- Continuous murmurs
-
Heart murmurs are most frequently organized by timing, into systolic heart murmurs and diastolic heart murmurs. However, continuous murmurs can not be directly placed into either category.[1]
These murmurs are due to blood flow from a high pressure chamber or vessel to a lower pressure system.
- Patent ductus arteriosus. PDA is an abnormal connection between the aorta and the pulmonary artery, which normally should be closed in infancy. Since aortic pressure is higher than pulmonary pressure, a continuous murmur occurs. This murmur is often described as a machinery murmur, or Gibson's murmur.[2] This is named for George Alexander Gibson, who characterized it in 1898.[3][4]
- shunts. Usually a left to right shunt through a small atrial septal defect in the presence of mitral valve obstruction.
References
- ^ "continuous murmur" at Dorland's Medical Dictionary
- ^ "Gibson murmur" at Dorland's Medical Dictionary
- ^ Gibson GA 1898 Diseases of the heart and aorta. Pentland, Edinburgh, pp 61, 303, 310–312
- ^ Tynan M (December 2003). "The murmur of the persistently patent arterial duct, or "The Colonel is going to a dance"". Cardiol Young 13 (6): 559–62. PMID 14982298.
Symptoms and signs: circulatory (R00–R03, 785) Cardiovascular Tachycardia/Bradycardia · Palpitation
Heart sounds: Heart murmur (Systolic, Diastolic, Continuous) · Gallop rhythm (Third heart sound, Fourth heart sound) · Pericardial friction rub · Split S2 · Heart clickVascular manifestations of heart disease (pulse): Pulsus tardus et parvus · Pulsus paradoxus · doubled (Pulsus bisferiens, Dicrotic pulse, Pulsus bigeminus) · Pulsus alternans · Carotid bruit · Cannon A wavesMyeloid/blood Categories:- Heart murmurs
- Turbulence
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