Cases reported "Heart Murmurs"

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1/13. Echocardiographic manifestations of postinfarction ventricular septal rupture.

    The echocardiographic features of three patients with postinfarction ventricular spectal rupture are described. All patients showed a decreased or paradoxical motion on the ventricular septum, and two of the patients demonstrated an unusual motion of the tricuspid valve. There were no abnormalities in mitral valve motion. The echocardiogram can be helpful in the diagnosis of postinfarction ventricular septal rupture and can assist in distinguishing this condition from acute disruption of the mitral valve complex.
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2/13. Paradoxical motion of the interventricular septum with right ventricular dilatation in the absence of shunting: report of two cases.

    A history, heart murmur, electrocardiogram and chest x-ray film suggesting an atrial septal defect associated with an echocardiogram revealing paradoxical motion of the interventricular septum with a dilated right ventricle may be considered indicative of a secundum or primum defect in a young adult or child. Two patients who fulfill all these criteria and had the presumptive diagnosis of an atrial septal defect were found at cardiac catheterization to have no demonstrable left to right shunt or other significant abnormality. The results of standard T-M mode echocardiograms were verified with B scan ultrasonograms. These cases may represent an early stage in the development of a cardiomyopathy. There is no echocardiogram pathognomonic of an atrial septal defect, and patients whose history and echocardiogram suggest this defect should have further diagnostic evaluation including technetium scan or cardiac catheterization.
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3/13. Beneficial effect of cibenzoline on left ventricular pressure gradient with sigmoid septum.

    An 83-year-old woman with hypertension was admitted to hospital with episodes of dyspnea on effort after having breakfast. physical examination revealed a systolic murmur at the left sternal border in the third to fourth intercostal space. Cross-sectional echocardiography showed a sigmoid-shaped interventricular septum markedly protruding into the left ventricle, concentric left ventricular hypertrophy, systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve, and a resultant left ventricular outflow tract obstruction with a pressure gradient of 121.8 mmHg. She began daily treatment with 60 mg metoprolol. However, the chest symptoms were not relieved and the left ventricular outflow tract obstruction was still visible on echocardiography. She was then given 200 mg daily of cibenzoline, in addition to 40 mg metoprolol, and the left ventricular pressure gradient significantly decreased and she was free of symptoms without any complications. This case shows that cibenzoline may be useful in the treatment of left ventricular outflow tract obstruction caused by sigmoid septum.
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4/13. Giant congenital coronary artery fistula to left brachial vein clearly detected by multidetector computed tomography.

    Coronary artery fistulas (CAF) are a rare anomaly in which there is communication between a coronary artery and a cardiac chamber or another vascular structure. A giant congenital CAF to the left brachial vein was identified clearly by multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) in an 84-year-old woman who presented with orthopnea and continuous murmur. Electrocardiogram was almost normal, but chest X-ray showed marked cardiomegaly with pulmonary congestion. Transthoracic echocardiography showed that the wall motion of the left ventricle (LV) was normal, but with an abnormal cavity behind the LV. CAF was suspected and coronary angiography revealed that the CAF originated from the right coronary artery (RCA), connected to the giant vessel. However, because the drainage site was not clearly detected, MDCT was performed and it became clear that the CAF originated from the RCA. The left circumflex artery flowed into the giant vessel, and drained to the left brachial vein.
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5/13. Transient mitral regurgitation due to mitral valve prolapse accompanied by systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve.

    A grade 4/6 systolic murmur, systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve (SAM), and severe mitral regurgitation (MR) documented by two-dimensional Doppler echocardiography developed suddenly on the structurally normal heart of a patient with idiopathic portal hypertension. The patient did not have signs of congestive heart failure and the aforementioned phenomenon disappeared completely when the patient was in hepatic failure. This could be explained by a change in circulating blood volume either by gastrointestinal hemorrhage or hepatic failure.
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6/13. Abnormal mitral valve motion associated with ventricular septal defect following acute myocardial infarction.

