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         Heart Murmurs:     more books (85)
  1. Assessment - Abnormal Heart Sounds and Murmurs: Clinical Cards
  2. Murmurs of Heart
  3. Physical assessment of the adult heart (AVC nursing series) by Anne Fero Chestnut, 1979
  4. The diagnosis and treatment of heart disease: Practical points for students and practitioners by E. M Brockbank, 1916
  5. The murmurs of debility in the pulmonary and tricuspid areas: Read before the Medico-Chirurgical Society of Edinburgh 5th April 1882 by William Russell, 1882
  6. Cardiac murmurs by James R Leaming, 1868
  7. The significance of cardiorespiratory and subclavian artery murmurs by H. R. M Landis, 1911
  8. Abstract of paper on the cardiac murmur: Commonly called auriculo-systolic by David Caldwell M'Vail, 1887
  9. Un soplo en el corazon de la patria / A Murmur In the Heart of the Country: Instantaneas De La Crisis (Spanish Edition) by Sabina Berman, 2007-06-30
  10. Heart Sounds and Murmurs Across the Life by Erickson, 2003-11-06
  11. Heart Sounds and Murmurs Across the Lifespan by Barbara Erickson, 2003
  12. Heart sounds and murmurs
  13. PHYSIOLOGICAL ORIGINS OF HEART SOUNDS AND MURMURS by JOHN MICHAEL CRILEY, 1997
  14. Heart Sounds and Murmurs: A Clinical and Phonocardiographic Study

81. Heart Murmurs : Irish Heart Foundation - Healthier Lifestyle::Heart Disease::Str
Irish Heart Foundation Healthier LifestyleHeart DiseaseStress ReductionQuit SmokingPatient QueriesResuscitationCardiovascular Disease Heart
http://www.irishheart.ie/iopen24/catalog/defaultarticle.php?cArticlePath=68_191_

82. Recognizing Normal Heart Murmurs: A Logic-based Mnemonic -- Sapin 99 (4): 616 --
heart murmurs are present in most pediatric patients, and almost all are My logicbased mnemonic for normal heart murmurs therefore begins with the
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/99/4/616
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This Article Extract Full Text (PDF) P ... Citation Map Services E-mail this article to a friend Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in PubMed Alert me to new issues of the journal ... Download to citation manager PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by Sapin, S. O. Related Collections Office Practice PEDIATRICS Vol. 99 No. 4 April 1997, pp. 616-618
EXPERIENCE AND REASON:
Recognizing Normal Heart Murmurs: A Logic-based Mnemonic
INTRODUCTION Top
Introduction
Conclusion
References A logic-based mnemonic for the auscultory diagnosis of nonpathologic murmurs, which I developed for teaching medical students and house staff, is presented with the hope of improving the auscultatory skills of primary care pediatric practitioners. The objective is positive identification of nonpathologic murmurs rather than diagnosis by exclusion. The auscultatory features of these murmurs are largely determined by their causative mechanisms. The logic, therefore, is based on an understanding of these mechanisms so

83. Murmurs Of The Heart
Discussion by Daniel J. Waters, D.O., FCCP on the causes and diagnosing of this disorder.
http://www.mcclinic.com/MCC/murmurs.htm
Murmurs of the Heart A heart murmur is a sound produced as blood flows through the chambers and large blood vessels of the heart during the cardiac cycle of contraction and relaxation. Some murmurs are benign or harmless and are more of a finding than a condition. A benign murmur is not associated with any significant underlying abnormality of the heart or its vessels. Many young people can have benign flow murmurs and still have normal cardiac structure and function. A pathologic heart murmur is one associated with a structural or functional abnormality of the heart. Most murmurs are produced as blood flows past the cardiac valves, which separate the chambers of the heart, or through the valves that lead to the great vessels of the lungs and the systemic circulation. If the flow is excessive or turbulent, a murmur may be manifest. Blood flowing through a tight valve will produce a murmur. Blood that is leaking back across an improperly sealing valve also can cause a murmur. Occasionally, abnormal communications (holes) between chambers of the heart can result in the presence of a murmur. Diagnosing a heart murmur begins with auscultation of (listening to) the heart-usually with a stethoscope. The location, quality, pitch and variation in the sound are all important clues to whether the murmur is benign or pathologic. One of the most useful tests in evaluating a murmur is an echocardiogram. This is a sound wave test that produces a real-time image of the beating heart and is very good in assessing the status and function of the cardiac valves and chambers. Sometimes further studies, such as cardiac catheterization, will be required to further track down the specific abnormality and its significance, and to determine which cases will require treatment.

