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The sounds LUB and DUB (also dup) are used to indicate a human heartbeat, with the LUB sound made by the closing of atrioventricular valves, and the DUB by the closing of the exterior or semilunar valves (aortic valves and pulmonary valve).
The difference between lub and dub (The heart sounds S1 and S2 of a heartbeat) is that the lub occurs when atrioventricular valves close, and dub occurs when the aortic and pulmonary valves close (valves leading out of the heart from the left and right ventricles).
Lub-Dup. (Also lub-dub)
lub dub lub is when the av valves close and dub is when the semi lunar valves close
Heart sounds are noises generated by the beating heart from the flow of blood through it. Thump, boom can be used to describe it. Lub and Dub are also used. There are other sound words that suggest problems with the hearbeat as well.
lub dub
Lub dub
The closing of the mitral and tricuspid valves produces the S1 sound, followed by the closing of the aortic and pulmonic valves, which produce the S2 sound. In sequence, it sounds like "lub-DUB, lub-DUB, lub-DUB".
there are 2 sounds the heart makes. "lub-dub" the first ("lub") is when the atrioventricular valves sclose the second ("dub") is when the semilunar valves close
pulse is caused by the dilation and recoiling of your artery as blood gushes through (one sound). heartbeat is closing of the heart valves (2 sounds). The 2 sounds are caused by the atrioventricular valve ("lub") and the semilunar valve ("dub")
lub-dub. ^_^ found that on ask.com fyi
The 'lub' is the S1 sound. It occurs due to normal closure of the mitral and tricuspid (atrioventricular) valves. With these valves closed, systole commences and blood is actively squeezed from the ventricles. The second sound is the 'dub' or S2 sound. It occurs as the aortic (to LV) and pulmonary (to RV) valves close to prevent backflow from the blood ejected from the ventricles and marks the beginning of diastole (or filling) of the heart.