I love this. I never thought the day would come where I could confidently say... "Yeah, it's not really that hard to differentiate b/w s3 and s4". This channel is a life saver.
idk how you made these videos straight to the point with clear graphics and broke it down easy for people to understand. Thank you so much for putting all that time and effort.
Thank you so much for helping medical students (yeah across the world!) who can't take lessons at the hospital. The graphics and word similarity with the S3 is beyond amazing :)
am a nurse. I find your videos really easy to understand. do keep posting educational videos with these format on your videos. hoping this channel will grow. 😁
I'm in medical school (3rd year) and told the doctor I am interning at that this patient had a systolic extra sound (?) because I didn't know how to describe it better. His frequency was 44 bpm and he was a hard core athlete! The doctor said it sounds normal but after hearing this I think I know what I heard!
Hello, another high quality video that can teach so many people!! Thank you!! can I ask something? Is S3 ubiquitously heard or it can disappear from time to time while auscultating?
+Miles Maassen no i did mean compliant, as in a ventricle that can accommodated increased volume/ filling pressures such as in congestive heart failure. A noncompliant ventricle would produce a S4 heart sound
That was just how I learned it but your point about CHF was a good one, and I didn't have a great answer so I looked it up again. Up-To-Date makes it sound like a plastic shopping bag...able to accommodate a large volume in total, but when stretched it's whole length, becomes tight. "S3 occurs as passive ventricular filling begins after actual relaxation is completed [33]. It appears to be related to a sudden limitation of the movement during ventricular filling along its long axis." Step Up To Medicine, 4th edition says a "noncompliant" chamber is associated with S3 as well. In the end, it might not be the most central point to becoming a physician, lol, so all good. Thanks for making your videos to help others!
Miles! Thanks for the feedback, it's always great to here from other people and how they learned this stuff. You make some good points. Back to the shopping bag analogy, if a bag is able to accommodate larger volumes wouldn't that make it more compliant or so compliant that it is stretched so much to point that you hear the s3. I think maybe we are both correct in that the S3 is coming from a ventricle filled with so much volume that it eventually cannot stretch any more (making it at some point noncompliant enough to take in more volume) therefore hearing an S3.
+Medzcool things can be big and also be completely non compliant, compliance is the ability of something to change itself in order to accommodate more. As a ventricle in heart failure may be dilated greatly, it cannot adjust itself any further and hence is non compliant. Tally o Connor also states 'S3 is due to reduced ventricular compliance' so let's keep it at that and not make it more confusing.
I’m 19 male and I seem to get this when I am resting, then I suddenly run for a few seconds, then stop suddenly and sit down. It lasts for about a couple minutes afterwards . Is this something I should look in to
I just hear Rafiki from The Lion King singing, "Asante Sana, Squashed Banana." but he gets too lazy to say the whole thing. It's more like "'Sante San. Squashed Banan."
Get Auscultate, a medical sound library of heart and lung sounds:
medzcool.com/auscultate
I love this. I never thought the day would come where I could confidently say... "Yeah, it's not really that hard to differentiate b/w s3 and s4". This channel is a life saver.
True
Definitely. The last explanation of the S1 S2 and S3 Ken - tuc - ey.. is perfect. So beautiful.
idk how you made these videos straight to the point with clear graphics and broke it down easy for people to understand. Thank you so much for putting all that time and effort.
Could not resist myself from liking this video. One of the best videos I have ever seen on heart sounds. Really clears it. Amazing work!
AMAZING! You can REALLY get the rythm down and clearly listen since the audio plays throughout the video! 10/10
Thank you so much for helping medical students (yeah across the world!) who can't take lessons at the hospital. The graphics and word similarity with the S3 is beyond amazing :)
This video is absolutely wonderful!
Whoever made, this I stand in salutation to you!
am a nurse. I find your videos really easy to understand. do keep posting educational videos with these format on your videos. hoping this channel will grow. 😁
Thank you for this wonderful piece!
Fifth year medical student, Nigeria.
Best description of an S3 heart I’ve seen so far! Thank you
time to dance
🤣🤣🤣
XD
😀😀
Your channel is the absolute best
Am I the only one who's not a medic or studying anything related to it, I'm just here cuz I like the sound of heart beats....Has a nice rhythm to it.
I'm in medical school (3rd year) and told the doctor I am interning at that this patient had a systolic extra sound (?) because I didn't know how to describe it better. His frequency was 44 bpm and he was a hard core athlete! The doctor said it sounds normal but after hearing this I think I know what I heard!
This was the first video I used for hearing heart sounds. It was really helpful! Thank you.♥️💕
These videos are AMAZING. Thank you!!!!!! You are saving my behind this OSCE season!
Studying for CCRN - this helps a lot, thank you!
this the best explanation i ever see
Beautiful clear explanation and beautiful visuals too
one of the best videos I've seen. thank you.
You're very welcome!
Kentucky - S3
Alabama - S4
this channel is gold. thanks
Jack up the volume and you'll hear it.