84. HeartLab: FamilyPractice.com
Provides text and icons to illustrate examination technique, describing both chest locations and patient maneuvers that are usually best to identify particular physical findings. Users can select the listening location to hear (simulated) normal and abnormal heart sounds and murmurs. Requires that Java and JavaScript be enabled.
http://www.familypractice.com/heartlab/heartlab.htm
This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

85. Hearing Aid For Doctors
Stethtron electronic stethoscope provides powerful amplification of heart sounds, murmurs, respiration sounds, and easier ausculation diagnosis.
http://hearing-aid.tripod.com
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Powerful Electronic Stethoscope Hearing Aid for doctors
Auscultaion is easy !
Diagnosis is simple
and more reliable
Loud and Distinct
Crystal-clear
respiration sounds
and cardiac murmurs

STETHTRON
specially designed for doctors with hearing loss The STETHTRON Model HG-900 is designed for medical professionals with hearing loss such as:- a) Doctors who can hear and converse normally ; but have difficulty in hearing heart or lung sounds through a stethoscope. Or, those who have difficulty in picking up faint murmurs ; or, blood pressure sounds. b) Doctors who use a Hearing-Aid to compensate for mild to high neuro-sensory hearing loss. With the hearing-aid, they are able to listen and manage normal conversation ; but are unable to use the conventional stethoscope, which is so essential in their medical practice. Stethtron has a built-in miniature amplifier that gives 10 times the amplification of the conventional stethoscope. The volume can be adjusted by a graduated potentiometer. It uses an electronic Filter switch to differentiate sounds of variable pitch and special noise-reduction circuitry to minimize external noise.

86. Celine Dion: One Heart
Bob Waliszewski's review maintains a strong, healthy beat, though risqu© murmurs occur when Dion shares unnecessary details about her sex life.
http://www.pluggedinonline.com/music/music/a0001460.cfm
var PageTitle = 'Plugged In Online'; var WebsiteId = "PIO"; var StyleSheet = "http://www.family.org/DFLT_EAF_stylesheet.css"; var LogoImage = "http://www.family.org/welcome/images/logos/pluggedin.gif"; var RefUrl = document.location.href; GENRE
Pop/Adult contemporary
CHART ACTION
Peaked at 2 and sold well over 2 million units.
REVIEWED BY
Bob Waliszewski Celine Dion One Heart
A plea to help the homeless and victims of domestic abuse fills "Love Is All We Need." The power of love is also preached on "One Heart," "Coulda Woulda Shoulda," "I Know What Love Is," "Have You Ever Been in Love" and "Sorry for Love (2003 Version)." Dion is thrilled that, in spite of her faults, her man loves her anyway ("Faith"). She promises a guy who has been deeply wounded that she will comfort and support him ("Stand By Your Side"). Three love songs cross into sexual territory. The married singer describes an all-night romp on "Naked" ("So naked with you/Feels like the first time ... Take me wherever you want to, baby"). "Reveal" shares intimate details of overflowing ecstasy. She recalls a feverish trek for sexual gratification on "I Drove All Night" ("Woke you from your sleep to make love to you/Is that all right"). For the most part

87. McGill Virtual Stethoscope Project
Listen to heart sounds, murmurs, breath sounds, and visualize them with spectra and shockwave animations.
http://sprojects.mmi.mcgill.ca/mvs/mvsteth.htm
Sorry, You are using an incompatible browser which does not support frames. You need Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0 or or better to properly view the McGill Virtual Stethoscope. Older browsers are not guaranteed to be able to play sounds or Shockwave animations. Requirements also include a sound card and speakers or headphones, and Apple's Quicktime plugin and Macromedia's Shockwave plugin. The minimum system requirements are usually met by a multimedia-compliant Intel-486 based PC (66MHz, 24MB RAM) machine running Windows 95 with Direct-X 6.0, or a 68030-based Macintosh running System 7 with 16MB RAM. It is also recommended, but not necessary, that your computer support 800x600 resolution and 16-bit color (>32,000 colors, possible with 1 or 2MB of video card RAM).

