hidden pixel

Continuous Murmurs Information

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.

References

  1. ^ continuous murmur at Dorland's Medical Dictionary
  2. ^ Gibson murmur at Dorland's Medical Dictionary
  3. ^ Gibson GA 1898 Diseases of the heart and aorta. Pentland, Edinburgh, pp 61, 303, 310–312
  4. ^ 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
Heart disease Tachycardia/Bradycardia · Palpitation Heart sounds: Heart murmur (Systolic, Diastolic, Continuous) · Gallop rhythm (Third heart sound, Fourth heart sound) · Pericardial friction rub · Split S2 · Heart click Cœur en sabot Cardiovascular chest pain Vascular manifestations of heart disease (pulse): Pulsus tardus et parvus · Pulsus paradoxus · doubled (Pulsus bisferiens, Dicrotic pulse, Pulsus bigeminus) · Pulsus alternans · Carotid bruit · Cannon A waves
Vascular disease Bruit · necrosis (Gangrene)
Myeloid/blood
Shock Cardiogenic · Hypovolemic · Distributive (Septic, Neurogenic)
Hyperaemia FunctionalReactive
Anemia Pagophagia

: HRT

//

//, /,

, drug (///),

: VAS

(a:////,v:////)////

////, /,

, drug(+//////)

: MYL

/ (, , , ),

///, /,

drug (//), ,

Categories: Cardiology | Turbulence

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Tue Jul 5 23:08:11 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.