Intracardiac Sound as a Diagnostic Adjunct in Subaortic Stenosis

Author:

Stein Paul D.1,Sabbah Hani N.1,Anbe Daniel T.1,Khaja Fareed1,Folger Gordon M.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan

Abstract

The purpose of this investigation is to demonstrate the potential diagnostic value of intracardiac sound recordings in patients with subaortic stenosis. Intra cardiac pressure and sound were measured in 10 patients with various types of subaortic obstructions using a catheter-tip micromanometer. Seven patients had idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis (IHSS), 2 had a subvalvular membrane, and 1 had a subvalvular tunnel. Within the left ventricular cavity, at the site of maximal systolic left ven tricular pressure, either there was no systolic murmur, or the murmur was of low intensity. However, within the outflow tract of the left ventricle, distal to the site of intraventricular obstruction, a prominent systolic murmur was de tected in all patients. This murmur was of higher intensity than the one mea sured distal to the aortic valve. In one patient, in whom no subvalvular obstruction was present, but in whom entrapment of the tip of the catheter occurred, no murmur was detected in the left ventricle even though a subvalvular pressure gradient was observed. Therefore it appears that a systolic murmur recorded with maximal intensity in the outflow tract of the left ventricle may be of substantial help in distinguish ing between an artifactual intraventricular pressure gradient, and one that re sults from intraventricular obstruction.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Reference6 articles.

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3. Turbulent blood flow in humans: its primary role in the production of ejection murmurs.

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