Cardiovascular Disease
Part 3 completes the cardiovascular examination with detailed murmur analysis, blood pressure measurement techniques, and heart failure assessment. Mastering these final components enables comprehensive cardiac diagnosis and clinical correlation.
🎵 Heart Murmurs: Turbulent Blood Flow
Murmur Fundamentals
Murmur Causes:
- Valve stenosis: Incomplete opening
- Valve regurgitation: Incomplete closure
- High flow states: Excessive blood through normal valves
- Structural defects: Septal defects, shunts
Murmur Grading (1-6):
🎯 Grade 1
- Very quiet, barely audible
- Requires optimal listening conditions
🎯 Grade 2
- Moderately loud
- Clearly audible with stethoscope
🎯 Grade 3
- Loud intensity
- Associated palpable thrill
🎯 Grade 4
- Very loud with thrill
- Audible without stethoscope
🔊 Essential Murmurs Mastery
Key Pathological Murmurs
Mitral Regurgitation:
🎯 Timing & Location
- Type: Pan-systolic
- Location: Apex
- Radiation: Axilla
🎯 Characteristics
- Usually grade 3 intensity
- High-pitched, blowing quality
- Auscultation: Bell at apex, follow to axilla
Ventricular Septal Defect (VSD):
🎯 Timing & Location
- Type: Pan-systolic
- Location: Left sternal border (3rd-4th space)
- Radiation: Minimal radiation
🎯 Characteristics
- Rough, harsh quality
- Associated thrill common
- Holosystolic timing
Mitral Stenosis:
🎯 Timing & Location
- Type: Mid-diastolic rumble
- Location: Apex only (non-radiating)
- Low-pitched, rumbling character
🎯 Associated Findings
- Loud S1 (snapping quality)
- Opening snap after S2
- Pre-systolic accentuation (sinus rhythm)
- Technique: Bell at apex, left lateral position
Aortic Regurgitation:
🎯 Timing & Location
- Type: Early diastolic decrescendo
- Location: Left sternal border
- High-pitched, blowing quality
🎯 Auscultation Technique
- Use diaphragm
- Patient sitting up, exhaled breath hold
- Listen along left sternal border
Aortic Stenosis:
🎯 Timing & Location
- Type: Ejection systolic (diamond-shaped)
- Location: 2nd right intercostal space
- Radiation: Right carotid artery
🎯 Auscultation Technique
- Use diaphragm at aortic area
- Follow sound radiation to neck
- Note crescendo-decrescendo pattern
📏 Blood Pressure Measurement
Accurate BP Assessment
Equipment & Preparation:
🎯 Cuff Selection
- Cover 40% of arm circumference
- Oversized cuffs for large arms
- Error: Small cuff → falsely high reading
🎯 Patient Positioning
- Arm at heart level
- Supported, relaxed position
- No talking or leg crossing
Measurement Technique:
🎯 Step-by-Step
- Palpate brachial artery
- Inflate until pulse disappears + 30 mmHg
- Place stethoscope over brachial artery
- Deflate slowly (2 mmHg/heartbeat)
- Systolic: First Korotkoff sound (Phase I)
- Diastolic: Sound disappearance (Phase V)
Korotkoff Sounds:
🎯 Phase I
- First tapping sounds
- Records: Systolic pressure
🎯 Phase II
- Murmur-like quality
- Softer, swishing sounds
🎯 Phase III
- Loud, crisp sounds
- Clear knocking quality
🎯 Phase IV
- Muffled, abrupt softening
- Sometimes used for diastolic in children
🎯 Phase V
- Complete sound disappearance
- Standard diastolic: Adult measurement
💔 Heart Failure Syndromes
Clinical Heart Failure Patterns
Right Heart Failure:
🎯 Key Signs
- Elevated JVP (pulsatile)
- Hepatomegaly (soft, tender)
- Dependent edema (ankles, sacrum)
- Weight gain from fluid retention
Left Heart Failure:
🎯 Key Signs
- Cardiomegaly (displaced apex beat)
- Bilateral basal crackles (non-clearing)
- S3 gallop rhythm
- Tachypnea, orthopnea
🎯 Symptoms
- Orthopnea (multiple pillow use)
- Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea (PND)
- Pink, frothy sputum (pulmonary edema)
- Exercise intolerance
Congestive Heart Failure:
- Right heart failure secondary to left heart failure
- Combined signs of both syndromes
- Biventricular failure presentation
Cor Pulmonale:
🎯 Definition
- Right heart failure from lung disease
- Not primary cardiac pathology
🎯 Signs & Symptoms
- Right ventricular hypertrophy
- Lung disease crackles (bronchiectasis, fibrosis)
- Sticky, colored sputum (not pink/frothy)
- Underlying respiratory symptoms
🎯 Clinical Success Strategies
Final Examination Tips
Essential Practices:
🎯 History Priority
- Chest pain characterization is diagnostic
- Dyspnea patterns guide differential diagnosis
- Risk factor assessment crucial
🎯 JVP Assessment
- Easy to overlook but highly informative
- Right atrial pressure window
- Waveform analysis provides specific diagnoses
🎯 Murmur Timing
- Time with carotid pulse palpation
- Systolic vs. diastolic differentiation critical
- Character and radiation patterns diagnostic
Comprehensive Approach:
🎯 Peripheral Assessment
- Check all pulse sites systematically
- Detect coarctation (femoral delay)
- Identify peripheral vascular disease
🎯 Precordial Examination
- Listen beyond four classic areas
- Systematic precordial mapping
- Detect murmur radiation patterns
🎯 Special Maneuvers
- Collapsing pulse test
- Hepatojugular reflex assessment
- Positioning for optimal murmur detection
Clinical Wisdom: The cardiovascular examination tells a comprehensive story. Begin with broad assessment (inspection, periphery), focus progressively (neck, pulses), and culminate with detailed cardiac examination. Each finding contributes to the complete clinical picture.