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Regurgitant Systolic Murmurs Chapter 15 Are G. Talking, MD, FACC Instructor Patricia L. Thomas, MBA, RCIS Outline • • • • • • • Mitral Regurgitation Tricuspid Regurgitation Ventricular Septal Defect Patent Ductus Arterious Acute Ventricular Septal Perforation Papillary Muscle Rupture Mitral Valve Prolapse Syndrome Introduction • Regurgitant Murmurs are caused by retrograde flow across AV valves • TR heard at the lower left sternal border • MR heard at the apex • Holosystolic Murmurs suggest MR, TR, VSD’s Chronic Mitral Regurgitation • Continues as long as LV pressure > that of the enlarged LA • Begins at S1 and extend through S2 • Large high pitched, blowing holosystolic/pansystolic murmur Acute Mitral Regurgitation • Loud Grade IV or >, diamond shaped • Pressure in the normal nondilated LA increases rapidly because of regurgitant flow in early systole and = LV pressure in late systole Mitral Regurgitation Causes • • • • • • Rheumatic Heart Disease Papillary Muscle Dysfunction Mitral Valve Prolapse Rupture Chordae Tendineae Calcified mitral Annulus LV Dilatation Tricuspid Regurgitation • The holosystolic murmur of MR engulfs A2 but stops before P2 whereas the murmur of TR persists through and engulfs P2 • Increases with inspiration (Carvallo sign) & does not radiate well to the axillary region • Mild TR – Infective Endocarditis seen with IV drug abuse may be mid-systolic of low intensity, heart only with inspiration – S4 may be present • Advance TR – May not increase with inspiration or may be absent – Tricuspid honk or whoop (highly musical) Causes • Tricuspid Insufficiency is commonly secondary to dilatation of the right ventricle • Severe Right Heart Failure secondary to mitral stenosis • Pulmonary Heart Disease with pulmonary hypertension • Congenital deformity (Epstein's Anomaly), Rheumatic Valve disease, or Infective Endocarditis • Listen with the diaphragm of the stethoscope along the lower left sternal border (third interspace) Ventricular Septal Defect • Holosystolic, loud, & harsh; S2 is loud & widely split; possible palpable thrill • Begins with ventricular systole S1, when the rise in LV pressure exceeds that of the RV & continues until S2 when left ventricular pressure falls • Listen with the diaphragm of the stethoscope from the mid-to lower left sternal border • Patent Ductus Arteriosus – Continuous murmur • Acute Ventricular Septal Perforation – Caused by acute MI – Loud short systolic murmur, grade IV – Listen with diaphragm of stethoscope • Papillary Muscle Rupture – mid-to late systolic murmur, thrill – Listen with diaphragm for the stethoscope Mitral Valve Prolapse Syndrome • Mid-to-late systolic, late systolic, or holosystolic • Moderate Prolapse – 1/3 or ½ into systole & increases its intensity until A2 – Valve is competent in early systole & prolapse in LA in late systole • Severe Prolapse – Loud S1, holosystolic murmur – Fusion of a click with S1, Sound is louder • Click – In < ½ of patients marks onset of the murmur “click murmur syndrome” • Cause – Mitral insufficiency THE END OF CHAPTER 15 Tilkian, Ara MD Understanding Heart Sounds and Murmurs, Fourth Edition, W.B. Sunders Company. 2002, pp. 180-196