enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Heart sounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_sounds

    Heart sounds are the noises generated by the beating heart and the resultant flow of blood through it. Specifically, the sounds reflect the turbulence created when the heart valves snap shut. In cardiac auscultation , an examiner may use a stethoscope to listen for these unique and distinct sounds that provide important auditory data regarding ...

  3. Levine scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levine_scale

    The Levine scaling system persists as the gold standard for grading heart murmur intensity. It provides accuracy, consistency, and interrater agreement which are essential for diagnostic purposes, particularly to distinguish innocent from pathological murmurs. Louder murmurs (grade ≥3) are more likely believed to represent cardiac defects ...

  4. Heart murmur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_murmur

    The sound differs from normal heart sounds by their characteristics. For example, heart murmurs may have a distinct pitch, duration and timing. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The major way health care providers examine the heart on physical exam is heart auscultation ; [ 3 ] another clinical technique is palpation , which can detect by touch when such turbulence ...

  5. Computer-aided auscultation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer-aided_auscultation

    Computer-aided auscultation (CAA), or computerized assisted auscultation, is a digital form of auscultation. It includes the recording, visualization, storage, analysis and sharing of digital recordings of heart or lung sounds. The recordings are obtained using an electronic stethoscope or similarly suitable recording device.

  6. Gallop rhythm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallop_rhythm

    A gallop rhythm refers to a (usually abnormal) rhythm of the heart on auscultation. [1] It includes three or four sounds, thus resembling the sounds of a gallop.. The normal heart rhythm contains two audible heart sounds called S 1 and S 2 that give the well-known "lub-dub" rhythm; they are caused by the closing of valves in the heart.

  7. Phonocardiogram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonocardiogram

    William Birnbaum with a Phonocardiogram System for use in Project Gemini, 1965. Awareness of the sounds made by the heart dates to ancient times. The idea of developing an instrument to record it may date back to Robert Hooke (1635–1703), who wrote: "There may also be a possibility of discovering the internal motions and actions of bodies - whether animal, vegetable, or mineral, by the sound ...

  8. Auscultation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auscultation

    Auscultation (based on the Latin verb auscultare "to listen") is listening to the internal sounds of the body, usually using a stethoscope. Auscultation is performed for the purposes of examining the circulatory and respiratory systems (heart and breath sounds), as well as the alimentary canal. The term was introduced by René Laennec. The act ...

  9. Split S2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split_S2

    Wiggers diagram of various events of a cardiac cycle, with 2nd heart sound at bottom. A split S2 is a finding upon auscultation of the S2 heart sound. [1] It is caused when the closure of the aortic valve (A 2) and the closure of the pulmonary valve (P 2) are not synchronized during inspiration. The second heart sound (S2) is caused by the ...