A
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Aortic Valve Sounds – Heart sounds generated by the aortic valve closure, mainly part of the second heart sound (S2).
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Auscultation – The act of listening to internal body sounds, especially heart and lung sounds, using a stethoscope.
B
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Best Heard At – Specific chest areas where heart sounds or murmurs are best auscultated (e.g., aortic area, mitral area).
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Bruit – A murmur heard over a blood vessel, not a heart valve, indicating turbulent blood flow (usually arterial).
C
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Click – A sharp, high-pitched sound heard during systole or diastole, often from mitral valve prolapse or prosthetic valves.
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Chest Wall Thrill – A palpable vibration on the chest wall due to turbulent blood flow associated with murmurs.
D
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Diastole – The phase of the cardiac cycle when the heart muscle relaxes and the chambers fill with blood.
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Diastolic Murmur – Murmur heard during diastole, commonly caused by aortic or pulmonary regurgitation, mitral or tricuspid stenosis.
E
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Ejection Click – A sharp sound heard shortly after the first heart sound, often due to valve abnormalities like pulmonary or aortic stenosis.
F
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Fourth Heart Sound (S4) – A low-frequency sound occurring late in diastole, just before S1, associated with atrial contraction against a stiff ventricle (e.g., LV hypertrophy).
G
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Gallop Rhythm – Presence of additional heart sounds (S3 or S4) producing a rhythm resembling a galloping horse.
H
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Heart Sounds – Audible sounds generated by closure of heart valves and blood flow through the heart during the cardiac cycle.
I
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Innate Heart Sounds – The normal heart sounds: S1 and S2.
L
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Left Sternal Border – Auscultation site where tricuspid and pulmonary valve sounds are best heard.
M
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Murmur – An abnormal heart sound produced by turbulent blood flow, graded from I (barely audible) to VI (heard without a stethoscope).
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Mid-systolic Murmur – Murmur occurring between S1 and S2, often due to aortic or pulmonary stenosis.
P
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Pericardial Friction Rub – A scratchy, grating sound caused by inflammation of the pericardium.
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Physiological Split of S2 – Normal delay in closure of pulmonary valve during inspiration, causing split second heart sound.
R
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Regurgitant Murmur – Murmur caused by backward flow of blood through an incompetent valve (e.g., mitral or aortic regurgitation).
S
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Second Heart Sound (S2) – Produced by closure of the aortic and pulmonary valves; loudest at the base of the heart.
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S1 (First Heart Sound) – Produced by closure of the mitral and tricuspid valves; loudest at the apex.
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S3 (Third Heart Sound) – A low-pitched sound occurring just after S2 during early diastole, associated with increased ventricular filling pressures.
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Systole – The phase of the cardiac cycle when the ventricles contract and eject blood.
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Systolic Murmur – Murmur heard between S1 and S2, often due to valve stenosis or regurgitation.
T
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Timing – Refers to when in the cardiac cycle a heart sound or murmur occurs (e.g., systolic, diastolic).
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Tricuspid Valve Sounds – Heart sounds related to closure of the tricuspid valve, best heard at the lower left sternal border.
V
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Valve Closure Sounds – The “lub-dub” sounds representing valve closures (S1 and S2).
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Valve Stenosis – Narrowing of a valve causing turbulent blood flow and characteristic murmurs.