88. Apical Thrust
Examination of valve murmurs. Detailed topics such as characteristics, timing, severity, causes and management.
http://www.fpnotebook.com/CV82.htm
Home About Links Index ... Editor's Choice document.write(code); Advertisement Cardiovascular Medicine Examination Congestive Heart Failure ... Jugular Venous Distention Apical Thrust Hypertension Blood Pressure Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring Home Blood Pressure Monitor ... Pulse Pressure Assorted Pages Cardiac Anatomy Heart Auscultation S1 Heart Sound S2 Heart Sound ... J Wave Apical Thrust Point of Maximum Impulse PMI Displaced Cardiac Apex Book Home Page Cardiovascular Medicine Dentistry Dermatology Emergency Medicine Endocrinology Gastroenterology Geriatric Medicine Gynecology Hematology and Oncology HIV Infectious Disease Jokes Laboratory Neonatology Nephrology Neurology Obstetrics Ophthalmology Orthopedics Otolaryngology Pediatrics Pharmacology Practice Management Prevention Psychiatry Pulmonology Radiology Rheumatology Sports Medicine Surgery Urology Chapter Cardiovascular Medicine Index Arrhythmia Coronary Artery Disease Congestive Heart Failure EKG Endocrinology Examination Ophthalmology Geriatric Medicine Hypertension Infectious Disease Laboratory General Hyperlipidemia Pulmonology Myocardium Neurology Neonatology Obstetrics Pediatrics Pericardium Pharmacology Prevention Procedure Radiology Sports Medicine Surgery Symptom Evaluation Valvular Disease Vessel Page Examination Index Anatomy CHF JVD CHF PMI Heart Heart Sound First Heart Sound Second Heart Sound Third Heart Sound Fourth Htn BP Htn BP Ambulatory Htn BP Home Htn Renin Angiotensin Hypotension Orthostatic Peds Murmur Peds Murmur Innocent Physiologic PPS Peds Murmur Innocent Pulmonary Flow

89. Common Heart Sounds
Fred Leong M.D looks at common heart sounds and murmurs in infants, innocent murmurs, pathologic murmurs, and diastolic continuous murmurs. Audio as well to hear the heart sounds.
http://www.rain.org/~landon/Heartweb/index.html
Prepared by:
Fred Leong M.D.
Pediatric Cardiogist for the Pediatric Diagnostic Center
For Patients, Parents, and Professionals
To contact us:
Landon Pediatric Foundation
3400 Loma Vista Road Suite 1
Ventura, Cal;ifornia
landon@rain.org

90. Health & Wellness Info From WWW.bcbsga.com
Provides an overview of murmurs of the heart, discussing what it is, are they serious, and how they are treated.
http://www.bcbsga.com/healthWellness/articles/wellAware/art_WA_010.htm
BACK Murmurs of the Heart
You're having a routine checkup when the doctor notices something while listening to your chest through the stethoscope. The doctor says you have a heart murmur, and she would like to check it out further.
What Are Heart Murmurs?
A heart murmur is an extra sound made by blood flowing through the heart valves in the different chambers of your heart. Normally, the heartbeat makes a "lubb-dupp" sound. The "lubb" occurs during systole with closure of the valves separating the upper and lower parts of your heart (the atria and the ventricles respectively). The "dupp" is heard during diastole when the valves close between the ventricles and the large blood vessels (aorta and pulmonary artery) that receive blood from the heart. often a "swish" sound occurs somewhere during the "lubb-dupp" of the normal heartbeat. With his or her training and experience in evaluating heart murmurs, by listening carefully to the timing and characteristics of the extra sound, your physician often can tell whether it represents a potentially serious problem.
Are Murmurs Serious?

91. The Auscultation Assistant - Hear Heart Murmurs, Heart Sounds, And Breath Sounds
Presented are audio of numerous heart sounds and murmurs.
http://www.wilkes.med.ucla.edu/intro.html
The Auscultation Assistant provides heart sounds, heart murmurs, and breath sounds in order to help medical students and others improve their physical diagnosis skills. Since its creation in 1997, it has logged over 175,000 visits.
Christopher Cable, MD
Thanks to for providing the tools to record some of the sounds
In association with

92. Heart Murmur, What Is, NHLBI DCI
A heart murmur is an extra or unusual sound heard during your heartbeat. murmurs range from very faint to very loud and sometimes sound like a whooshing or
http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/Diseases/heartmurmur/hmurmur_what.html

