Approach To Heart Murmurs
Approach To Heart Murmurs
Approach To Heart Murmurs
HEART
MURMURS
CHARISMAY B. BANWA, MD
OBJECTIVES
• To be able to present the basic physiology of
murmurs
female
Filipino
Roman
Catholic
Cordon
Isabela
GENERAL APPEARANCE
awake, conscious coherent not in respiratory distress
VITAL SIGNS
BP: 140/80 mmHg RR: 22 cpm
HR:93 bpm Temp: 36.7°C
No pallor no jaundice
Anicteric sclera, pink palpebral conjunctiva
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
CHEST
symmetric chest expansion, no retractions, no
wheezes on both lung fields, no crackles or rhonchi
HEART
Adynamic precordium, PMI at 5th ICS MCL,
normal rate, regular rhythm, with 3/6 midsystolic
murmur at second ICS at right parasternal
border
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
ABDOMEN
normoactive bowel sounds, soft, no
organomegaly, no tenderness
EXTREMITIES
Weak pulse, no cyanosis, no deformities
QUESTIONS:
WHAT IS THE MOST LIKELY DIAGNOSIS:
AORTIC STENOSIS
• 7phases
• 1. Atrial systole
• 2. Isovolumetric ventricular contraction
• 3. Rapid ventricular ejection
• 4. Reduced ventricular ejection
• 5. Isovolumetric ventricular relaxation
• 6. Rapid ventricular filling
• 7. Diastasis
Normal heart sounds
The bell and diaphragm of the stethoscope
accentuate sounds of different pitches
BELL- low pitch sound such as normal
heart sound and diastolic murmur of mitral
stenosis
DIAPHRAGM- high pitch sounds such as
early diastolic murmur of aortic
regurgitation or pericardial friction rub
seen in acute pericarditis
Normal heart sounds
S1 S2
S3 S4
Systole- period of contraction of the
ventricles of the heart that occurs
between the first and second heart
sounds of the cardiac cycle
left-to-right
shunt
Anatomically large
and uncorrected
VSDs, which usually
involve the
membranous portion
of the septum, may
lead to pulmonary
hypertension
• AORTIC
STENOS
IS
HOCM
is associated with a midsystolic murmur that is
usually loudest along the left sternal border or
between the left lower sternal border and the
apex
the bulging of one or both of the
mitral valve flaps (leaflets) into the
left atrium during the contraction of
the heart.
MITRAL
VALVE
PROLAPSE
Although the systolic murmur associated with
MVP behaves similarly to that due to HOCM
in response to the Valsalva maneuver and to
standing/squatting
LVH in HOCM
a nonejection click in MVP
Not all continuous murmurs are pathologic.