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Heart Disease Braunwald

Heart Disease Braunwald. Chapter 4 Physical Examination (II) --- Heart Murmur. Presenter: R4 劉嚴文. Cardiac Auscultation Heart Murmur. Characteristics of heart murmur Timing in the cardiac cycle Intensity (loudness) Frequency (pitch) --- from high to low

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Heart Disease Braunwald

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  1. Heart DiseaseBraunwald Chapter 4 Physical Examination (II) --- Heart Murmur Presenter: R4 劉嚴文

  2. Cardiac AuscultationHeart Murmur Characteristics of heart murmur • Timing in the cardiac cycle • Intensity (loudness) • Frequency (pitch) --- from high to low • Configuration (shape) --- crescendo, decrescendo, crescendo-decrescendo (diamond-shaped), plateau (even) or variable (uneven) • Quality • Duration • Direction of radiation

  3. Cardiac AuscultationHeart Murmur

  4. Cardiac AuscultationHeart Murmur Heart murmurs broad categories • Systolic:begin with / after S1 end at / before S2 2 terms out of time • Regurgitant systolic murmur (holosystolic murmur) • Ejection systolic murmur (midsystolic murmur) • Diastolic: begin with / after S2 end at / before the subsequent S1 • Continuous: begin in systole and continue without interruption through the S2 into all / part of diastole

  5. Midsystolic Murmurs Etiologies • Obstruction to ventricular outflow • Dilatation of the aortic root or pulmonary trunk • Accelerated flow into the normal aorta or pulmonary trunk, as during pregnancy, fever, thyrotoxicosis, or anemia • Innocent (normal) midsystolic murmurs • Some forms of MR

  6. Aortic Valve Stenosis • Symmetrical diamond shape • High-velocity jet within the aortic root  radiation of the murmur upward to the right 2nd intercostal space and the neck

  7. Aortic Valve Stenosis • In old adults, aortic valve with sclerotic or stenotic change resulted from fibrocalcific change : • R’t 2nd ICS: impure, noisy, harsh (jet turbulence) • LV impulse: pure, musical (from periodic high-frequency vibrations of the fibrocalcific aortic cusps) ( Gallavardin dissociation--- Noisy right basal and musical apical )

  8. Aortic Valve Stenosis D/D from high-pitch apical murmur of MR • VPC followed by pauses longer than the dominant cycle length Intensity of AS: increase Intensity of MR: unchange

  9. Pulmonary Valve Stenosis • Location: Right side of the heart • Length and configuration: signs of severity

  10. Still Murmur • Normal vibratory midsystolic murmur • Short, buzzing, pure and medium in frequency • Generated by low-frequency periodic vibrations of normal pulmonary leaflets or a left LV false tendon • Typically heard between LLSB and apex

  11. Innocent Midsystolic Murmur • Location: second left intercostal space • Aortic sclerotic murmur (most common) • Exaggeration of normal ejection vibrations within the pulmonary trunk: relatively impure, best heard in the left 2nd ICS. • In patients with diminished anteroposterior chest dimension

  12. Midsystolic Murmur from MR • Usually in ischemic heart disease associated with LV regional wall motion abnormalities. • Impaired integrity of the muscular component of the mitral apparatus • Early systolic competence of the mitral valve • Midsystolic incompetence • Late systolic decline in regurgitant flow

  13. Holosystolic Murmurs • Left heart: MR • Right heart: TR • Between the ventricles: a restrictive VSD • Between the great arteries: Aortopulmonary connection (pulmonary vascular resistance rise to abolish the diastolic portion of the continuous murmur) A persistent high pressure / resistance systolic flow to a low pressure / resistance vascular bed

  14. Holosystolic Murmurs Direction of radiation of MR • Jet forward and medial against the atrial septum near the origin of the aorta: murmur radiation to the left sternal edge, base and neck • Jetposterolateral with the LA: murmur radiation to the axilla, left scapula angle and the vertebral column with bone conduction from the C spine to L spine

  15. Holosystolic Murmurs Diagnostic feature of TR • Carvallo sign --- inspiratory increasein loudness Due to increase RV volume during inspiration  Stroke volume ↑  Regurgitant flow velocity ↑

  16. Early Systolic Murmurs • Begins with S1, diminish in decrescendo and end well before S2, generally at or before midsystole • Certain types of acute severe MR, TR and VSD

  17. Early Systolic Murmurs • A feature of TR with normal RV systolic pressure, ex. TR caused by IE • VSD • A small VSD (constrictive): a soft, pure, high-frequency, early systolic murmur localized to the mid- or lower left sternal edge • A non-constrictive VSD with elevated pulm. vascular resistance

  18. Late Systolic Murmurs • Begin in mid- to late systole and proceed up to S2 • Prototype: Mitral valve prolapse • Response to postural maneuvers / amyl nitrite • Prompt standing after squatting / valsalva maneuver: longer and softer • Squatting / handgrip (LV volume↑): shorter and louder • An intermittent, striking systolic whoop or honk -- spontaneously or in response to maneuvers: from mitral leaflets and chordae tendineae

  19. Heart MurmurDiastolic murmur • Early diastolic murmur  AR, PR • Mid-diastolic murmur  MS, TS and atrial tumors, increase flow through non-obstructive AV valve • Late diastolic murmur  Austin-Flint murmur

  20. Early Diastolic Murmurs --- AR • Left side of the heart, esp. with the diaphragm of the stethoscope • From primary valvular disease: best heard along the left sternal border in the 3rd and 4th intercostal space • From ascendingaorta dilatation: along theright sternal border • Esp. leaning forward and during a held, deep exhalation • Beginning immediately after A2, high frequency

