Abstract
An automatic screening device for auscultatory evidence of heart disease was tested on 308 children and adolescents who had previously had rheumatic fever. The device correctly recognized as abnormal 88.5% of 131 patient with rheumatic heart disease (RHD), and correctly recognized as normal 83.6% of 177 patients with no RHD. For purposes of comparison a cardiologist, an internist, and a senior medical student each listened while blindfolded to the heart sounds of 3 100-patient subsets of the above population. The auscultation was limited to the areas used for the automatic screening. They correctly recognized as abnormal 97.9%, 94.5%, and 91.9% of the patients with RHD, and correctly recognized as normal 81.1%, 84.4%, and 85.7% of the patients without RHD.