Meta Search Engine Navigation


Look For It  




An Introduction To Stethoscopes



by Damian Sofsian

ARTICLE REPRINTING IS PERMITTED

Stethoscopes are simple yet effective tools that allow doctors to listen to the internal sounds in a patient's body. Doctors can use stethoscopes to listen to a patient's heart, intestines, breathing, and blood flow.

A French doctor named Rene-Theophile-Hyacinthe Laennec invented the first stethoscope in 1816. Dr. Laennec used a hollow wooden tube to listen to the heartbeat of his female patients so that he wouldn't have to come into improper contact with them by touching his head to their chests. He discovered that the hollow wooden tube amplified the sound of the heart beating, making it much easier to hear any anomalies. He called his invention a stethoscope, after the Greek words for chest (stethos) and the verb to examine (scopeein). The design remained relatively unchanged until the 1940s, when Dr. Sprague and Maurice Rappaport investigated the scientific principles behind stethoscopy and created the basic model that is used today.

Stethoscopes are primarily used to listen to a person's heartbeat. Most stethoscopes have a two-sided piece that can be placed against a person's chest. One side is a flat plastic diaphragm that magnifies body sounds. The other side of this piece is a hollow cup, called a bell, that transmits the sound of the patient's skin vibrating. The bell picks up low frequency sounds, while the diaphragm is good for hearing sounds at a higher frequency. The doctor can listen to a person's heartbeat with either side and can hear any problems such as an irregular beat, weak heartbeat, or a number of other irregularities.

Doctors can hear any blockage or irregular movement in the intestines with stethoscopes. Stethoscopes are also used to listen for blocked arteries and breathing irregularities.

Stethoscopes are vital tools that allow doctors to detect any irregular sounds in a patient's body, letting them diagnose and treat problems before they become more serious.

Information About The Author

Stethoscopes Info provides detailed information about Littman, electric, cardiology, and discount stethoscopes, as well as stethoscope covers and more. Stethoscopes Info is the sister site of EKG Web.
Published by Meta Search Engine LOOK-4IT.COM.




You can reprint this article for FREE at your web site. Doing this you agree to keep all texts and hyperlinks unchanged.

Please keep reference to LOOK-4IT.COM meta search engine as well, if you decide to use this article as a free content for your web site.

Back to article category: Medical Equipment

Additional Medical Equipment Articles

The Function of Automated External Defibrillators
Automated External Defibrillators (AEDs) are not vastly dissimilar from the ones many of us have seen for years on medical shows or in emergency rooms at hospitals. The device exists to correct a fibrillation, or irregular heart rate that is negatively impacting blood flow, but unlike the standard defibrillators, the automated external defibrillator can be operated by any citizen; even those with little or no medical training.

The Benefits of Portable Defibrillators
The onset of the portable defibrillator has single-handedly taken the life saving measures of the cardiac defibrillator out of the exclusive domain of the emergency room, and into the hands of a general public now able to help fight the tragedy of death by sudden cardiac arrest.

Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators
While many people might be most familiar with the external defibrillators seen on TV, in emergency rooms or at sporting events, there are similar devices that, although less obvious in their use, serve the same purpose of restoring proper heart rhythms and thus averting possible death by cardiac arrest or heart attack.

Interpreting an EKG
EKGs can assist doctors in diagnosing and determining any current or past heart abnormalities and are often a regular screening for those with heart disease. Through electrodes attached at various strategic body points, the EKG machine records the electrical impulses of the heart.

The Modern EKG Machine
Perhaps one of the most useful 20th century technologies for the diagnosis of heart disease is the electrocardiogram (EKG) machine. Although much more bulky and heavy than the modern EKG machines in use today, the first device was built at the turn of the century and was considered a huge advancement in medicine.








Home  |  Submit Article  |  Link to Us  |  Directory  |  Free Content  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Use

Copyright © 2005-2006, LOOK-4IT.COM. All rights reserved.

All trademarks, icons, and logos, shown or mentioned at this web site, are the property of their respective owners.
The information in the articles is provided without any warranty and must by used by the reader at their own discretion.
A professional opinion should be sought before taking any of the advice.