Observations on the Atrial Sound in Hypertension
- 1 November 1963
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 28 (5) , 877-884
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.28.5.877
Abstract
Recovery from heart failure in hypertensive patients having an audible atrial sound was associated with decrease in the intensity of this sound and lengthening of the P-G interval. In most patients the atrial sound disappeared entirely. The rapid intravenous infusion of saline was invariably associated with the appearance of an audible atrial sound in 10 hypertensive patients with left ventricular disease. This procedure was ineffective in producing an audible atrial sound in nine normal subjects and in eight of nine hypertensive patients without left ventricular disease. In four hypertensive patients with left ventricular disease and an audible atrial sound, the infusion of saline resulted in increase in the intensity of the sound and shortening of the P-G interval. An audible atrial sound was most frequently found in association with left ventricular disease and elevation of atrial and ventricular diastolic pressures. The findings suggest that an audible atrial sound is frequently a manifestation of cardiac dysfunction.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- The ventricular end-diastolic pressureThe American Journal of Medicine, 1963
- Pressure-volume characteristics of the diastolic left ventricle of man with heart diseaseAmerican Heart Journal, 1962
- Hemodynamic-Phonocardiographic Correlations of the Fourth Heart Sound in Aortic StenosisCirculation, 1962
- GALLOP SOUNDS IN HYPERTENSION AND MYOCARDIAL ISCHAeMIA MODIFIED BY RESPIRATION AND OTHER MANOEUVRESHeart, 1961
- THE ATRIAL SOUND IN HYPERTENSION AND ISCHAeMIC HEART DISEASE WITH REFERENCE TO ITS TIMING AND MODE OF PRODUCTIONHeart, 1959
- THE MECHANISM AND SIGNIFICANCE OF THE AURICULAR SOUNDHeart, 1955
- THE CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF GALLOP RHYTHM IN HYPERTENSIONHeart, 1951
- TRIPLE HEART RHYTHMHeart, 1943
- A study of gallop rhythm by a combination of phonocardiographic and electrocardiographic methodsAmerican Heart Journal, 1932
- GALLOP RHYTHM IN HYPERTENSIONArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1929