View allAll Photos Tagged Ultrasound
'An ultrasound is an momentous part of any woman's pregnancy journey. It's a special moment for families to meet their little one or one's for the first time and also allows us as medical professionals to help gather valuable information. It's very important that these are done at least twice during pregnancy, as we can detect any abnormalities. But for me it's my favourite part of my job. Nothing beats the joy and happiness I feel from family and friends.' Dr Suga.
@xqueenvictoria
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strange artifacts brought by uniform bright scene and zoom telephoto lens.
To Stefano: just to proove you are right, this is also limestone peak but overall smaller (named Malý Kriváň, altitude 1671m), less dominant and displaying much less geological and biological diversity in its caves.
Today's scan went really well! The ultrasound tech was awesome; she was very personable, and very knowledgeable. A far cry from the corpsman that did my ultrasound the last time. Anyhow, I asked her a ton of questions about ultrasound and when it's applicable, for people other than pregnant ladies and so on.
When she brought Grace and Kurt back into the room with me, the baby started really moving! S/he kept flipping and turning and rolling. Every time the tech tried to take a photo of him/her, s/he would race away from the probe and hide somewhere else. We got to see his/her mouth open, the arms waving, and the feet kicking. We saw the bladder and the stomach and the heart and the backbone. We even got to see the bone structure of the face!! What amazing technology!
You will find at Bayside Medical Clinic our doctors are second to none when it comes to our detail. With some of our doctors obtaining actual rl skills in the medical field, you can be rest assured you will be receiving the best medical care on the grid.
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Voilà. La petite Chouette a été chez la vétérinaire hier. Elle a été étonnamment sage et calme (je pense que calme est de toute façon le qualificatif qui lui convient le mieux). Pour ses petits hoquets, la vétérinaire pense que c'est dû à son nez aplati, je dois lui donner à manger dans une écuelle surélevée et inclinée.
Ca c'est pour la bonne nouvelle. La moins bonne est qu'elle a un souffle au coeur et la prise de sang (qui pour le reste est parfaite) confirme qu'il y a un souci cardiaque.
Idéalement elle devrait passer une échographie cardiaque, mais avec la vétérinaire on a décidé d'attendre quelques semaines (sauf si je constate un souci), histoire de ne pas lui faire subir plein de manipulations alors qu'elle vient juste d'arriver.
Voilà, je ne sais pas trop quoi penser, ou plus exactement j'ai envie de ne plus penser, car je me sens plutôt maudite.....
Well, here are the news. Chouette went to the vet yesterday. She was surprisingly well-behaved and calm (I think calm is the best description for her anyway). As for her little hiccups, the vet thinks it's because of her flat nose, I have to feed her in a raised and tilted bowl.
That's the good news. The less good news is that she has a heart murmur and the blood test (which is otherwise perfect) confirms that there is a heart problem. Ideally she should have a cardiac ultrasound, but the vet and I decided to wait a few weeks (unless I notice a problem), to avoid a lot of manipulation when she has only just arrived. I don't really know what to think, or more precisely I want to stop thinking, because I feel rather cursed...
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Mittens donning her Elizabethan collar and showcasing her tattoo after her recent spaying. Oh my she is growing up too fast, I already miss my little miss Mittens!
She is finally getting used to the collar after four days. I give her some relief and remove it several times a day during feedings and shortly afterwards for grooming under very careful observation.
"When a female kitten is spayed, a small incision is made in her abdomen and her reproductive organs are removed. The incision is then closed with surgical glue or stitches. As the kitten grows, the scar becomes almost invisible as it stretches and thins. A veterinarian looking at an adult female cat cannot always tell if the tiny scar he sees on the cat's belly is a belly button, well-healed wound or the result of surgery for something other than spay. Before universal methods to indicate spaying has been done, vets had to anesthetize cats and open them up to see if they were intact. Ultrasounds and X-rays are not effective in determining if a cat has been spayed. The universal methods include ear-tipping, tattooing and microchipping. "(Sourcehttps://pets.thenest.com)
The weather is nice and sunny again this week and Cleo definitely enjoys it. She was happy too that it was Fynn who had to go to the vet on Thursday and not her. Cleo doesn't know yet that her next vet appointment is on Monday for an ultrasound.
