Cardiac Abnorms Flashcards
an S1 sound that is caused by
- position of the AV valve being wide open and no time to drift together at the start of systole
- calcification of valve, needs increasing ventricular pressure to close the valve against increased atrial pressure
Loud (acenuated)
an s1 sound that is caused by
- the delayed conduction from atria to ventricles.
- mitral valve drifts shut before ventricular contraction closes it
- extreme calfication, limiting mobility
- more forceful atrial contraction into noncompliant ventricle
- delays or diminishes ventricular contraction
faint ( diminished ) s1
an s1 sound that is caused by
- varying of position of AV valve before closing from beat to beat
- atria and ventricles beat independently
Varying intensity of S1
an s1 sound caused by
- mitral and tricuspid components are heard separately
Split s1
an s2 sound caused by
- higher closing pressure
- exercise and exccitment increase pressure in aorta
- pulmonary hypertension
- semilunar valves calcified but still mobile
accenuated s2
an s2 sound caused by
- a fall in systemic bp and decrease in valve strength
- semilunar valves thickened and calcified with decreased mobility
diminished s2
occurs early in systole
from opening of the semilunar valves
usually in the presence of stenosis
heard most over apex
ejection click
associated with mitral valve prolapse
occurs in mid to late systole
midsystolic click
ventricular filling sound
early in diastole during the rapid filling
heard at the apex
s3
ventricular filling sound
occurs when atria contract late in diastole
heard immediately before s1
s4
when pathologic s3 and s4 are heard
quadruple sound is heard
summation sound