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Information
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Editors
Juhani
Airaksinen
Innocent Heart Murmurs in Adults
For cardiac murmurs in children, see
Cardiac Murmur in a Child
Essentials
Innocent murmurs include
murmurs of physiological origin
occasionally murmurs originating from haemodynamically insignificant cardiac defects.
Innocent murmurs caused by accelerated blood flow are common in young adults.
Fever, anaemia, tachycardia and a thin or flat chest wall may intensify flow sounds making them resemble a murmur of a valvular disease.
Innocent nature of the murmur is suggested by the following features:
short early systolic or mid-systolic murmur, grade 1-2
point of maximum intensity beside the sternum on the left
and attenuates in a recumbent position
systolic ejection murmur in the pulmonary valve auscultation area
normal S2 (not constantly split)
no other abnormalities on auscultation
good performance status, normal ECG and chest x-ray.
A murmur must not be considered innocent until the patient has undergone thorough investigation.
If necessary, an echocardiography
Echocardiography as an Outpatient Procedure
should be carried out to confirm diagnosis.
Diastolic murmurs always originate from an organic abnormality which may, nevertheless, be haemodynamically insignificant.
Pulmonary ejection murmur
The most common innocent murmur
Heard in the second or third left intercostal space
Intensity of the murmur is usually of grade 1-2/6.
Heard in early systole
The closure of the pulmonary valve is not delayed and the heart sound split widens on inspiration. No ejection click is heard.
Echocardiography is usually unnecessary.
Aortic ejection murmur
A flow sound originating form the aorta, comparable to the pulmonary flow murmur
In young adults
Heard in the aortic valve area
More notable after strenuous exercise when the stroke volume is particularly high
A murmur associated with a calcified aortic valve
In elderly patients
Resembles the murmur of aortic
stenosis
Aortic Stenosis
(ejection click may be heard), but its intensity is of grade 2
.
No significant aortic stenosis or other signs suggesting stenosis are detected.
Echocardiogram is often warranted in differential diagnostics.
Still's murmur
Common innocent murmur in children, audible still in adolescence
Heard in mid-systole, musical (vibratory) in quality, intensity usually 2/6
Heard in the 3
rd
or 4
th
left intercostal space parasternally, typically better when the patient is in sitting position
Venous hum
In children and young adults
Heard as a continuous hum in the neck and supraclavicular fossa, particularly in the right
Disappears when pressure is applied to the internal jugular vein or when the patient is lying in the supine position. Louder during inspiration.
Related Keywords
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ATC Code:
Primary/Secondary Keywords
pulmonary ejection sound
ejection murmur
venous hum
diastolic murmur
Aortic Valve
aortic ejection sound
Brachiocephalic Trunk
Pulmonary Valve
physiological murmur
Aorta
turbulence
innocent heart murmur
Heart Murmurs
Stll´s murmur
Heart Sounds
Heart Auscultation
K81
R01.1
R01.0