sinus tachycardia = rapid heartbeat borderline av conduction delay = a slight delay in the conduction of electrical impulse from the atria, at the top of the heart, to the ventricles, at the base of the heart. The ventricles are the chambers that do the pumping of blood to the lungs and to the body. The atria are the two "collecting" chambers for the blood returning to the heart from the lungs and from the body. The electrical impulse of a heartbeat starts in the right atrium, travels across to the left atrium and down to the top of the ventricles. This causes the atria to contract and push blood through heart valves into the chambers of the heart called Ventricles. The contraction then has a slight pause as the impulse "stimulates" the atrioventricular node to pass the impulse down to the base of the right and left ventricles. When the impulse passes the AV node, the ventricles contract and push the blood out to the lungs to be oxygenated and to the body. A slight delay in the conduction of the impulse is normal but it is only a fraction of a second. Any delay in the conduction which is longer than the "normal" fraction of a second is considered an abnormal av conduction delay. Probable Left Atrial abnormality = some kind of abnormal size, shape, structure, or electrical conduction in the chamber at the top of the left side of the heart. Remember that the atria are chambers for collecting blood returning to the heart. The left atrium is the chamber for collecting blood which is returning from the lungs. This is freshly oxygenated blood. The blood travels from the lungs to the left atrium. When the atria contract, the blood is pushed from the left atrium into the left ventricle. When the ventricles contract, the blood is then pumped from the left ventricle out into the aorta (the largest artery in your body) and then on to the furthest reaches of your body.
Decipher is a verb, so it does not become plural like a noun would. However, it does conjugate within the tenses. It is the same in all tenses except third person singular: I decipher You decipher **He/she deciphers We decipher You all decipher They decipher
The opposite of decipher is encrypt.
The detective tried to decipher the clue.
Decipher is how it is spelled in British English.
looking at the ledger, maybe we can decipher something
her handwriting was awful, i couldn't even decipher what it said
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No, "decipher" is typically used as a verb meaning to decode or interpret something that is difficult to understand.
She worked tirelessly to decipher the mysterious code hidden in the ancient manuscript.
You need the Codapedia to decipher chemistry CPT codes.
Saga is of Norse origin (not Arabic origin)Cipher and Decipher come from the Arabic Shifra (شيفرة), the "de" in decipher is a French prefix.
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