Mitral Regurgitation - Sound
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Whoa, I have autophony caused by my ears, so I can hear some of my body sounds really loudly, like my talking and breathing, and occasionally I can hear my heart beat. That first example there is really what my heart sounds like... Mitral valve prolapse runs in my family. I'm guessing I've got it. :)
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Two comments bellow me is wrong. Tricuspid is on the left side, on the sternal border. Mitral is more lateral and inferior to it; more or less on the mid clavicular line.
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I NEED SOME SERIOUS HELP! :D
tomorrow will be our case presentation and our case is RHD.. one of our instructor told us to look for the heart MURMUR which is specific in patients with RHD.. i suppose it's the CAREY COOMBS MURMUR. but im not certain.. can someone help me out?? :)
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@balderdash227 Please answer My Telephone , our nmeumonics... Pulmonary ( left-uper chest), Aortic(Right upper chest), Mitral( Left lower chest), Tricuspid ( right-lower chest)... Please Answer My Telephone..
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@anjumhassan yap.it is pansystolic murmur
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@dr.parth s.solangi or anyone else kindly tell the names of all the murmers that this seirs of videos show.the names of all the murmers are important both for cinical and academic intersts.waitng for ur responsese.....
is this murmer pansystloic?
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it's a pansystolic with an s2 and s3 after it
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kindly label all d murmurs.
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@Fiopi13 LUB is the sound produced by the closure of tricuspid and mitral valves and it is S1 that is 1st heart sound preceeded by systole ... And obviously DUB is produced by the closure of semilunar valves and it is S2 that is 2nd heart sound,preceeded by diastole.
Loooosh dub Looooosh Dub
GettingIN2010 2 years ago 24
@AngelOne11 1: location. Aortic sounds are best heard in 2nd intercostal space on right side of sternum. Mitral murmers are best heard at the apex of heart (or 5th intercostal space on the left side in the midclavicular line).
2. Radiation. Aortic murmers can radiate to the carotids (bruits), Mitral sounds may radiate to the (left) axilla. Always check carotids!
There are probably other characteristics like pitch, etc (I think AS is crescend-decresendo, MR is holosystolic [a.k.a. pansystolic])
balderdash227 1 year ago 8