auscultation - traducción al francés
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auscultation - traducción al francés

LISTENING TO THE INTERNAL SOUNDS OF THE BODY, USUALLY USING A STETHOSCOPE
Auscultator; Ausculation; Auscultate; Auscultoscope; Auscultated; Auscultators; Mediate auscultation; Immediate auscultation; Auscultogram; Phonocardiograms; Chest auscultation
  • A student using a handheld doppler to listen to her own heart
  • Laennec]] auscultates a patient before his students.
  • [[Phonocardiogram]]s (also known as auscultograms) of common [[heart murmur]]s.
  • Illustration from 1906 depicting a physician who has placed a Laennec wooden stethoscope between his left ear and the corseted patient's back to ausculate.

auscultation         
n. auscultation, act of listening with a stethoscope
ausculter      
listen, auscultate
auscultatoire      
auscultatory, pertaining to medical examination by auscultation (listening to sounds in the body by means of a stethoscope)

Definición

auscultation
[??:sk(?)l'te??(?)n]
¦ noun the action of listening to sounds from the heart, lungs, or other organs with a stethoscope.
Derivatives
auscultate verb
auscultatory ?:'sk?lt?t(?)ri adjective
Origin
C17: from L. auscultatio(n-), from auscultare 'listen to'.

Wikipedia

Auscultation

Auscultation (based on the Latin verb auscultare "to listen") is listening to the internal sounds of the body, usually using a stethoscope. Auscultation is performed for the purposes of examining the circulatory and respiratory systems (heart and breath sounds), as well as the alimentary canal.

The term was introduced by René Laennec. The act of listening to body sounds for diagnostic purposes has its origin further back in history, possibly as early as Ancient Egypt. (Auscultation and palpation go together in physical examination and are alike in that both have ancient roots, both require skill, and both are still important today.) Laënnec's contributions were refining the procedure, linking sounds with specific pathological changes in the chest, and inventing a suitable instrument (the stethoscope) to mediate between the patient's body and the clinician's ear.

Auscultation is a skill that requires substantial clinical experience, a fine stethoscope and good listening skills. Health professionals (doctors, nurses, etc.) listen to three main organs and organ systems during auscultation: the heart, the lungs, and the gastrointestinal system. When auscultating the heart, doctors listen for abnormal sounds, including heart murmurs, gallops, and other extra sounds coinciding with heartbeats. Heart rate is also noted. When listening to lungs, breath sounds such as wheezes, crepitations and crackles are identified. The gastrointestinal system is auscultated to note the presence of bowel sounds.

Electronic stethoscopes can be recording devices, and can provide noise reduction and signal enhancement. This is helpful for purposes of telemedicine (remote diagnosis) and teaching. This opened the field to computer-aided auscultation. Ultrasonography (US) inherently provides capability for computer-aided auscultation, and portable US, especially portable echocardiography, replaces some stethoscope auscultation (especially in cardiology), although not nearly all of it (stethoscopes are still essential in basic checkups, listening to bowel sounds, and other primary care contexts).

Ejemplos de uso de auscultation
1. Pour s‘en persuader, nombreuses sont les élites suisses ŕ s‘ętre muées en observatrices directes, vivant le congé pascal en France, entre auscultation de l‘électorat in situ et lecture assidue des grands journaux. «C‘est effrayant, note Pascal Broulis.
2. Comme s‘il pressentait la spectaculaire «rentrée de classe» sonnée par Katrina, le New York Times, il y a un an, a détaché une équipe d‘enquęteurs pour une auscultation en profondeur, tr';s concr';te, de la société américaine.
3. C‘est un projet de la Suisse, longuement préparé par une auscultation du fonctionnement de l‘actuelle commission du męme nom, dont les réunions annuelles avaient fini par donner de l‘urticaire aux démocraties – et d‘abord aux Etats–Unis – quand les séances étaient dirigées, ce qui arrivé souvent, par le représentant d‘une dictature.