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it is produced by vibrations
no it cooling not smashing to gather
2.0Hz.
sound barrier
Sounds are produced during talking in the vocal tract, which starts from the vocal cords in the larynx. The vocal cords vibrate to produce sound, which then resonates through the throat, mouth, and nasal cavity. Various movements and positions of the articulators, such as the tongue, lips, and teeth, shape the sound to produce different speech sounds.
Sounds of korotkoff are the sounds that can be auscultated over a partically occluded artery.
The first Korotkoff sound is when you first hear the pulse, and the fifth Korotkoff sound is when you no longer hear the post. Sometimes, there will also be an "auscultory gap," when you have a period with no sounds with korotkoff sounds heard before and after the gap.
there are 5 phases
check your blood pressure
Sounds of Korotkoff
While taking blood pressure
While taking blood pressure
Yes and no. They certainly sound like a pulse! But the pulse is a feeling of blood flow through a vein, whereas Korotkoff sounds are the sounds of turbulent blood flow through a constricted or partially occluded artery.
The first Korotkoff sound is the sound produced by the turbulence of the AV (atrioventricular valves) closing specifically the tricuspid and mitral valves. The second Korotkoff sound is produced by the closure of the aortic and pulmonary valves. You can hear a splitting of the second heart sound in a highly efficient heart.
Korotkoff sound
When the blood pressure cuff is inflated, the blood flow is stopped. Slowly the cuff is decreased. When the technician starts to hear the blood flow, these are called Korotkoff Sounds. This pressure point defines the systolic pressure.
sounds are produced from vibrations