Fourth Heart Sound Gallop 102
Here we present a fourth heart sound occuring in late diastole just prior to the first heart sound. The first heart sound is decreased in intensity and the second heart sound is increased in intensity. The fourth heart sound is produced by an increase in stiffness of the left ventricle due to scar tissue formation. This may be a manifestation of coronary heart disease. A fourth heart sound can also be caused by a greatly thickened left ventricular wall such as with essential hypertension or aortic stenosis. This is shown in the anatomy video. A fourth heart sound is never heard with atrial fibrillation because the contraction of the atria is ineffective in this condition. The fourth heart sound is a low frequency sound best heard with the bell of the stethoscope pressed lightly on the skin of the chest.Auscultation Sounds
 
                    
Position
 
                The patient's position should be supine.
Listening Tips for Fourth Heart Sound Gallop 102
S1:Reduced intensityS2:Increased intensity
Diastole:S4 present - a low-pitched sound
Waveform (Phonocardiogram)
Observe Cardiac Animation for Fourth Heart Sound Gallop 102
Authors and Sources
Authors and Reviewers
- EKG heart rhythm modules: Thomas O'Brien.
- EKG monitor simulation developer: Steve Collmann
- 
                    12 Lead Course: Dr. Michael Mazzini, MD.
- Spanish language EKG: Breena R. Taira, MD, MPH
- Medical review: Dr. Jonathan Keroes, MD
- 
                    Heart sounds and mentorship: W. Proctor Harvey, MD
- Medical review: Dr. Pedro Azevedo, MD, Cardiology
- 
                    Last Update: 1/8/2023 
Sources
- 
                        Electrocardiography for Healthcare Professionals, 5th Edition
                    
                    Kathryn Booth and Thomas O'Brien
 ISBN10: 1260064778, ISBN13: 9781260064773
 McGraw Hill, 2019
- 
                        Rapid Interpretation of EKG's, Sixth Edition
                    
                    
 Dale Dublin
 Cover Publishing Company
- 
                        12 Lead EKG for Nurses: Simple Steps to Interpret Rhythms, Arrhythmias, Blocks, Hypertrophy, Infarcts, & Cardiac Drugs
                    
                    
 Aaron Reed
 Create Space Independent Publishing
- 
                        Heart Sounds and Murmurs: A Practical Guide with Audio CD-ROM 3rd Edition
                    
                    
 Elsevier-Health Sciences Division
 Barbara A. Erickson, PhD, RN, CCRN
- Clinical Heart Disease
                    W Proctor Harvey, MD
 Clinical Heart Disease
 Laennec Publishing; 1st edition (January 1, 2009)
- 
                        The Virtual Cardiac Patient: A Multimedia Guide to Heart Sounds, Murmurs, EKG
                    
                    Jonathan Keroes, David Lieberman
 Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkin)
 ISBN-10: 0781784425; ISBN-13: 978-0781784429
- Project Semilla, UCLA Emergency Medicine, EKG Training Breena R. Taira, MD, MPH
Fourth Heart Sound Gallop 102 | Lessons with Audio and Video | #85




