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  1. Hill’s Atlas of Veterinary Clinical Anatomy. Contents. 1 Introduction. Cardiovascular and Lymphatic Systems. 2 Normal Heart. 3 Chronic Valvular Disease. 4 Normal Canine Heart. 5 Heartworm Disease. 6 Normal Canine Heart. 7 Canine Dilated Cardiomyopathy. 8 Normal Feline Heart. 9 Feline Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy. 10 Normal Feline Heart.

  2. 25 wrz 2023 · Anatomy atlas of the canine general anatomy: fully labeled illustrations and diagrams of the dog (skeleton, bones, muscles, joints, viscera, respiratory system, cardiovascular system). Positional and directional terms, general terminology and anatomical orientation are also illustrated.

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  4. 2 kwi 2023 · The following sections in this chapter will discuss the imaging characteristics of the normal canine and feline cardiovascular system, as well as abnormal variations for the identification of cardiovascular diseases. Normal Anatomy. The heart is the driving force (pump) of the circulatory system.

  5. The cardiovascular system comprises the heart, veins, arteries, and capillary beds. The atrioventricular (mitral and tricuspid) and semilunar (aortic and pulmonic) valves keep blood flowing in one direction through the heart, and valves in large veins keep blood flowing back toward the heart.

  6. 14 mar 2022 · Dogs have a skeletal system. However, dogs don’t have a collar bone, unlike humans; providing a larger stride for running. A cardiovascular system; they need powerful muscles for movement. They have a brain for learning and teeth for eating, holding and chewing!

  7. Recommendations for image display orientations are very similar to those for comparable human cardiac images, with the heart base or cranial aspect of the heart displayed to the examiner's right on the video display.

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