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  2. Pulmonary valve stenosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulmonary_valve_stenosis

    Pulmonary valve stenosis. Pulmonary valve stenosis (PVS) is a heart valve disorder. Blood going from the heart to the lungs goes through the pulmonary valve, whose purpose is to prevent blood from flowing back to the heart. In pulmonary valve stenosis this opening is too narrow, leading to a reduction of flow of blood to the lungs. [1][5]

  3. Pulmonic stenosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulmonic_stenosis

    Pulmonic stenosis is usually due to isolated valvular obstruction (pulmonary valve stenosis), but it may be due to subvalvular or supravalvular obstruction, such as infundibular stenosis. It may occur in association with other congenital heart defects as part of more complicated syndromes (for example, tetralogy of Fallot). [citation needed]

  4. Graham Steell murmur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham_Steell_murmur

    A Graham Steell murmur is a heart murmur typically associated with pulmonary regurgitation. [1][2] It is a high pitched early diastolic murmur heard best at the left sternal edge in the second intercostal space with the patient in full inspiration, originally described in 1888. [citation needed] The murmur is heard due to a high velocity flow ...

  5. Heart murmur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_murmur

    Pulmonary valve regurgitation presents as a diastolic decrescendo murmur. One may hear it at the left lower sternal border. A palpable S2 in the second left intercostal space correlates with pulmonary hypertension due to mitral stenosis. The cooing dove murmur is a cardiac murmur with a musical quality (high pitched).

  6. Ross procedure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ross_procedure

    The Ross procedure, also known as pulmonary autograft, is a heart valve replacement operation to treat severe aortic valve disease, such as in children and young adults with a bicuspid aortic valve. [1] It involves removing the diseased aortic valve, situated at the exit of the left side of the heart (where the aorta begins), and replacing it ...

  7. Pulmonary regurgitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulmonary_regurgitation

    Pulmonary (or pulmonic[4]) regurgitation (or insufficiency, incompetence) is a condition in which the pulmonary valve is incompetent [5] and allows backflow from the pulmonary artery to the right ventricle of the heart during diastole. [6] While a small amount of backflow may occur ordinarily, it is usually only shown on an echocardiogram and ...

  8. Valvular heart disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valvular_heart_disease

    See media help. Valvular heart disease is any cardiovascular disease process involving one or more of the four valves of the heart (the aortic and mitral valves on the left side of heart and the pulmonic and tricuspid valves on the right side of heart). These conditions occur largely as a consequence of aging, [1] but may also be the result of ...

  9. Functional murmur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_murmur

    A functional murmur (innocent murmur, physiologic murmur) is a heart murmur that is primarily due to physiologic conditions outside the heart, as opposed to structural defects in the heart itself. [1] Serious conditions can arise even in the absence of a primary heart defect, and it is possible for peripheral conditions to generate ...

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