It is both. The first sound LUB is S1 and the second, lower pitched sound is S2 or Dupp. S1 is hear loudest at the apex and S2 at the base @icakaoko11
@caitlinmarie111 hahaha, you're hilarious... it's ok, if you don't think the heart is important, well, you're probably right... feel free to donate it to any hospital, I'm sure they'll find a better use for it and give it to someone else who needs it more ;)
Wow... Dr parth ! ur work is really appreciable...im a medical student..but i have learned so much from ur videos for which a person needs to spend whole life in the hospitals,listening each and every patient.. I am really really grateful to you.May God bless u
@caitlinmarie111 Most likely those 'geeks' will go to Medical School become life saving Doctors ... and what will you be doing ??? reiterating over and over "Do you want fries with that ?" ......
The first one is S1 that's produced most by mitral and tricuspid closing at the beginning of ventricular systole, and it's separated from the S2 - which is instead produced by aortic and pulmonary closing at the end of ventricular systole - by the "little pause". As you can listen, S2 is separated from S1 by a longer pause: in fact it is called "big pause"! Then, S1 is like the sound "tum", S2 is like the sound "ta". :)
Quote: "Lub-Dub"
lordxheroth 2 weeks ago
wait...is this S1? orS2? <--mesh still studying please dont kill me DX
icakaoko11 3 months ago
It is both. The first sound LUB is S1 and the second, lower pitched sound is S2 or Dupp. S1 is hear loudest at the apex and S2 at the base @icakaoko11
Liev4life38 2 months ago
caithlinmarie111 is famous because of this video
nazzadabest 3 months ago
Bad recording. I heard a lot of other noise going on. Sounded similar to a dripping water sound going on with the heartbeat.
totallyfrozen 8 months ago
@caitlinmarie111 hahaha, you're hilarious... it's ok, if you don't think the heart is important, well, you're probably right... feel free to donate it to any hospital, I'm sure they'll find a better use for it and give it to someone else who needs it more ;)
TheKotassium 8 months ago 5
Wow... Dr parth ! ur work is really appreciable...im a medical student..but i have learned so much from ur videos for which a person needs to spend whole life in the hospitals,listening each and every patient.. I am really really grateful to you.May God bless u
petenkofer 9 months ago
@caitlinmarie111 please remember your comment when you're 60 :))
this is possibly one of the most idiotic comments on youtube, ever!
copilasproblematic 9 months ago
@caitlinmarie111 lol you got no point, you just troll
pogo108 10 months ago
Sounds like you have a loose hose clamp :)
spinbubba 10 months ago
@caitlinmarie111 its because of people like you in the US that the rest of the world calls us dumb.
EliteClass88 11 months ago 9
IT looks like an running river or rainning ......
I don't think we heard like this sound as normal unless the pt is alien , maybe *.*!!
kwaiii333 11 months ago
make own is doing the same sound
erik19882010 1 year ago
@caitlinmarie111 Most likely those 'geeks' will go to Medical School become life saving Doctors ... and what will you be doing ??? reiterating over and over "Do you want fries with that ?" ......
kksd2 1 year ago 6
@caitlinmarie111
maybe bc your are an ill educated twit. do you work at Mcdonalds??
godivadove 1 year ago 23
@godivadove word.
onsiedude 1 year ago 3
haha! =), but rather useful actually.
maxryberg81 1 year ago
do you know how many beats a minute a normal heart would be?
MaxJammings 1 year ago
@MaxJammings 70
externalfire 1 year ago
@MaxJammings normal is from 60 to 100 average 72, athletes are usually bradycardic (low frequency) and children\teens tachycardic (high f)
komaracjezut 1 year ago
After viewing these heart sound lectures, I found that the web site "easy auscultation" helped me improve my understanding of cardiac auscultation.
rishigupta02445 1 year ago
whts d gurgling sound like water.. in b/w s1 nd s2.??sum1 plz tel..
mohinita70 2 years ago
i cant make out which one is s1 and which is s2.
i think first one is s2, can make out the splittin...hope i am correct.
vivekzx 2 years ago
I'm sorry but you're wrong!
The first one is S1 that's produced most by mitral and tricuspid closing at the beginning of ventricular systole, and it's separated from the S2 - which is instead produced by aortic and pulmonary closing at the end of ventricular systole - by the "little pause". As you can listen, S2 is separated from S1 by a longer pause: in fact it is called "big pause"! Then, S1 is like the sound "tum", S2 is like the sound "ta". :)
nunmegagarergazomai 2 years ago 2