Auricular fibrillation and its relationship to clinical irregularity of the heart / by Thomas Lewis.
- Thomas Lewis
- Date:
- [1910?]
Licence: In copyright
Credit: Auricular fibrillation and its relationship to clinical irregularity of the heart / by Thomas Lewis. Source: Wellcome Collection.
7/80 page 309
![PAGE Oscillations similar to those, characterising complete irregularity of the heart in man are found experimentally when the auricle is fibrillating, and these oscillations are produced in the auricle as a result of the fibrillation . . . , . . 334 The electrocardiographic curves compared in more detail .. 337 The radicd curves compared . . . . . . . . . . 330 The venous curves and their comparison . . . . . . . . 340 A summary of the comparison instituted between the records ob- tained in complete irregidarity of the heart in man, and in experimental auricidar fibrillation ,. . . . . .. 345 AURICULAR FIBRILLATION AS A CLINICAL ENTITY .. .. .. .. 346 AURICULAR FIBRILLATION AND HEART-BLOCK ; THE ACTION OF DIGITALIS . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . 340 THE CAUSE OF THE ONSET AND DURATION OF AURICI’LAR FIBRILLATION 353 AURICULAR FIBRILLATION AND VENTRICULAR EXTRASYSTOLES .. 356 CERTAIN CONDITIONS DIFFERENTIATED . . .. . . . . . 357 Cases in ivhich the ventricular form of venous pulse occurs, bid in which either auricular fibrillation is absent or in which the evidence is insufficient to justify us in assuming its presence .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 357 True nodal rhythm is a rare affection and gives rise to a clinical picture entirely at variance with that of the disorderly action of the heart hitherto considered. . . . . . . . 360 CHIEF CONCLUSIONS .. .. .. .. .. .. . . 368 BIBLIOGRAPHY .. .. .. .. . . .. . 360 Historical and introductory. In the following pages an account of a sjiecific clinical condition, characterised in the great majority of cases by complete irregularity of the arterial jmlse and by an absence of all signs of the normal auricular contraction, is given. It will be shown that the type of irregularity, which is one of the chief features of the condition, is the commonest jiersistent irregularity exhibited by the human heart, constituting as it does ap])roximately 50 per cent, of all such cases ; and it will be demonstrated that the disturbance of cardiac rhythm is to be sought in the auricle and attributed to temporary or permanent inco-ordination of the musculature of that chamber.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b29000610_0007.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)
No text description is available for this image
No text description is available for this image
No text description is available for this image