systolic - vertaling naar russisch
Diclib.com
Woordenboek ChatGPT
Voer een woord of zin in in een taal naar keuze 👆
Taal:

Vertaling en analyse van woorden door kunstmatige intelligentie ChatGPT

Op deze pagina kunt u een gedetailleerde analyse krijgen van een woord of zin, geproduceerd met behulp van de beste kunstmatige intelligentietechnologie tot nu toe:

  • hoe het woord wordt gebruikt
  • gebruiksfrequentie
  • het wordt vaker gebruikt in mondelinge of schriftelijke toespraken
  • opties voor woordvertaling
  • Gebruiksvoorbeelden (meerdere zinnen met vertaling)
  • etymologie

systolic - vertaling naar russisch

PART OF THE CARDIAC CYCLE WHEN A HEART CHAMBER CONTRACTS
Systolic; Systole and Diastole; Systole (medicine); Sistolic; Hemisystole
  • A [[Wiggers diagram]], showing various events during systole (here primarily displayed as ''ventricular systole'', or ''ventricular contraction''). The very short interval (about 0.03 second) of isovolumetric, or fixed-volume, contraction begins (see upper left) at the R peak of the QRS complex on the electrocardiogram graph-line. + Ejection phase begins immediately after isovolumetric contraction—ventricular volume (red graph-line) begins to decrease as ventricular pressure (light blue graph-line) continues to increase; then pressure drops as it enters diastole.

systolic         

[si'stɔlik]

общая лексика

систолический

прилагательное

физиология

систолический

systole         

['sistəlt]

общая лексика

систола

систолический

Смотрите также

atrial systole; ectopic systole; electrical systole; extra systole; mechanical systole; premature systole; retrograde systole; ventricular systole

существительное

физиология

систола

сокращение сердца

systole         
systole noun physiol. систола

Definitie

Systolic
·adj Of or pertaining to systole, or contraction; contracting; ·esp., relating to the systole of the heart; as, systolic murmur.

Wikipedia

Systole

Systole ( SIST-ə-lee) is the part of the cardiac cycle during which some chambers of the heart contract after refilling with blood. The term originates, via New Latin, from Ancient Greek συστολή (sustolē), from συστέλλειν (sustéllein 'to contract'; from σύν sun 'together' + στέλλειν stéllein 'to send'), and is similar to the use of the English term to squeeze.

The mammalian heart has four chambers: the left atrium above the left ventricle (lighter pink, see graphic), which two are connected through the mitral (or bicuspid) valve; and the right atrium above the right ventricle (lighter blue), connected through the tricuspid valve. The atria are the receiving blood chambers for the circulation of blood and the ventricles are the discharging chambers.

In late ventricular diastole, the atrial chambers contract and send blood to the ventricles. This flow fills the ventricles with blood, and the resulting pressure closes the valves to the atria. The ventricles now perform isovolumetric contraction, which is contraction while all valves are closed. This contraction ends the first stage of systole. The second stage proceeds immediately, pumping oxygenated blood from the left ventricle through the aortic valve and aorta to all body systems, and simultaneously pumping oxygen-poor blood from the right ventricle through the pulmonic valve and pulmonary artery to the lungs. Thus, the pairs of chambers (upper atria and lower ventricles) contract in alternating sequence to each other. First, atrial contraction feeds blood into the ventricles, then ventricular contraction pumps blood out of the heart to the body systems, including the lungs for resupply of oxygen.

Cardiac systole is the contraction of the cardiac muscle in response to an electrochemical stimulus to the heart's cells (cardiomyocytes).

Cardiac output is the volume of blood pumped by the ventricles in one minute. The ejection fraction is the volume of blood pumped divided by the total volume of blood in the left ventricle.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor systolic
1. The first figure – for systolic pressure – corresponds to the "surge" that occurs with each heartbeat.
2. The first figure, the systolic pressure, corresponds to the "surge" that occurs with each heart beat.
3. This means the heart has to compensate by working harder during its active, systolic, phase.
4. After the exercise program, the average systolic blood pressure fell from 143.1 to 135.5 mmHg, the report indicated.
5. Their systolic pressure –– measured when the heart contracts –– was in the range of 120 to 15' millimeters of mercury.
Vertaling van &#39systolic&#39 naar Russisch