Heart Murmurs Flashcards
Mitral regurgitation
Loud pansystolic murmur at the apex radiating into the axilla. Best heard in the left lateral position.
- displaced apex beat with thrusting.
- may be systolic thrill over apex.
- soft S1
Mitral valve prolapse (Barlow Syndrome)
Mid-systolic click, followed by a late systolic murmur heard best at the apex. Squatting delays the click, standing increases the murmur.
Mitral Stenosis
Rumbling mid-diastolic murmur heard at the apex and radiationg to the axilla. heard best in in the left lateral position - accentuated by excercise
- Tapping undisplaced apex beat
- Loud S1 and S2
- Left parasternal heave
(As mitral stenosis worsens, left atrial pressure increases forcing the mitral valve open earlier in diastole. Thus, in severe mitral stenosis, the opening snap occurs earlier as does the initial decrescendo part of the murmur.)
Aortic regurgitation
High pitched early diastolic murmur audible in the aortic area and at the left sternal edge. Best heard leaning forward on end expiration
- Wide pulse pressure which is collapsing
- Apex beat is thrusting and displaced to 6th intercostal space in the anterior axillary line (volume overload)
Aortic stenosis
Harsh ejection systolic murmur heard best at the left sternal edge (2nd ICS) . loudest leaning forward on end expiration and may radiate to carotids.
- Narrow pulse pressure and slow rising pulse
- aortic thrill
- Apex is forceful but usually undisplaced
Tricuspid regurgitation
Pansystolic murmur heard loudest at lower left sternal edge during inspiration
- AF common
- JVP raised with giant v waves
- Tender pulsatile hepatomegaly
Mechanical mitral valve replacement
Click on first heart sound (closure of valve)
Possible mid-diastolic murmur (more common with old ball-and-cage valve)
Pansystolic murmur? (leaking of prosthetic valve)
Mechanical aortic valve replacement
Normal first heart sound
Ejection click (opening of prosthetic valve)
Soft ejection systolic murmur
Click on second heart sound (closing of valve)
Early diastolic murmur? (leaking - also wide pulse pressure and collapsing pulse)
Heart Sounds
S1
S2
S3
S4
S1: Closure of the atrioventricular valves (AV) TRICUSPID AND MITRAL VALVES. This sounds like “LUB”.
S2: closure of the semilunar valves (SL) AORTIC AND PULMONIC VALVES. This sounds like “DUB”.
S3: heard after S2 and sounds like “LUB-DUB-TA”. Caused by vibrations of ventricle filling from a resistant ventricle due to fluid volume overload or heart failure.
S4: heard before S1 and sounds like “TA-LUB-DUB”. Caused by ventricle resistance from an atrial “kick” during presystole (hypertrophic left ventricle)