Abstract
The external carotid pulse, the PCG, and the ECG were studied in 26 adult patients with valvular aortic stenosis whose systolic peak pressure gradients ranged from 18 to 165 mmHg. A significant correlation was found between the rapidity of the pulse upstroke, as measured by the T-time, and the location of the peak of the systolic murmur during ventricular ejection, on the one hand, and the gradient, on the other. The left ventricular ejection time (LVET) related directly and the pre-ejection period (PEP) indirectly with the gradient. There was a signficant inverse relationship between the PEP/LVET quotient and the pressure gradient but this quotient did not classify the patients according to the severity of the stenosis as well as the T-time and the location of the peak of murmur. When a combination of the T-time, the PEP/LVET, and the location of the peak of the murmur was used in each patient, a good discrimination between the patients was achieved. When the pressure gradient was above 50 mmHg, at lease one of the measurements was abnormal and when it exceeded 100 mmHg, at least two measurements were abnormal. The study further showed that it is possible to separate patients with valvular aortic stenosis from those with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy lidiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis) or mitral insufficiency on the basis of carotid pulse tracings and PCGs.
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