Update on Fynn: the anal glands have been cleaned but the whole anal region is still sore and his diarrhea continues. As it's likely that an infection is the reason for all the problems the vets did a stool analysis again. It turned out that he still has a coccidia problem and apparently doesn't respond at all to the medication he receives so far. He now gets another medicine for the next 5 days hoping that this will finally help. If not, I don't know what I'll do yet. I can't go on with this kind of medication forever as it will do more harm than good on the long run.
Mei Xiang Ultrasound Update
Keep your paws crossed! This morning, Zoo veterinarians saw some exciting movement during giant panda Mei Xiang’s ultrasound. Her fetus was kicking and swimming in the amniotic fluid. Its spine and blood flow were also clearly visible. We hope to have a healthy cub in the coming days!
our family doctor Lena told us the good news we are going to have a Boy and a Girl, hooray, we are Happy
Just messing around with combining multiple exposures and intentional camera motion in the same image.
Yesterday's eye-ultrasound for the Ocular Health experiment
More on this experiment: www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/experiments/2...
More about the Principia mission: www.esa.int/Principia
Credits: ESA/NASA
122F3345
Using a Fundoscope to learn more about changes to vision in space
More about this research: www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/experiments/2...
Credits: ESA/NASA
128E6095
Ultrasound is used to measure the thickness of the manatee’s back fat. This measurement is a component of the manatee’s condition assessment and can provide valuable insight into the overall health of an individual.
FWC photo taken by Jennifer Johnson in Placida Harbor, Florida. Activities were conducted under the USFWS permit #MA773494
first pic. Taken @8.5 weeks
Taking progress pics each week as the Baby and Mama grow
RiveraProject <--Like Us cause we are RAD!!!
Strobist
550EX @ 1/4 pwr thru a shoot thru umbrella, camera left
baby #2 is just around the corner! happy birthday today to our daughter Alexandra, who's hoping that baby #2 will arrive today. Ollie (baby #1), was born almost two years ago on his father Matt's birthday! you never know what the day may bring...
So obviously I'm way behind posting my 365 photos, however, this has been weighing heavily on me and required immediate attention.
This is a compilation of ultrasound images of the right side of my neck, inside which is growing a kidney bean-shaped mass roughly the size of a golfball. Sorry for the quality, I had to take these with a crappy cell phone camera. The tech looked at me like I was a freak when I asked her for a digital copy.
For the past two weeks or so I had pretty much decided to suspend my 365 shots because the lump in my neck is so large I'm pretty sure it can be seen from space.
Then, I was gently reminded by the photostream of my Savannah, GA friend lost in translatn of the purpose of starting 365 in the first place. You don't know you did it Charlotte, but thank you. I will never remember accurately a week, a month or a year from now my feelings this day without posting this.
I have spent the last two weeks telling myself in my best Arnold Schwarzenegger voice, "It's not a toomuh!" Right now nobody seems to know what it is. I go in Monday to hear from my doctor what the radiologist had to say about it. All the ultrasound tech would say about it was, "Holy Cow, that's huge," which was less than edifying.
I am scared. I am angry. Here in Seattle I can feel the approach of Fall in the air. The coming weeks have always been my favorite time of the year. The warm days, the chill nights, the changeable weather, the wind redolent with the scent of the leaves turning. I have always felt a contentment and melancholy as summer dies away. Now I am feeling it even more poignantly with August not even past.
Am I to wane and fade with the summer? This is the thought that keeps my up all night, watching incessant re-runs of "Law & Order" and "Dog the Bounty Hunter" ( I know, I know, but there something freakishly compelling about a grown man in the 21st century sporting a mullet and a truly appalling choice of clothing).
The last three years have been so hard. I have lost all three of my mentors and two cherished pets. This last February my friend Henry died in his sleep at 34 of congestive heart failure that he never knew he had.
It seems I've picked a banner year to start my 365. Before it is done it will have seen my divorce, change of career and a cross country move. Now it will also chronicle the saga of the suspicious lump. All I need now to make it complete will be a UFO sighting and a run in with Chupacabra.
British Medical Ultrasound Society Master Class Meeting at UCD School of Medicine ; 14th November 2015