


ACL BMW M20/M50/M52/M54-1919CC 80.0mm Bore 66.0mm Stroke STD + .001in Clearance Conrod Bearing Set
Marsoni
M251S
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Friday, May 29
ACL BMW M20/M50/M52/M54-1919CC 80.0mm Bore 66.0mm Stroke STD + .001in Clearance Conrod Bearing SetACL BMW M20 M50 M52 M54 1919CC 80. 0mm Bore 66. 0mm Stroke STD + . 001in Clearance Conrod Bearing SetThis Part Fits: Year Make Model Submodel 2000 BMW 323Ci Base 1998 2000 BMW 323i Base 1998 1999 BMW 323is Base 1986 1988 BMW 325 Base 2001 2006 BMW 325Ci Base 1984 1987 BMW 325e Base 1986 1987 BMW 325es Base 1987 1995,2001 2005 BMW 325i Base 1987 1995 BMW 325is Base 1988 1991 BMW 325iX Base 2001 2005 BMW 325xi Base 2000 BMW 328Ci Base 1996 2000 BMW 328i
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★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
Great book by Josh
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2015
★★★★★ 5
.thanks agai
Format: Hardcover
The book is hard to.good job thanks
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2019
★★★★★ 4
Amazing compilation of historical facts that I never heard before
Format: Kindle
Our local priest quoted from this book on Easter Sunday and that made me curious to read it. The book starts slowly, but the second half is a great history lesson, loaded with information that I had never known. Compelling.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2016
★★★★★ 5
Excellent Introduction to Hemodynamics for a Resident or Fellow
Format: Paperback
Background: PGY-2 Internal Medicine Resident with no prior hemodynamic monitoring experience
Overall:
Fantastic introduction to the field.
The author will assume you know the following prior to starting the book:
- Moderate understanding of EKG’s
- Anatomical arrangement of the heart and its vessels
- Understanding some of the practical effects of atrial fibrillation (lack of an atrial contraction, etc)
Specifics:
The book can be picked up without significant prior knowledge of hemodynamic monitoring. I initially tried to read Hemodynamic Rounds, and the authors of that book did not introduce significant pieces of information, such as the normal pressures of the heart chambers, what each wave means on the monitor, and how is each chamber of the heart/vessel represented on the monitor (where do I look to see the left ventricular pressure?).
In contrast to that, Dr. Hanna provides a book that appears to be intended for residents/cardiology fellows or zealous pre-cardiology interns who are looking for an introduction to the field that maintains enough depth to be practical. Its first section goes over the relevant physiology and pathophysiology and the mechanical/hemodynamic representation. The second section is a series of practice problems with excellent explanations which reviews all of the prior concepts and helps to solidify them in the reader’s mind. The reader will learn to appreciate the relevant waveforms and their relevant representations, the normal values for the cardiac chambers and vessels, and eventually the changes to these normal values during pathologic states. As others have mentioned, it is concise, but this also makes it a bit dense initially when the reader encounters the basic four waveforms and attempts to memorize the normal pressures. Once you get over that initial learning curve, the rest of the first section goes a bit faster.
Overall, I’m very happy I purchased this book, and I feel that it has prepared me very well for time spent in the cardiac ICU.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2019
★★★★★ 5
Info not to be found elsewhere ...
Format: Paperback
I am a cardiologist in my 50s. I have long been interested in hemodynamics and have an extensive home file system and library of Cardiovascular related books and journal articles. I thought I understood hemodynamics and tracings very well. However this book is a treasure trove of info that simply cannot be found in other publications. It has been a very worthwhile purchase. Highly recommended. This is best suited for cardiology fellows and beyond in my opinion. This info is simply not to be found elsewhere. It is as if a grey haired attending is pointing out minutiae to you that you had not realized was buried in the tracings. Well written and easy to digest. It is best to have a good understanding of hemodynamics and waveforms before reading this though. The correlation with ECHO and diastolic issues is also very good. (This book should be required reading for all cardiology fellows - invasive or noninvasive)
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Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2016