murmers Flashcards

1
Q

Aids: Usually decreasing or disappears on sitting

A

Innocent Murmurs

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2
Q

result from turbulent blood flow, probably generated by ventricular ejection of blood into the aorta from the left and occasionally the right ventricle.

A

Innocent Murmur

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3
Q

Very Common in children and young adults-may also be heard in older people. There is not lying cardiovascular disease

A

innocent murmurs

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4
Q

similar to innocent murmurs, possible signs of a likely cause, turbulence due to a temporary increase in blood flow in predisposing conditions such as anemia, pregnancy, fever, and hyperthyroidism

A

Physiologic Murmurs

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5
Q

the most common kind of heart murmur

A

midsystolic click

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6
Q

three types of midsystolic clicks

A

innocent - without detectable physiologic or structural abnormality

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7
Q

midsystolic murmurs tend to peak _____ and usually stop _______

A

near mid-systole, usually stop before S2

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8
Q

Aids: heard best with the patient sitting and leaning forward

A

Aortic Stenosis

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9
Q

A2 decreases as this worsens. A2 may be delayed and merge with P2 _ single S1 on expiration or paradocixcal S2 split. Carotid upstroke may be delayed with slow rise and small amplitued. Hypertrophied left ventricle may _ sustained apical impulse and an S4 from decreased compliance

A

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10
Q

Aids: Decreases with squatting, increases with straining down from Valsava and standing

A

Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

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11
Q

associated with unusually rapid ejection of blood from the left ventricle during systole. Outflow tract obstruction of flow may coexist. Accompanying distortion of the mitral valve may cause mitral reguritation

A

massive ventricular hypertrophy

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12
Q

Quality: often harsh

A

Pulmonic Stenosis

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13
Q

In severe pulmonic stenosis ____ is widely split, and ____ is diminished or inaudible. An early pulmonic ejection sound is common. May hear a right sided ____. Right ventricular impulse often increased in amplitude and sustained

A

S2, P2, S4

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14
Q

______ impairs flow across the valve, increasing right ventricular afterload. Congenital and normally found in children.

A

Pulmonic valve stenosis

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15
Q

In an ______, the systolic murmur from pathologically increased flow across the pulmonic valve may mimic pulmonic stenosis

A

atrial septal defect

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16
Q

Diastolic Murmurs, two types

A

Aortic regurgitation and mitral stenosis

17
Q

Aids: The murmur is heard best with the patient sitting, leaning forward, with breath held after exhalation

A

Aortic Regurgitation

18
Q

An ejection sound may be present. An S3 or S4, if present, suggusts sever regurgitation

A

Aortic reguritation

19
Q

Progressive changes in the apical impulse for Aortic Regurgitation include:

A

increased amplitude, displacement laterally and downward, widened diameter, and increased duration

20
Q

For Aortic Regurgitation, the pulse pressure ______ and the arterial pulses are ______. A midsystolic flow murmur or an Austin Flint murmur suggests large regurgitant flow

A

Increases,

21
Q

(Diastolic / Systolic) murmurs almost always indicate heart disease.

A

Diastolic

22
Q

_______ murmurs signify regurgitant flow through an incompetent semilunar valve, more commonly, the aortic

A

Early descresendo diastolic

23
Q

____ mumurs in mid or late _____ suggest stenosis of an AV valve, usually the mitral

A

Rumbling diastolic, diastolic

24
Q

Mechanism of aortic reguritation

A

The leaflets of the aortic valve fail to close completely during diastole, and blood reguritates from the aorta back into the left ventricle. Volume overload on the left ventricle resules.

25
Q

Two other murmurs associatied with Aortic Regurgitation

A

mid systolic murmur from the resulting increased forward flow across the aortic valve and a mitral diastolic (Austin Flint) attributed to diastolic impingement of the regurgitant flow on the anterior leflet of the mitral valve

26
Q

Aids: placing the bell exactly on the apical impulse turning the patient into a LLD position and mild exercise, better in exhalation

A

Mitral Stenosis

27
Q

S1 is accentuated and may be palpable at the apex. An opening snap often follows S2 and initiates the murmur

A

Mitral Stenosis

28
Q

If pulmonary hypertension develops, P2 is acentuated, and the right ventricular impuls becomes palpable.

A

Mitral Stenosis

29
Q

Mitral regurgitation and aortic valve disease may be associated with

A

Mitral Stenosis

30
Q

When the leaflets of the mitral valve thicken, stiffen, and become distorted from the effects of rheumatic fever the …

A

mitral valve fails to open sufficiently in diastole

31
Q

two components of mitral stenosis murmur

A

middiastolic (during rapid ventricular filling)

32
Q

three examples of cardiovascular sounds with both systolic and diastolic components

A

venous hum, pericardial friction rub, patent ductus arteriosus

33
Q

a benign sound produced by turbulance of blood in the jugular veins

A

venous hum

34
Q

produced by inflammation of the pericardial sac

A

pericardial friction rub

35
Q

a congenital abnormality in which an open channel persists between the aorta and pulmonary artery

A

patent ductus arteriosus

36
Q

____ mumurs begin in systole and extend through S2 into all or part of diastole

A

continuous

37
Q

Pitch: low (better heard with bell)

A

Venous hum

38
Q

Pitch: High (heard better with the diaphram)

A

Pericardial Friction Rub

39
Q

Pitch: Medium

A

Patent Ductus Arteriosus