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AH murmur

Posted By: sally on 2007-12-07
In Reply to:

Subject: AH murmur

Anyone ever hear , "2/6 systolic "AH" murmur heard best . . . What's AH?? Arterial hypertension, perhaps?? thanks



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Murmur grades are 1 through 6. I myself have never heard of a 3/5 murmur
Subject: Murmur grades are 1 through 6. I myself have never heard of a 3/5 murmur


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Doctor states:  "She has a grade 2/6 (s/l two-four) murmur heard at the left upper sternal border." 


Anyone know what this is?


TIA


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Hi! I have a rather simple (I hope) question. I have an ESL that always dictates 2/6 systolic murmur **at LLB and apex**. Is LLB correct? Every time she says this I try to look it up again, but it is a little difficult to search. Thanks for any advice on this!
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Subject: Could it be flow murmur?


Thanks, but I figured it out. To-fro murmur. NM
Subject: Thanks, but I figured it out. To-fro murmur. NM

nm
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Subject: Where is the murmur heard best? nm


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Subject: without ectopy or murmur

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Subject: s/l trasis??? murmur

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Subject: holosystolic murmur NM

xx
systolic murmur
Subject: systolic murmur


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Subject: Heart murmur grades 2 or II

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Subject: Heart murmur, esh and no palpatation

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Any help out there?


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Subject: Sorry. ESM is ejection systolic murmur. sm

ISH is isolated septal hypertrophy, ASH is asymmetric septal hypertrophy, but I doubt these. Maybe she's making a word out of abbreviations, again doubt. I'd leave a blank and flag it unless someone else has an idea. She may have started to say something like "ischemia" but cut herself off. Doubt if she'd say "murmurish." That wouldn't make any sense. I'll keep thinking about it. Please let us know what you find out.

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Subject: Could be "systolic murmur is not heard"


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Subject: Could also be "a systolic murmur is heard"


Could be - 2/6 systolic "ejection" murmur
Subject: Could be - 2/6 systolic "ejection" murmur


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Subject: Doc dictates 3/5 systolic murmur (sm)

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Subject: I wonder if he means grade 3/6-5/6 murmur


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Subject: type of flow murmur?

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Subject: hole systolic murmur

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Subject: 1/6 vs 1/VI systolic ejection murmur.

Hi Ginny,

Actually, both are technically correct. However, for us it depends on client. Some want it with regular numbers and some want the roman numeral. As per the AHDI book of style 2 though "arabic v roman numerals
There is a trend away from the use of roman numerals and toward the use of arabic numerals. A good example of this is in diabetes terminology, where an international expert committee dropped the roman numerals in favor of arabic, noting the danger of a roman numeral II being misread as an arabic number 11. In addition, the AMA Manual of Style states, "Avoid the use of roman numerals except when part of established nomenclature." Copyright (c) 2002 American Association for Medical Transcription"
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Subject: Systolic ejection murmur...

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MTPockets
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Subject: Could it be "regular rate and rhythm without murmur"

xx
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Subject: heart murmur with roman numerals?

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Subject: Heart: (“cephalic ejects”) murmur?

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Subject: I am hearing the "n" either noted or not heard, but I don't hear murmur. sm

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Subject: Ever heard of a medicine called Fercon? (systolic murmur)

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Subject: Heart: Regular rate and rhythm, no murmur, s/l (no extra beat) is hear


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Subject: ejection (or early) systolic murmur at the anterior ascending right and (or "or") left lower sternal border (?)


He has a whistling type 3/6 systolic ejection murmur best heard at the left *heart or hard* border.
Subject: He has a whistling type 3/6 systolic ejection murmur best heard at the left *heart or hard* border.

He has a whistling type 3/6 systolic ejection murmur best heard at the left *heart or hard* border. nm


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Subject: 1-2/6 murmur load; load should be heard.

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