Signs of aortic stenosis
The patient is usually well unless suffering from infective endocarditis or heart failure.
The clinical signs of aortic stenosis are classified as shown:
- pulse:
- rhythm:
- usually in sinus rhythm
- atrial fibrillation suggests rheumatic aetiology with co-existing mitral stenosis
- amplitude - this is reduced
- rhythm:
- wave form - slow upstroke (plateau pulse)
- jugular venous pressure - this is often normal unless right ventricular failure has developed due to pulmonary hypertension resulting from left ventricular failure
- cardiac impulses - left ventricular hypertrophy can often be detected (impulse prominent if the patient is inclined to the left)
- auscultation
- ejection murmur:
- loud in the aortic area, at the apex and in the neck
- in an elderly patient this may be maximal at the apex
- ejection click:
- usually loudest at the apex
- if severe valve calcification then will be absent
- an ejection click excludes supra- or subaortic stenosis
- ejection murmur:
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