Appearance
🎉 your bitcoin🥳
"A parasternal heave, lift, or thrusthttps://books.google.ca/books?id=FrlEDwAAQBAJ&pg;=PA77&lpg;=PA77&dq;=%22parasternal+heave%22+thrust&source;=bl&ots;=iZVY_rpFev&sig;=ACfU3U07lNIIN5tXpi7DJyXhTKzRI7moBg&hl;=en&sa;=X&ved;=2ahUKEwiL- _uisuboAhVQip4KHfxjAEcQ6AEwEXoECDIQMQ#v=onepage&q;=%22parasternal%20heave%22%20thrust&f;=false is a precordial impulse that may be felt (palpated) in patients with cardiac or respiratory disease. Precordial impulses are visible or palpable pulsations of the chest wall, which originate on the heart or the great vessels. Technique A parasternal impulse may be felt when the heel of the hand is rested just to the left of the sternum with the fingers lifted slightly off the chest. Normally no impulse or a slight inward impulse is felt. The heel of the hand is lifted off the chest wall with each systole. Palpation with the fingers over the pulmonary area may reveal the palpable tap of pulmonary valve closure (palpable P2) in cases of pulmonary hypertension. Interpretation Parasternal heave occurs during right ventricular hypertrophy (i.e. enlargement) or very rarely severe left atrial enlargement.Clinical Examination: A Systematic Guide to Physical Diagnosis 5th Edition Nicholas Talley Simmon O' Connor This is due to the position of the heart within the chest: the right ventricle is most anterior (closest to the chest wall). Hypertrophy of the right side of the heart will occur when the right side of the heart chronically contracts against higher pressure. This occurs in the setting of valvular disease i.e. pulmonary valve, and in the setting of respiratory disease whereby the pressure in the pulmonary artery becomes elevated (e.g., chronic obstructive pulmonary disease). An example of a condition where parasternal heave can be felt is cor pulmonale. This impulse may also be felt in dilated right ventricular myopathy. The palpation of dilated myopathy differs in that the impulse tends to be vigorous and brief. This is in contrast with the sustained impulse of the hypertrophied right ventricle. A parasternal heave may also be felt in mitral stenosis. A left ventricular heave (or lift) suggests the possibility of aortic stenosis. References Category:Symptoms and signs: Cardiac "
"Vitis blancoi is a species of liana in the grape family which bears black berries, and is native to western Mexico. References blancoi Category:Plants described in 1906 Category:Flora of Mexico "
"The 10.1 Daegu Uprising of 1946 (hangul: 대구 10·1 사건; hanja: 大邱 10·1 事件) in Korea was a peasant uprising throughout the southern provinces of Korea against the policies of the United States Army Military Government in Korea headed by General John R. Hodge and in favor of restoration of power to the people's committees that made up the People's Republic of Korea. The uprising also called as Daegu Riot or Daegu Resistance Movement. Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Korea chooses the neutral name of the Daegu October Incident. The uprising started on September 1946 in Busan and eventually spread to Seoul, Daegu, Gyeongsangbuk-do, Gyeongsangnam-do, Chungcheongnam-do, and Jeollanam-do and ended in mid-November. Further demands expressed during the uprising were for better working conditions, higher wages, the right to organize, and the release of political prisoners. On October 1, 1946, thousands of workers gathered the Daegu Station in order to protest against the U.S. They stoned the police and yelled out “Kill the police!” In response to the raid, police shot and killed Hwang Mal-yong, a factory worker. On October 2, the leftists brought the four corpses of patients who had died from Cholera from Daegu medical university hospital, then they yelled the dead bodies were victimized by policemen at the Daegu station. The leftists quickly assembled laborers. Korean Communist Party rioters broke into 22 police stations and civil offices located in North Gyeongsang Province. According to the conditions the United States Military Government responded in different ways, including mobilizing strikebreakers, the police, right-wing youth groups, sending in U.S. troops and tanks, and declaring martial law, and succeeded in putting down the uprising. The uprising resulted in killing of 38 policemen, 163 civil workers, and 73 civilians. Some analysts say that the uprising, which was in part a reaction to the October elections for the South Korean Interim Legislative Assembly, organized by the United States Military Government, is a better indicator of public opinion than the election itself. The defeat of the uprising is considered to be a turning point in establishing political control over Korea as the people's committees and the National Council of Korean Labor Unions were weakened in the suppression. To the Americans, the Autumn Harvest Rebellion added new urgency to the effort to find some formula for unifying the two occupation zones of Korea under an elected government. In 2010, Truth and Reconciliation Commission presented its findings, there were 60 victims to whose families it suggested the government should provide compensation, and there were around 7,500 other people who suffered at the incident. Some victims were arrested and tortured, then police and extreme right wing groups damaged or confiscated their homes and property. The families of the victims had to endure the shame of being viewed as criminals. See also * Operation Blacklist Forty * United States Army Military Government in Korea * Jeju Uprising References * Cumings, Bruce, The Origins of the Korean War: Liberation and the Emergence of Separate Regimes, 1945-1947. Princeton University Press, 1981. Chapter 10, "The Autumn Uprising." Category:1946 in South Korea Category:History of South Korea Category:South Korea–United States relations Category:Rebellions in Asia Category:Allied occupation of Korea Category:Cold War rebellions Category:History of Daegu Category:Resistance movements Category:Anti-Americanism Category:1946 protests "