1 / 13

Evaluation of Heart Murmurs in the Neonate

Evaluation of Heart Murmurs in the Neonate. By Nikette Neal, MD. Definition. A heart murmur is am extra heart sound cause by turbulent blood flow Murmurs may be common in the first 24-48 hours of life. Changes After Birth. Pulmonary Vascular Resistance begins to fall immediately

Download Presentation

Evaluation of Heart Murmurs in the Neonate

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evaluation of Heart Murmurs in the Neonate By Nikette Neal, MD

  2. Definition • A heart murmur is am extra heart sound cause by turbulent blood flow • Murmurs may be common in the first 24-48 hours of life

  3. Changes After Birth • Pulmonary Vascular Resistance begins to fall immediately • Foramen Ovale closes – within the first hour • Ductus Arteriosus closes – up to 48 hours can be normal • Left heart now the dominant side • Process continues for up to 6-8 weeks

  4. Epidemiology • Murmurs have been reported in an many as 90% of newborns • The prevalence of structural disease is less than 1% • 25% of which requiring surgical intervention • Fewer than 50% of cases of CHD are identified on a prenatal ultrasound

  5. Etiology • Murmurs in asymptomatic neonates may be caused by the following in a neonate: • Turbulent flow through a closing ductusarteriosus • Regurgitant mitral or tricuspid valves • Pulmonic stenosis • Aortic stenosis • Nonphysiologic peripheral pulmonary stenosis • Supravalvularaortic stenosis • Etc.

  6. history • A detailed history is important in determining the need for further work up of murmur • History of Present Illness • Feeding History- infants with structural heart disease tend to have difficulty with tolerating feeds • Associated symptoms while feeding- this includes tachypnea, diaphoresis, fussiness, retractions, or cyanosis • Weight gain- infants with heart disease tend to have poor weight gain • Activity level- lethargy and/or irritability are both associated with murmurs in the newborn.

  7. History con’t • Prenatal history • Prenatal ultrasound results • Medications taken during pregnancy • Alcohol or drug exposure • Comorbid conditions • Family history • Congenital abnormalities • Inheritable conditions related to cardiac conditions • Childhood deaths or first degree relatives with heart disease

  8. Physical Exam • Physical exam is paramount in the diagnosis if cardiac disease in a newborn • Examination of the newborn should include a thorough assessment of the vitals • Especially heart rate, respiratory rate, blood pressure, and pulse oximetry • On general exam, note the patient’s dispositionand color • Central cyanosis is highly associated with cardiac disease. • Diminished or bounding pulses should increase our index of suspicion

  9. Cardiac Examination • To determine if further evaluation is needed note • Presence of a precordial bulge, heave, or thrill • Abnormality of the second heart sound • Obscured S1 • Diastolic murmur • Intensity greater than II/VI • Harsh quality • If any of these are present, an echocardiogram is indicated

  10. Innocent Murmurs • A murmur is characterized by timing, location, quality, intensity, pitch and presence or absence of clicks • An innocent murmur is characterized by the 7 S’s • Sensitive (changes with position) • Short duration • Single • Small(non-radiating) • Soft • Sweet (not harsh) • Systolic

  11. Diagnostic Studies • Echocardiogram • Study of choice to diagnose CHD • Pulse Oximetry • Should be obtained in the right upper and lower extremities • An oxygen saturation of <90% is considered positive • Chest X-ray • EKG

  12. References • Frommelt MA. Differential diagnosis and approach to a heart murmur in term infants. Pediatric Clinics of North America. 2004;51:1023–1032 • Yi MS, Kimball TR, Tsevat J, Mrus JM, Kotagal UR. Evaluation of heart murmurs in children: Cost-effectiveness and practical implications. The Journal of Pediatrics. 2002;141(4):504–510 • Silberbach M, Hannon J. Presentation of Congenital Heart Diseases in the Neonate and Young Infant. Pediatr. Rev. 2007;28;123-131

More Related