A
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Aortic Stenosis (AS)
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Type: Systolic, crescendo-decrescendo ejection murmur
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Best Heard: Right upper sternal border, radiates to carotids
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Clinical Scenario: Elderly patient with exertional syncope, angina, and heart failure symptoms
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Murmur Maneuvers: Heard louder with patient leaning forward and during expiration
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Aortic Regurgitation (AR)
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Type: Early diastolic, high-pitched decrescendo murmur
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Best Heard: Left sternal border (3rd-4th intercostal space) with diaphragm
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Clinical Scenario: Patient with Marfan syndrome or rheumatic heart disease, presenting with dyspnea and bounding pulses
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Murmur Maneuvers: Loudest with patient sitting up, leaning forward, during expiration
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B
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Blowing Murmur
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Description: Soft, high-pitched murmur typical of valve regurgitation (e.g., mitral or aortic regurgitation)
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Clinical Tip: Helps distinguish regurgitant murmurs from stenotic ones
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C
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Continuous Murmur
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Example: Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) producing a “machinery” murmur
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Best Heard: Left infraclavicular area
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Clinical Scenario: Infant or young child with signs of volume overload and failure to thrive
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Crescendo-Decrescendo Murmur
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Characteristic of AS; intensity rises then falls during systole
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D
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Diastolic Murmur
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Always abnormal; includes murmurs from mitral stenosis, aortic regurgitation, and pulmonary regurgitation
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Clinical Note: Any diastolic murmur requires further evaluation with echocardiography
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H
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Holosystolic (Pansystolic) Murmur
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Examples: Mitral regurgitation, tricuspid regurgitation, ventricular septal defect
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Best Heard: MR – apex radiating to axilla; TR – lower left sternal border; VSD – lower left sternal border with loud harsh sound
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Clinical Scenario: Patient with previous MI may develop MR due to papillary muscle dysfunction
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L
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Loudness (Grade of Murmur)
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Graded I (barely audible) to VI (heard without stethoscope, with thrill)
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Thrills correlate with grade IV or higher murmurs
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Late Systolic Murmur
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Often due to mitral valve prolapse
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Clinical Clue: Usually preceded by a mid-systolic click
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M
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Mitral Stenosis (MS)
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Type: Low-pitched, rumbling diastolic murmur with an opening snap
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Best Heard: Apex with bell, patient in left lateral decubitus position
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Clinical Scenario: History of rheumatic fever, presenting with exertional dyspnea and atrial fibrillation
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Mitral Regurgitation (MR)
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Type: Holosystolic, blowing murmur
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Best Heard: Apex, radiating to axilla
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Clinical Scenario: Patient post-MI or with dilated cardiomyopathy presenting with pulmonary edema
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P
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Pulmonary Stenosis (PS)
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Type: Harsh systolic ejection murmur
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Best Heard: Left upper sternal border with possible thrill
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Clinical Scenario: Congenital heart disease in children or young adults
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Pulmonary Regurgitation (PR)
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Type: Early diastolic decrescendo murmur
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Best Heard: Left upper sternal border, increases with inspiration
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Clinical Scenario: May occur post-pulmonary hypertension or after repair of tetralogy of Fallot
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R
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Rumbling Murmur
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Low-frequency murmur typical of mitral stenosis
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Requires bell of stethoscope for best detection
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S
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Systolic Murmur
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May be benign (e.g., innocent murmur) or pathological (e.g., AS, MR)
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Timing and quality important for diagnosis
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Systolic Ejection Murmur
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Common in AS and pulmonary stenosis
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T
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Thrill
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Palpable vibration on chest wall indicating significant turbulent flow, often in severe AS or VSD
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Helps grade murmur severity
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Tricuspid Regurgitation (TR)
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Type: Holosystolic murmur
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Best Heard: Lower left sternal border
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Clinical Clue: Increases with inspiration (Carvallo’s sign)
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Clinical Scenario: Seen in right heart failure or endocarditis
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Tricuspid Stenosis (TS)
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Diastolic rumbling murmur at lower left sternal border
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Often with prominent “a” waves in JVP
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V
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Valve Insufficiency (Regurgitation)
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Leads to backward blood flow producing blowing murmurs
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Examples: MR, AR, TR, PR
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Valve Stenosis
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Narrowing of valve opening causing turbulent flow and characteristic murmurs
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Examples: AS, MS, PS, TS
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Murmur Maneuvers (Helpful to Differentiate Murmurs)
Maneuver | Effect on Murmurs | Explanation |
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Inspiration | Increases right-sided murmurs (e.g., TR, PS) | Increased venous return to right heart |
Expiration | Increases left-sided murmurs (e.g., MR, AS) | Increased venous return to left heart |
Valsalva (strain phase) | Decreases most murmurs except hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) | Decreases venous return, lowering murmurs |
Squatting | Increases most murmurs except HCM | Increases venous return and afterload |
Standing | Decreases most murmurs except HCM | Decreases venous return |