Atrial septal defect physical examination: Difference between revisions
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==Cardiac Sounds== | ==Cardiac Sounds== | ||
In unaffected individuals, there are respiratory variations in the splitting of the second heart sound (S<sub>2</sub>). During respiratory '''inspiration, the negative intrathoracic pressure''' causes '''increased blood return''' into the right side of the heart. The increased blood volume in the right ventricle causes the '''pulmonic valve to stay open longer during ventricular systole'''. This causes a normal '''delay in the P<sub>2</sub> component of S<sub>2</sub>'''. During expiration, the positive intrathoracic pressure causes decreased blood return to the right side of the heart. The reduced volume in the right ventricle allows the pulmonic valve to close earlier at the end of ventricular systole, causing P<sub>2</sub> to occur earlier. '''In individuals with an atrial septal defect, there is a fixed splitting of S<sub>2</sub>. Fixed splitting occurs as a result of the extra blood return during inspiration equalized by the intraseptal communication between the left and right atrium allowed by the defect.''' | |||
'''Fixed Splitting of S<sub>2</sub>''' | |||
* Heart sound- S1 is typically split | * Heart sound- S1 is typically split | ||
* Increased S2 intensity, (due to increased right ventricular contraction) | |||
* Widely fixed split S2 ( occur due to reduced respiratory variation due to delayed pulmonic valve closure | |||
==Murmurs== | ==Murmurs== |
Revision as of 01:47, 21 August 2011
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editors-In-Chief: Priyamvada Singh, M.B.B.S. [[2]]; Cafer Zorkun, M.D., Ph.D. [3]; Assistant Editor-In-Chief: Kristin Feeney, B.S. [[4]]
Overview
Upon physical examination, a patient with an atrial septal defect may present with an ejection systolic murmur caused by the fixed splitting of S2.
Physical examination
The physical findings in an adult with an ASD include those related directly to:
- The degree of left-to-right intracardiac shunt
- Size of defect
- Associated anomalies
General physical examination
Cardiovascular examination
- Precordial palpation
- Atrial enlargement can cause a precordial bulge that makes Harrison's groove, which are a horizontal line at the lower margin of the thorax where the diaphragm attaches to the ribs, founds along the sixth and seventh costal cartilages.
- A hyperdynamic impulse in the right ventricle can cause a right ventricular heave where there is an increased diastolic filling and large stroke volume, found along the left sternal board and subxiphoid area.
- Pulsatile, enlarged pulmonary artery palpation can be felt at the second left intercostal space where a more pronounced pulse may be felt if pulmonary hypertension is present
- Underdevelopment/below-average size for age
Cardiac Sounds
In unaffected individuals, there are respiratory variations in the splitting of the second heart sound (S2). During respiratory inspiration, the negative intrathoracic pressure causes increased blood return into the right side of the heart. The increased blood volume in the right ventricle causes the pulmonic valve to stay open longer during ventricular systole. This causes a normal delay in the P2 component of S2. During expiration, the positive intrathoracic pressure causes decreased blood return to the right side of the heart. The reduced volume in the right ventricle allows the pulmonic valve to close earlier at the end of ventricular systole, causing P2 to occur earlier. In individuals with an atrial septal defect, there is a fixed splitting of S2. Fixed splitting occurs as a result of the extra blood return during inspiration equalized by the intraseptal communication between the left and right atrium allowed by the defect.
Fixed Splitting of S2
- Heart sound- S1 is typically split
- Increased S2 intensity, (due to increased right ventricular contraction)
- Widely fixed split S2 ( occur due to reduced respiratory variation due to delayed pulmonic valve closure
Murmurs
During auscultation of the heart, a clinician may find evidence of abnormal heart sounds produced by a cardiac murmur. Atrial septal defect, being a condition that directly influences the hemodynamics between the right and left ventricle, has multiple types of associated murmurs such as: Crescendo-decrescendo systolic ejection murmur.
- Heard best at 2nd intercostal space at upper left sternal border.
- Occur due to increased right ventricular stroke volume across pulmonary outflow tract
Rumbling middiastolic murmur
- In large left-to-right shunts
- Low-to-medium frequency
- Heard best at the lower left sternal border because of increased flow across the tricuspid valve.
- Ostium primum defect+cleft of the mitral valve can have an apical murmur of mitral regurgitation.
- In ostium secundum defects, it is the mitral valve prolapse where the holosystolic murmur of the mitral regurgitation emitting to the axilla is audible
Pulmonic regurgitation
- Low-pitched diastolic murmur
- caused by pulmonary artery dilatation
- Patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension and right ventricular hypertrophy- S4 may be present, narrow S2 splitting with accentuated pulmonic component, and murmur of pulmonic regurgitation may be audible.
- Cyanosis and clubbing in case Eisenmenger's develops
- Only associated with a thrill when there is a very large left-to-right shunt or the presence of a pulmonic stenosis
<youtube v=5tBk1XuEyuM/>
In individuals with an atrial septal defect, there is a fixed splitting of S2. Fixed splitting occurs as a result of the extra blood return during inspiration equalized by the intraseptal communication between the left and right atrium allowed by the defect.
Extrcardiac features
- Deformed carpal bones
- Deformed thumbs
- Holt-Oram syndrome
- Deformed radial bones