  21. Early Diastolic Murmurs --- AR • Chronic AR • Moderate: murmur throughout diastole • Severe: more obvious decrescendo • Radiation to the right sternal edge: aortic root dilatation, as in Marfan syndrome

  22. Early Diastolic Murmurs --- Acute AR D/D from chronic AR Often loud, Grade 4 Quite soft, Grade 2

  23. Early Diastolic Murmurs Graham Steell murmur (of pulmonary hypertensive pulmonary regurgitation) • Begin with loud P2 • High pulmonary pressure on the incomplete P valve  High diastolic pressure gradient between the pulmonary artery and the RV  High-velocity regurgitant flow  High-frequency blowing murmur, throughout diastole  Amplitude of the murmur: uniform throughout most of diastole

  24. Mid-Diastolic Murmurs Mitral stenosis • Following the mitral opening snap, originating within the LV, transmission to the chest wall, maximal over the LV impulse • Left lateral decubitus position • Vigorous voluntary cough or a few sit-ups  HR and mitral valve flow ↑  Murmur reinforced

  25. Mitral stenosis • In Af, duration of the murmur is a sign of the degree of obstruction at the mitral orifice • In sinus rhythm

  26. Mid-Diastolic Murmurs Tricuspid stenosis • D/D from MS: • Loudness of tricuspid murmur ↑with inspiration • Tricuspid murmur confined to a localized area along the left lower sternal edge

  27. Late Diastolic Murmurs • Occur immediately before S1 • Usually originate at the mitral or tricuspid orifice because of obstruction (MS, TS) • Tricuspid stenosis: crescendo-decrescendo. Fading before S1 • Austin-Flint murmur in AR

  28. Continuous Murmurs • PDA (loudest in left 2nd ICS) • Coronary AV fistula (loudest in lower sternal border) • Ruptured sinus of Valsalva aneurysm (loudest in right upper sternal border)

  29. Continuous Murmurs • Arteriovenous continuous murmurs • Arterial continuous murmurs • Continuous venous murmur • Innocent cervical venous hum: the most common type of normal continuous murmur, in healthy children and healthy young adults, esp. pregnancy • Thyrotoxicosis and anemia

  30. Heart Murmur Approach

  31. Approach to the Patient with a Heart Murmur • Cardiac echo is indicated as follows: • Loud murmur (>= grade 3) • Holosystolic or late systolic murmur • Systolic murmur becomes louder or longer during Valsava maneuver (susp. HOCM or MVP) • Systolic murmur with clinical findings suggesting IE, thromboembolism or syncope • Systolic murmur associated with abnormal EKG

  32. Heart Murmur • Pericardial Rubs Triple phases midsystolic, middiastolic and late diastolic • Detected in Acute pericarditis

  33. Dynamic AuscultationRespiration • Diastolic sounds and ejection sounds • S3, S4, opening snap • From right heart: augmented during inspiration • From left heart: diminished during inspiration • Ejection sounds intensity • Right heart, ex. PS: ↓ during inspiration • Left heart: not effected, except tetralogy of Fallot • Murmur: more pronounced on the right side murmur ( Venous return increase during inspiration ) ↑during inspiration: TS, PR (diastolic murmur), TR and Ebstein anomaly (presystolic murmur), MVP

  34. Dynamic AuscultationValsalva Maneuver

  35. Dynamic Auscultation • Valsalva maneuver reduced LV filling • Standing—reduce venous return • Squatting—increase venous return and systemic resistence • Lying—increase venous return • Hand grip—increase cardiac output and BP • Amyl nitritevasodilationBP drop reflex tachycardiaincrease cardiac output • Phenylephrine opposite effect of amyl nitite

  36. Dynamic Auscultation

  37. Thanks for Your Attention

  38. Systolic Arterial Murmurs • Normal anatomical arteries with normal or increased flow • Abnormal arteries with tortuosity or luminal narrowing • Systolic and crescendo-decrescendo configuration • In old adults: atherosclerotic narrowing of a carotid, subclavian or iliofemeral artery • A rare pulmonary arterial systolic murmur: by luminal narrowing after a pulmonary embolus

  39. Supraclavicular Systolic Murmurs • Often heard in children and aldolescents • Originate at the aortic origins of normal major branchiocephalic arteries • Crescendo-decrescendo, abrupt onset, loud and radiation below the clavicles • Murmur decrease in response to hyperextension of the shoulders

  40. Systolic Mammary Souffle • Over the breast because of increase flow through normal arteries during late pregnancy or in lactating • Begin after S1

  41. Mid-Diastolic Murmurs • Appreciable aortic valve incompetence or large left-to-right shunts, preceded by S3 • Short, mid-diastolic aortic valve flow murmur in complete AV block • Pulmonary valve regurgitation

  42. Dynamic AuscultationMuller Maneuver • Close the nose and seal the mouth then forcibly inspire for 10 seconds  Widen the split S2 and augment murmurs originating in the right heart

  43. Heart Murmur

  44. Dynamic Ausculation

  45. Heart MurmurSystolic murmur • Early Systolic Murmuracute MR(giant V) TR with normal RV systolic pressure • Midsystolic murmur(ejection murmur) AS, PS,VSD,ASD • Late systolic murmurMVP • Holosystolic murmur(regurgitant murmur) MR,TR(Carvallo sign selective inspiratory increase murmur),VSD

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