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ventricular fibrillation fast, uncoordinated, fluttering beats of the heart's ventricles, causing heart beat and pulse beat to go out of synch. This is exremely dangerous
Ãâó: www.chfpatients.com/glossary_2.htm
ventricular fibrillation a condition in which the ventricles contract in rapid and unsynchronized rhythms and cannot pump blood into the body.
Ãâó: www.health.uab.edu/show.asp
ventricular fibrillation A condition in which the purposeful, forceful, and rhythmic contraction of the ventricle is lost. Ventricular fibrillation is one of several conditions known as "arrhythmias". With ventricular fibrillation, the heart muscle has no purposeful contractile motion, which results in a loss of the pumping action of the heart. Ventricular fibrillation is fatal if not quickly treated. Ventricular fibrillation can be treated with medications, or through an electrical shock known as a defibrillation.
Ãâó: www.usctransplant.org/heart/glossary.html
ventricular fibrillation A serious and dangerous variant of ventricular tachycardia, often the causative agent of death. Ventricular fibrillation can be effectively terminated by applying an electrical shock to the chest cavity over the heart region. Thus, when a television episode shows a doctor holding a set of paddles in each hand and delivering jolts of electricity into the body of an unconscious patient, you are witnessing an attempt to eliminate ventricular fibrillation. ...
Ãâó: www.barnesjewish.org/groups/default.asp
ventricular fibrillation (V-Fib) A lethal arrhythmia characterized by the rapid, chaotic movements of the heart muscle that causes the heart to stop functioning and leads quickly to cardiac arrest.
Ãâó: www.ect-hk.com/ect_glossary_bot.html
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