the valve would fail to close or would invert when the heart contracts, this may cause heart failure.
If the transmission is slipping or shifting badly it COULD be a sign of a valve body failure. If the transmission will not engage reverse or any of the forward gears, it COULD be a sign of a valve body failure.
It is best to replace it. The failure happens in the electrical part of the valve, not the pintle and seat.It is best to replace it. The failure happens in the electrical part of the valve, not the pintle and seat.
section valve to be close before Type your answer here...
Generally healthy but are prone to mitral valve heart disease: a deterioration in one of the four sets of mitral valve's in a dog's heart. When it strikes, the mitral valve atrophes. The valve doesn't fully close after each pumping action, allowing blood to float backwards from the ventrical into the adrium. This can lead to valve collapse and ultimatley, heart failure.
On a round valve handle you normally turn it clockwise to close .
It's possible for a valvestem to bend or break, but the most common failure is for the seat area to deteriorate and leak, requiring the valve and it's seat to need refacing.
A defective aspirator valve would unlikely cause a misfire monitor failure. It would more likely cause an air system monitor failure
Class III refers to the degree of congestive heart failure, but not directly to mitral valve prolapse. Ask your cardiologist if you have any degree of heart failure as a result of mitral valve prolapse.
When a valve cannot close all the way it is called incompetent.
All the heart valves close in order to prevent the back flow of blood, including semilunar valve.
The bicuspid valve opens and the tricuspid valve closes.