A heart murmur - a frequent incidental finding

Journal: Therapeutische Umschau. Revue Therapeutique
Published:
Abstract

A heart murmur - a frequent incidental finding Abstract. Heart murmurs are very common and are present in up to 80 % of school children and 52 % of adults. They originate from the transition from laminar to turbulent blood flow in patients with a structural cardiomyopathy (so-called "organic" murmurs) or in patients with normal hearts (so-called "innocent" murmurs). A detailed history and physical examination help to discriminate innocent from organic murmurs. With the wide availability of transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) cardiac auscultation has lost a lot of its importance, although it remains an important skill for the initial evaluation and triage. An innocent murmur is a minor (1 / 6 - 2 / 6), crescendo-decrescendo, mostly position-dependent, mid-systolic murmur without radiation, which needs no further workup in asymptomatic patients with normal physical capacity. A TTE should be ordered if signs for a cardiac disease are present based on history, physical examination or other tests. Diastolic and continuous murmurs are mostly pathologic and warrant further workup.

Authors
Simon Frey, Michael Zellweger
Relevant Conditions

Heart Murmurs