DCI Home
Heart Murmur : What Is ...
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What Is a Heart Murmur?
A heart murmur is an extra or unusual sound heard during your heartbeat. Murmurs range from very faint to very loud and sometimes sound like a whooshing or swishing noise. Normal heartbeat sounds"lub-DUPP" or "lub-DUB"are the sounds of valves closing as blood moves through the heart. (Go to the section on " How the Heart Works " for more information about how the normal heart works.) A heart murmur is not a disease; it is a sound that the doctor hears with the stethoscope. It may be normal for your child, or it could be a sign that something may be wrong. Most heart murmurs are harmless. Some are a sign of a heart problem, especially if other signs or symptoms of a heart problem are present.
Types of Murmurs
Innocent (harmless) murmurs . A person with an innocent murmur has a normal heart and usually has no other symptoms or signs of a heart problem. Innocent murmurs are common in healthy children. Abnormal murmurs . A person with an abnormal murmur usually has other signs or symptoms of a heart problem. Most abnormal murmurs in children are due to congenital heart disease heart defects present at birth. In adults, abnormal murmurs are most often due to heart valve problems caused by infection, disease, or aging.

93. Murmurs And Heart Sounds In Children - Patient UK
murmurs And heart Sounds In Children Patient UK. A directory of UK health, disease, illness and related medical websites that provide patient information.
http://www.patient.co.uk/showdoc/40001956/
PatientPlus articles are written for doctors and so the language can be technical. However, some people find that they add depth to the articles found in the other sections of this website which are written for non-medical people.
Factfile 10/2001
Heart Murmurs in Children
Although a heart murmur is an important presenting feature of a cardiac disorder in infancy and childhood, innocent murmurs are very common, occurring in up to 80% of children at some time or other. These murmurs are frequently detected during a febrile illness and are also exacerbated by nervousness or on exercise. It is important to distinguish between innocent and pathological murmurs and to arrange more detailed evaluation of the child if there is any doubt. Children should be routinely screened for heart murmurs and other evidence of cardiac disorder between 6 and 8 weeks of age and at subsequent examinations during childhood. Serious cardiac pathology may exist without symptoms. Innocent murmurs The commonest innocent murmur in children (usually heard at age 3-6 years, although also occasionally in infants) is the parasternal vibratory ejection systolic murmur ( Still's murmur which has a very characteristic low-frequency 'twanging' or musical quality. It is localised to the left mid-sternal border or midway between the apex and left lower sternal border, is of short duration, low intensity and is loudest when the child is supine often varying markedly with posture. It can be made to disappear on hyperextension of the back and neck (Scott's manoeuvre).

94. Heart Murmur In A Newborn
Many factors may cause murmurs in children, and the condition can be benign or quite serious.
http://parenting.ivillage.com/newborn/nhealth/0,,3q92,00.html
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95. Norton Healthcare® - The Health Illustrated Encyclopedia Article
Have other family members had murmurs or other abnormal heart sounds? Is there any family history of heart problems? What other symptoms are present (such
http://www.nortonhealthcare.com/healthinfo/adam/1/003266.adam
Search Health Care Professionals Norton Employees Careers Contact Us ... health information the health illustrated encyclopedia article Health Information
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Select One Health Information Get Healthy! Magazine Diseases and Conditions Health Risk Assessments Drug Information Center Quality Report Health News Interactive Wellness Tools Pregnancy Health Center Breast Health Buddy Check Child Safety The Body Guide Heart, section through the middle
Heart murmurs and other sounds
Definition: Murmurs are blowing, whooshing, or rasping sounds produced by turbulent blood flow in or near the heart. Often, they are caused by turbulent blood flow through the heart valves.
Alternative Names: Chest sounds - murmurs; Heart sounds - abnormal
Considerations: Heart sounds are evaluated by listening with a stethoscope ( auscultation ). They can be further evaluated with an echocardiogram to see what the exact cause of the murmur is.
The heart has four chambers two upper chambers (called atria) and two lower chambers (ventricles). The heart has valves that temporarily close to permit blood flow in only one direction. The valves are located between the atria and ventricles, and between the ventricles and the major arteries from the heart.

96. The Original Holisticat (TM) FAQs - Heart Problems
A heart murmur occurs when there is turbulence to the normal flow of blood There is a small risk that murmurs can lead to congestive heart failure.
http://www.holisticat.com/hcm.html
Heart Problems
Contact Authors: Sandy and Jean
the information provided below is not intended to replace or override the advice of your veterinarian. Both the author and the site owner assume that this information will be used to work with your vet in planning the best treatment plan for your cat
WHAT IS A HEART MURMUR? A heart murmur occurs when there is turbulence to the normal flow of blood through the chambers of the heart, and is usually due to a problem in a heart valve. When a valve is thickened or damaged and unable to close fully, some of the blood escapes around the valve. A vet can hear a squishing sound which confirms that blood is leaking out of the heart valves during contraction. Murmurs are usually seen in older cats but it is not uncommon to see them in a young kitties. In fact, many kittens are born with murmurs and outgrow them later in life. A lot of cats with murmurs live long healthy lives. There is a small risk that murmurs can lead to congestive heart failure. When older pets have a valve related murmur, the incomplete valve closure is often due to bacterial deposits on the valves. A very common source of this bacteria is dental disease, so it's important to keep your kitty's teeth and gums in good condition.