I had to subscribed to your link. Now I can say I confidently know the s3 sound.
This video looks like a cool trailer to an upcoming movie. im in awe.
Thank you from guiding about the heart sounds
For real! who is jamming out to this as if its Banger from the club? Just say it kinda 🔥🔥
Just great in every way! Thank you!
Super high quality content!
That last graphical presentation 👌
Thank you for this video
저는 의사 성창훈입니다.좋은 영상 감사드립니다.
Hello, another high quality video that can teach so many people!! Thank you!! can I ask something? Is S3 ubiquitously heard or it can disappear from time to time while auscultating?
Can we get a 10 hour loop of this 😅
Great demo ever .. ❤️❤️❤️
Phenomenal! thank you so much
Thank you, my friend. I wish you all the best :)
These videos are absolutely fantastic. Thank you!!
thanks a lot 😍
Oh sweet Jesus.. You're a hero!
Yo this is very cool. Subscribed! keep it coming
Soooopeerrrrb...best ever u can get
wonderful, thank you so much.
I love this channel
thank u so your kind
Thank you so much
0:31 Do you mean, a noncompliant ventricle?
Thank you!!
Great vid, super helpful
Great Video!
At 0:28, I believe you meant to write that the sound of S3 represents blood coming into contact with a "NON-compliant ventricle"
+Miles Maassen no i did mean compliant, as in a ventricle that can accommodated increased volume/ filling pressures such as in congestive heart failure. A noncompliant ventricle would produce a S4 heart sound
That was just how I learned it but your point about CHF was a good one, and I didn't have a great answer so I looked it up again. Up-To-Date makes it sound like a plastic shopping bag...able to accommodate a large volume in total, but when stretched it's whole length, becomes tight. "S3 occurs as passive ventricular filling begins after actual relaxation is completed [33]. It appears to be related to a sudden limitation of the movement during ventricular filling along its long axis." Step Up To Medicine, 4th edition says a "noncompliant" chamber is associated with S3 as well. In the end, it might not be the most central point to becoming a physician, lol, so all good. Thanks for making your videos to help others!
Miles! Thanks for the feedback, it's always great to here from other people and how they learned this stuff. You make some good points. Back to the shopping bag analogy, if a bag is able to accommodate larger volumes wouldn't that make it more compliant or so compliant that it is stretched so much to point that you hear the s3. I think maybe we are both correct in that the S3 is coming from a ventricle filled with so much volume that it eventually cannot stretch any more (making it at some point noncompliant enough to take in more volume) therefore hearing an S3.
+Medzcool things can be big and also be completely non compliant, compliance is the ability of something to change itself in order to accommodate more. As a ventricle in heart failure may be dilated greatly, it cannot adjust itself any further and hence is non compliant. Tally o Connor also states 'S3 is due to reduced ventricular compliance' so let's keep it at that and not make it more confusing.
Medzcool great video! This is what I like about your channel, you’re open for healthy criticism.
Excellent
so cool!
Memorize this , it comes out on the NCLEX
Thanks
V. Clear 👍👍👍
Marvelous ❤️
has a nice groove
You gotta place this with the sound up and subs on. :)
AWESOME!
i like dis video
Awesome
super
I think S3 happen due to blood flow to non-complaint ventricle.
Referencestep up to medicine 5th ed
awesome
Why can I only hear S1 and S2
mitral regurgitation??
Nice
Great thx
low pitched extra sound opposite to a high pitched split s2.
I’m
19 male and I seem to get this when I am resting, then I suddenly run for a few seconds, then stop suddenly and sit down. It lasts for about a couple minutes afterwards . Is this something I should look in to
Kentucky. Awesome
Love itttt
"Compliant Ventricle" is normal right?
Yes
0:47
add some high hats and you got a banger!!!
u can even sing with it
Can't hear it :(
Try slowing the speed of the video!
Good idea thank you!
I just hear Rafiki from The Lion King singing, "Asante Sana, Squashed Banana." but he gets too lazy to say the whole thing. It's more like "'Sante San. Squashed Banan."
00:44
❤❤❤❤❤
can this be sometimes indistinguishable from s2 split..?
They might sound similar at first, try comparing the sounds side by side and at different speeds and you’ll start to appreciate the differences
My heart sounds exactly like it
I thought this until i used headphones
@@playlistaccount me to until my doctor told me I have a split 2
mine does too, but that may have something to do with the fact that I actually got s3
Wait, this beat slaps tho
It is like beating a drum
sounds almost like a tympany
👏👏👏
Nằm nghiêng, nghe bằng phần chuông.
❤
MÜTHİŞ
👍👍👍❤❤❤❤
to me it sounds normal
I got tachycardia when i saw my crush. What logic behind that? Parasympathetic nervous system?? 😂
Jazzy
"Ken-tucky"
🙌👌👌👌
Sounds like techno music.
ken tu key ken tu key
ken tuc ky
ken-tuc-KY