    It is often difficult to make the clinical distinction between acute mitral regurgitation caused by papillary muscle dysfunction or rupture and ventricular septal defect complicating an acute myocardial infarction. A case of a patient with rapidly progressive congestive heart failure and a loud murmur is presented. echocardiography strongly suggested the presence of a flail posterior mitral leaflet. However, the patient was subsequently found to have rupture of the interventricular septum. This diagnosis was made with bedside right heart catheterization and was later confirmed by left ventriculography and direct inspection at the time of surgery. The mitral valve apparatus was completely normal. Thus this case demonstrates the apparent lack of specificity of the accepted echocardiographic criteria for flail mitral leaflet and acutely ruptured interventricular septum, and the potential necessity of cardiac catheterization to distinguish between these entities.
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7/13. Idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis and ventricular preexcitation.

    Two patients who had idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis (IHSS) and type A ventricular preexcitation were studied and showed variations of the subvalvular flow gradients. The increase in subvalvular gradient, occurring at a time when preexcitation developed, was associated with significant increase of the systolic murmur and the systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve. In patient 1, the significant increase in subvalvular gradient during ventricular preexcitation was also confirmed by catheterization of the left side of the heart. The increase of the gradient with the development of the ventricular preexcitation was apparently due to decreased end-diastolic volume. The importance of ventricular volume considered as a variable affecting outflow tract gradient in idopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis is emphasized.
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8/13. The echocardiographic diagnosis of rupture of a papillary muscle.

    The echocardiographic diagnosis of acute rupture of a papillary muscle is described. The pertinent findings included (1) decreased systolic motion of the posterior wall, (2) exaggerated septal motion, (3) left ventricular enlargement and pattern suggesting left ventricular diastolic overload, and (4) bizarre fluttering of posterior leaflet of the mitral valve in diastole, suggesting an unhinging of the mitral valvular apparatus. The echocardiogram is a useful noninvasive tool in the diagnosis of this often fatal complication of myocardial infarction.
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9/13. Mechanism of a musical systolic murmur caused by a degenerated porcine bioprosthetic valve.

    The cause of a musical (cooing) murmur produced by a degenerated bioprosthetic valve in the mitral position was investigated. Spectral analysis of the murmur recorded at the chest wall at the site of the maximum palpable impulse showed virtually all sound in a narrow frequency band around the dominant frequency of 158 hertz. The same valve, surgically removed and mounted in the mitral position in a pulse duplicating system, produced an audible musical murmur detected by a phonocatheter in the atrial chamber. Nearly all of the sound-pressure occurred in a narrow band of frequency around 145 hertz. High speed motion pictures (500 frames/s) showed systolic flutter of a flail leaflet. The frequency of this leaflet flutter was 142 hertz. Hot film anemometry showed minimal turbulence, all located near the margin of the regurgitant leaflet. The intensity of the murmur was unrelated to the intensity of turbulence. A second degenerated bioprosthetic valve that produced in vivo a typical blowing holosystolic mitral regurgitant murmur produced in vitro a murmur with a broad range of frequencies (20 to 500 hertz). With this valve, the intensity of the murmur was related to the intensity of the turbulence. motion pictures showed no leaflet flutter. Flutter of an insufficient valve leaflet causing uniform and periodic high frequency fluctuating pressures therefore appeared to be the cause of the musical quality of the systolic murmur in a degenerated bioprosthetic valve.
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10/13. Double diastolic murmur in mitral stenosis with atrial fibrillation and complete heart block.

    A double diastolic murmur was heard in a patient with mitral stenosis, atrial fibrillation, and complete heart block. Echo-phonocardiographic examination showed two separate opening and closing movements of the mitral valve in the same long diastole. A clear time relation was observed between the valve closing movements and the separate diastolic murmurs, giving support to the theory that the backward motion of the mitral valve against the forward blood flow through the valve is responsible for the production of these murmurs.
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