The electrical milestone event that occurs at the P wave of the cardiac cycle of the EKG is atrial depolarization. The upward stroke is right atrial depolarization, and the downward stroke is left atrial depolarization. Normally, this lasts for no more than 0.11 sec.
Immediately after the P wave occurs the P-R Segment, which is the time taken by an impulse to travel from the SA node to the Ventricles. Then the QRS complex occurs.
An Isoelectric line, T-P interval
T-P interval
P-R interval and the qrs complex
actually no. the p waves gets subtracted from the s wave. remener promary comes before secondary waves!
A p wave is the primary or compression wave in a seismic wave. it's wavy
no a p wave is faster than s wave
The next type of seismic wave to arrive after the P-wave is the S-wave.
A P wave reflects atrial depolarization.
The P wave on an ECG occurs when the sinoatrial node which is the hearts natural pacemaker fires causing the atria to contract. The period just before this when there is no electrical activity is the hearts 'resting' period between beats when the muscles are relaxed giving the atria a chance to refill with blood.
P-Wave
S-wave stands for : Secondary wave. It comes after the P-wave and goes before the L-wave.
actually no. the p waves gets subtracted from the s wave. remener promary comes before secondary waves!
A p wave is the primary or compression wave in a seismic wave. it's wavy
no a p wave is faster than s wave
Both, first the P wave Then the S wave.
The next type of seismic wave to arrive after the P-wave is the S-wave.
P wave .
Longitudinal Waves
A P wave reflects atrial depolarization.
Yes. P-waves are known as primary waves and are a compressional or longitudinal wave.