Title: Cardiovascular Physical Exam Pearls
1Cardiovascular Physical Exam Pearls
- Daniel J. ORourke, MD
- Cardiology Symposium
- December 2004
2Valvular Abnormality
- Cardiovascular Exam
- JVP pressure pulsations
- Carotid Pulse rate, rhythm, rate of rise,
volume, compliance - Inspection
- Palpation LV apical impulse, PMI
- Heart Sounds intensity 2 components to S1 and
S2. Gallops - Murmur
3DDX of a 2 Component S1
- S4-S1 (noncompliant LV)
- S1-Ejection sound (valvular or aortic root
dilatation) - S1-Click (MVP)
- M1-T1 splitting (normal or pathologic - RBBB)
4DDX of a 2 Component S2
- Splitting of S2 (normal, narrow, wide,
paradoxical) - S2-S3 (physiologic vs. pathologic normal LV,
dilated LV) - S2-opening snap (mitral stenosis)
- S2-pericardial knock (constrictive pericarditis)
- S2-tumor plop (atrial myxoma)
5Overview of Murmurs
- Mid Systolic (SEM)
- 1. Physiologic or flow murmur
- 2. Aortic stenosis
- 3. HOCM
- Late Systolic
- 1. Papillary muscle dysfxn
- Holosystolic
- 1. MR
- 2. TR
- 3. VSD
- Early Diastolic
- 1. Aortic regurgitation
- 2. Pulmonic regurgitation
- Mid Late Diastolic
- 1. Mitral stenosis
- 2. Tricuspid stenosis
6Evaluation of Murmurs
- Timing - Systolic vs. Diastolic
- Intensity - Grade I-VI
- Characteristics
- Quality (blowing, harsh, musical)
- Pitch (high or low)
- Duration
- Shape of murmur
- Location
- Radiation
7Clinical ScenarioIn-hospital patient develops a
new murmur
- Clinical question Endocarditis?
- Murmurs associated with left-sided endocarditis
AR, MR - Tachycardia
- Soft S1 severe AR or moderate to severe MR
- Pulmonary edema
- Diastolic murmur (AR), systolic murmur (MR)
- Classic findings of chronic AR are rarely present
- Features of a physiologic or flow murmur
8Physiologic Murmur(Flow, Functional)
- Common in hyperkinetic states
- Caused by rapid ejection of blood
- Starts shortly after S1 and peaks by mid systole
- Intensity related to velocity of blood flow -
Never gt Grade III - Absence of concomitant cardiac pathology
9Pathologic vs. Nonpathologic Murmurs
- Always pathologic if
- Diastolic murmur
- Holosystolic or late systolic murmur
- Continuous murmur
- Grade 4-6 murmurs
- Concomitant cardiac symptoms or exam findings
10Clinical ScenarioKnown AS when do I need to
order a follow-up echo?
- History angina, syncope (lightheadedness),
heart failure (dyspnea) - Physical exam findings
- Mean annual progression
- AVA decreases by 0.1 cm2
- Mean gradient increases by 10 mmHg
- AVA Mean Gradient
- Mild gt1.5 cm2 lt25 mmHg
- Moderate 1.0-1.4 25-49 mmHg
- Severe lt1.0 gt50 mmHg
11Aortic Stenosis
- Three major causes
- Congenital, Rheumatic, and Degenerative
(calcific) - Classic murmur
- Harsh, crescendo-decrescendo SEM at the base
- Radiates to the carotids and/or apex
(Gallavardin) - Clues to assessing severity
- Carotid upstroke
- Duration of the murmur
- Splitting of S2
12Assessing AS Severity by Exam
- Splitting of S2
- Physiologic --gt Mild
- Single --gt Mod/Severe
- Paradoxical --gt Severe
- Murmur Peak
- Early-mid --gt Mild
- Mid-late --gt Moderate
- Late --gt Severe
Sustained LV apical impulse, S4 gallop Moderate
to severe
Delayed, diminished carotid upstroke - Severe
13Obtaining an Echocardiogram Aortic Stenosis
- Indications Class
- Diagnosis and severity of AS I
- Assessment of LV size, function, and/or
hemodynamics I - Reevaluation of patients with known AS with
I - changing symptoms or signs
- Reassessment of asymptomatic patients with severe
AS I
JACC 1998321486-1588.
14Obtaining an Echocardiogram Aortic Stenosis
- Indications Class
- Reassessment of asymptomatic patients with
IIa - mild to moderate AS and LV dysfunction or
- hypertrophy
- Reassessment of asymptomatic patients with stable
III - exam findings and normal LV size and function
JACC 1998321486-1588.
15Frequency of Surveillance Echo
- Asymptomatic, clinically stable patients
- Mild AS Every 5 years
- Moderate AS Every 2 years
- Severe AS Annually
16Chronic Mitral Regurgitation
- Pathophysiologic mechanisms
- Mitral valve leaflets
- Papillary muscles
- Chordae tendinae
- Annulus
- Classic murmur
- High pitched, blowing, holosystolic murmur at the
apex - Radiates to the axilla or left sternal border
17Assessing MR Severity by Exam
- Mild MR
- Normal carotid upstroke
- Normal LV apical impulse
- Heart Sounds
- Normal intensity of S1
- Grade 1-2 murmur
- Moderate-Severe MR
- Carotid pulse - Brisk upstroke
- Hyperdynamic, displaced LV apical impulse
- Heart Sounds
- Soft S1
- S2 widely split
- S3 gallop
18Obtaining a TTE Chronic Mitral Regurgitation
- Indications Class
- Baseline evaluation to quantify severity of MR
I - and assess LV function
- Determine the mechanism of MR
I - Annual or semi-annual surveillance of LV function
I - in asymptomatic severe MR
- To establish cardiac status after a change in sxs
I - Evaluation post MVR to establish baseline status
I - Routine f/u evaluation of mild MR with normal
III - LV size and function
JACC 1998321486-1588.
19Summary
- The cardiovascular exam remains the most widely
used method to screen for heart disease. - Echocardiography is an important noninvasive
method for assessing the significance of cardiac
murmurs and to define cardiac structure and
function.