Korotkoff sounds

Korotkoff sounds

Korotkoff are the sounds that medical personnel listen for when they are taking blood pressure using a non-invasive procedure. They are named after Dr. Nikolai Korotkoff, a Russian physician who described them in 1905, when he was working at the Imperial Medical Academy in St. Petersburg.

Description

The sounds heard during measurement of blood pressure are not the same as the heart sounds 'lub' and 'dub' which are due to the closing of the hearts valves. If a stethoscope is placed over the brachial artery in the antecubital fossa in a normal person (without arterial disease), no sound should be audible. As the heart beats, these pulses are transmitted smoothly via laminar (non-turbulent) blood flow throughout the arteries and no sound is produced.

If the cuff of a sphygmomanometer is placed around a patient's upper arm and inflated to a pressure above the patient's systolic blood pressure, there will similarly be no sound audible. This is because the pressure in the cuff is high enough such that it completely occludes the blood flow. It is similar to a flexible tube or pipe with fluid in it that is being pinched shut.

If the pressure is dropped to a level equal to that of the patient's systolic blood pressure, the first Korotkoff sound will be heard. As the pressure in the cuff is the same as the pressure produced by the heart, some blood will be able to pass through the upper arm when the pressure in the artery rises during systole. This blood flows in spurts as the pressure in the artery rises above the pressure in the cuff and then drops back down, resulting in turbulence that results in audible sound.

As the pressure in the cuff is allowed to fall further, thumping sounds continue to be heard as long as the pressure in the cuff is between the systolic and diastolic pressures, as the arterial pressure keeps on rising above and dropping back below the pressure in the cuff.

Eventually, as the pressure in the cuff drops further, the sounds change in quality, then become muted, then disappear altogether. As the pressure in the cuff drops below the diastolic blood pressure, the cuff no longer provides any restriction to blood flow allowing the blood flow to become smooth again with no turbulence and thus produce no further audible sound.

The 5 Korotkoff sounds

Korotkoff actually described 5 types of Korotkoff sounds:
# The first Korotkoff sound is the snapping sound first heard at the systolic pressure.
# The second sounds are the murmurs heard for most of the area between the systolic and diastolic pressures.
# The third and-
# the fourth sound, at pressures within 10 mmHg above the diastolic blood pressure were described as "thumping" and "muting".
# The fifth Korotkoff sound is silence as the cuff pressure drops below the diastolic blood pressure.

ystolic and diastolic blood pressure

Traditionally, the systolic blood pressure is taken to be the pressure at which the first Korotkoff sound is first heard and the diastolic blood pressure is the pressure at which the fourth Korotkoff sound is just barely audible. However, there has recently (2000 onwards) been a move towards the use of the 5th Korotkoff sound (i.e. silence) as the diastolic blood pressure, as this has been felt to be more reproducible. [Citation
author-link = Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
year = 2006
title = Best Practices: Evidence-Based Nursing Procedures
edition = 2nd
publisher = Lippincott Williams
isbn = 158255532X
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=HXWmZ9cdBbsC
]

ee also

* Auscultatory gap
* Pulse pressure

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Korotkoff sounds — Ko·rot·koff sounds also Ko·rot·kow sounds or Ko·rot·kov sounds kȯ rȯt kȯf .sau̇ndz n pl arterial sounds heard through a stethoscope applied to the brachial artery distal to the cuff of a sphygmomanometer that change with varying cuff pressure… …   Medical dictionary

  • Korotkoff method sounds test — Ko·rot·koff method, sounds, test (kə rotґkof) [Nicolai Sergeevich Korotkoff, Russian physician, 1874–1920] see under method, sound, and test …   Medical dictionary

  • auscultatory sounds — sounds heard on auscultation, such as heart sounds, Korotkoff sounds, breath sounds, or adventitious sounds …   Medical dictionary

  • Korotkoff — Nikolai S., Russian physician, 1874–1920. See K. sounds, under sound, K. test …   Medical dictionary

  • Nikolai Korotkov — This article is about Russian surgeon. For Russian soccer player, see Nikolai Korotkov (footballer). Nikolai Korotkov Николай Коротков Nicolai Korotkov in 1900 …   Wikipedia

  • Sphygmomanometer — BP 126/70 mmHg as result on electronic sphygmomanometer …   Wikipedia

  • Pulsus paradoxus — In medicine, a pulsus paradoxus (PP), also paradoxic pulse and paradoxical pulse, is an exaggeration of the normal variation in the pulse during the inspiratory phase of respiration, in which the pulse becomes weaker as one inhales and stronger… …   Wikipedia

  • sound — 1. The vibrations produced by a sounding body, transmitted by the air or other medium, and perceived by the internal ear. 2. An elongated cylindrical, usually curved, instrument of metal, used for exploring the bladder or other cavities of the… …   Medical dictionary

  • 5 (number) — This article discusses the number five. For the year 5 AD, see 5. For other uses of 5, see 5 (disambiguation). 5 −1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 → List of numbers Integers …   Wikipedia

  • Cushing reflex — (also referred to as the vasopressor response, the Cushing effect, the Cushing reaction, the Cushing phenomenon, the Cushing response, or Cushing s Law) is a physiological nervous system response to increased intracranial pressure (ICP) that… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”