97. Information On Functional Murmurs - DrGreene.com - Caring For The
During a recent physical exam my son s pediatrician heard a heart murmur. Please explain what is meant by a functional heart murmur and what followup
http://www.drgreene.com/21_368.html

98. Functional Heart Murmur
A functional heart murmur is a harmless heart murmur (abnormal sound) made by a healthy heart beating strongly. As blood rushes with great force out of the
http://www.drhull.com/EncyMaster/F/functional_heart_murmur.html

Help for sleepless parents
Encyclopedia Index F functional heart murmur Search
functional heart murmur
A functional heart murmur is a harmless heart murmur (abnormal sound) made by a healthy heart beating strongly. As blood rushes with great force out of the ventricles of the heart, turbulence in the blood flow can make the walls of the heart vibrate with a characteristic low-pitched "twang." Eighty percent or more of all normal children will be diagnosed at some point with a functional heart murmur. The truth is, if we listen carefully enough to a quiet patient with a good stethoscope we can hear at least a faint murmur in just about every normal child. Functional murmurs are short, often twangy in sound, with an ejection type pattern of crescendo-decrescendo (waxing and waning) intensity. There is an audible gap between the "lup" and the beginning of the murmur, and between the end of the murmur sound and the "dudup."

99. Information About Heart Murmur
This site contains information about heart murmur.
http://www.mamashealth.com/heart/hmurmur.asp

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What is a Heart Murmur?

A heart murmur is a swishing or a whistling sound that the doctor hears when he listens to your heart. The doctor uses a tool called a stethoscope to listen to the heart. A murmur is usually present when there is a heart valve problem. The doctor will perform a variety of tests to determine what kind of valve problem you have and if the valve problem is serious. Some of the tests performed are: an echocardiogram, an electrocardiogram, a chest x-ray, or cardiac catheterization. What Causes a Heart Murmur? There are many different causes of heart murmurs. They can be caused by a heart attack, high blood pressure , rheumatic fever, pregnancy, fever , thyrotoxicosis or anemia . Thyrotoxicosis is a condition caused by an overactive thyroid gland Types of Heart Murmurs? There are two main types of heart murmurs: diastolic and systolic. A diastolic murmur occurs when the heart muscle relaxes between beats. It occurs after the second heart sound. A systolic murmur occurs between the first and second heart sounds. What is a Heart Valve?

100. Heart Murmur Introduction & Symptoms
Health Information on heart Murmur,cardiac souffle,heart,cardiac,sound,resound,valve,anatomic valve,blood,sanguis,examinations,test,dub,dysfunctional
http://my.webmd.com/content/pages/4/1675_51096.htm
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Who We Are About WebMD Site Map You are in All Conditions ADD/ADHD Allergies Alzheimer's Arthritis Asthma Back Pain Bipolar Disorder Breast Cancer Cancer Cholesterol Management Dental Depression Diabetes Epilepsy Eye Health Heart Disease Hepatitis HIV/AIDS Hypertension Men's Conditions Mental Health Migraines/Headaches Multiple Sclerosis Osteoporosis Parkinson's Sexual Conditions Stroke Weight Control Women's Conditions Heart Murmur Heart Center Illustration Learning that you have or your child has a heart murmur can be scary. However, heart murmurs are quite common and often are harmless. More In-Depth Info: Heart Center In particular, they occur in many healthy children, who may or may not outgrow them as adults. They may also occur during pregnancy. Such murmurs are called "innocent" heart murmurs. They are not associated with medical or heart conditions, and do not require treatment or lifestyle changes. Try Our Heart Murmur Quiz Though many murmurs are innocent, some may indicate serious heart problems. For instance, heart murmurs may be caused by blood flowing through a heart valve made leaky or narrow by disease. Murmurs can also be caused by increased blood flow across a valve as a result of medical conditions such as anemia or hypothyroidism. Congenital cardiac defects (heart problems present at birth) can also cause heart murmurs. These often can be repaired with surgery.

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