrillation

American Heart Journal, 1948
Abstract Injection of aconitine into the region of the head of the sinus node causes auricular tachycardia with a rate between 200 and 400 per minute. Often auricular fibrillation appears spontaneously or follows vagus stimulation. The change of the auricular tachycardia into fibrillation and vice versa, which was ofter registered, shows that the ...
David Scherf, R. Terranova, F.J. Romano
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Auricular Fibrillation in Normal Hearts

New England Journal of Medicine, 1949
AURICULAR fibrillation is not always associated with organic heart disease, and its presence may be the only sign attracting the examiner's attention to the heart. All cases of auricular fibrillation are fairly readily separated into two significant clinical groups — a minor group occurring in anatomically normal hearts and a major group occurring in ...
David I. Rutledge, Hugh H. Hanson
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Auricular fibrillation in infancy

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1946
Summary Auricular fibrillation of the fleeting type occurring in an infant with signsof congenital heart disease was followed from the age of 2 months to its fatal termination seven months later. Digitalis was only partially effective in controlling the ventricular rate.
Joseph Edeiken   +3 more
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AURICULAR FLUTTER AND FIBRILLATION

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1951
To the Editor: —In his letter to the Editor which appeared inThe Journalof Oct. 6, 1951, Dr. Ernest B. Zeisler has advanced arguments supporting the circus movement theory of auricular fibrillation. Dr. Zeisler states that "in auricular flutter there is an underlying circus movement" and suggests that, since auricular flutter and auricular ...
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AURICULAR FIBRILLATION IN GOITER

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1924
Recently Schoonmaker and Webb1reported a case of auricular fibrillation in a toxic adenoma of the thyroid. Because of the great improvement noted in all symptoms in this case and the rarity of this condition among our patients with goiter we thought it worth while to investigate the literature on this subject. In looking through the literature we find
E. A. Baumgartner   +2 more
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AURICULAR FIBRILLATION IN CHILDHOOD

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1932
Auricular fibrillation is a common arrhythmia in adults. According to White, 1 it probably ranks third in order of frequency, premature contractions being first and paroxysmal tachycardia second. In children this form of arrhythmia has been regarded as extremely uncommon, and reports of only a few cases in children under 10 years of age appear in the ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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