Sign-in, or Join our Auscultation-Essentials plan. Join

Aortic Stenosis - Severe #2 Auscultation Lesson with Recordings

Virtual Auscultation

patient torso with stethoscope chestpiece

patient position during auscultation
The patient's position is sitting.

Lesson

In Severe Aortic Stenosis there is a diamond shaped systolic murmur which lasts throughout systole. The murmur is loud and higher pitched than the murmur of mild aortic stenosis. It is caused by calcification of the aortic valve leaflets. There is a fourth heart sound heard in late diastole (just before the first heart sound). This is caused by the increased left ventricular wall thickness and stiffness. S1 is normal. S2 is louder than normal. In fact, you are hearing only the accentuated pulmonic component of S2 due to heart failure on the left side. The aortic ejection click heard in mild cases of valvular aortic stenosis is gone. In the anatomy video you can see the greatly thickened left ventricular wall and the almost totally immobile aortic leaflets.
1

Waveform




Heart Sounds Video



Authors and Sources

Authors and Reviewers

Sources

? v:9 | onAr:0 | onPs:0 | tLb:0 | tLbJs:0
isPageNeedsInvoke:False | isTc: False
isHome:False | uStat: False | db:0 | pu:False | jsNext:False | pv:1 | now: 11/3/2024 5:54:06 AM | n? True | i? True
pu:False | ads: True | iparam: 0 | firstPage? True | showD? False





An error has occurred. Please reload the page or visit our other website, Practical Clinical Skills. Reload 🗙