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  2. Systolic heart murmur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systolic_heart_murmur

    The resultant configuration of this murmur is a crescendo-decrescendo murmur. Causes of midsystolic ejection murmurs include outflow obstruction, increased flow through normal semilunar valves, dilation of aortic root or pulmonary trunk, or structural changes in the semilunar valves without obstruction.

  3. Heart murmur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_murmur

    The cooing dove murmur is a cardiac murmur with a musical quality (high pitched). Associated with aortic valve regurgitation (or mitral regurgitation before rupture of chordae). It is a diastolic murmur heard over the mid-precordium. [16] Continuous and Combined Systolic/Diastolic

  4. Souffle (heart sound) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Souffle_(heart_sound)

    The following characters of this murmur are emphasized. It may occur throughout systole and diastole (some reports with only noted during systolic phase). [5] Its quality (primarily systolic, high-pitched, around left sternal border [4]) may closely simulate Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA). The distinguishing properties are its variation in ...

  5. Heart Month: Mayo Clinic Health System cardiologist advises ...

    www.aol.com/heart-month-mayo-clinic-health...

    A murmur is an extra heart sound that can be heard by a stethoscope. Sometimes, a murmur sounds like a humming sound, which can be faint or loud. It might be temporary or persistent.

  6. Heart click - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_click

    These are short, high-pitched sounds. [citation needed] The mitral valve in cases of mitral stenosis may open with an opening snap [1] [2] on the beginning of diastole. Patients with mitral valve prolapse may have a mid-systolic click along with a murmur, referred to as apical late systolic murmur. [3]

  7. Heart sounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_sounds

    Yet, though obvious using echocardiography visualization, probably about 20% of cases of mitral regurgitation do not produce an audible murmur. [3] Stenosis of the aortic valve is typically the next most common heart murmur, a systolic ejection murmur. This is more common in older adults or in those individuals having a two-leaflet, not a three ...

  8. Diastolic heart murmur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diastolic_heart_murmur

    Pulmonary regurgitation is most commonly due to pulmonary hypertension (Graham-Steell murmur). It is a high-pitched and blowing murmur with a decrescendo configuration. It may increase in intensity during inspiration and best heard over left second and third intercostal spaces. The murmur usually does not extend to S1. Early diastolic

  9. Mitral regurgitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitral_regurgitation

    Mitral regurgitation, also known as mitral insufficiency or mitral incompetence, is the backward flow of blood from the left ventricle, through the mitral valve, and into the left atrium, when the left ventricle contracts, resulting in a systolic murmur radiating to the left armpit.