Stethoscope recommendation?

Started by CBG23
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CBG23

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So, I lost my trusty littmann cardiology iii a few months ago and am in the market for a new stethoscope. Turns out the III has been discontinued and replaced by the IV. I was all set to pick up a IV, but read the reviews for this and there appears to be a flaw in the design that makes the diaphragms prone to falling off. This makes me leary of picking it up. I also had a II SE in the past but it seems to have been replaced by the classic III. I am NOT looking for something a cardiologist needs. Just need something to identify basic murmurs, clearly hear breath sounds, and listen to bowel sounds. Any recommendations?
 
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This gets asked on here every so often (there was a discussion in the last year or so) and every time it does, I say "Welch-Allyn Harvey DLX or GTFO". I'm saying it again.

Thanks for the reply- it seems pretty pricey compared to some other models. What do you like about this one?

Also, if it makes a difference, just realized I left an important word out of my original post - NOT looking for something a cardiologist needs
 
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Word to the wise - if you have have a demented pt with behavioral issues (ie someone who likes to bite) then use the isolation stethoscopes as they’re typically longer and you can maintain your distance
 
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So, I lost my trusty littmann cardiology iii a few months ago and am in the market for a new stethoscope. Turns out the III has been discontinued and replaced by the IV. I was all set to pick up a IV, but read the reviews for this and there appears to be a flaw in the design that makes the diaphragms prone to falling off. This makes me leary of picking it up. I also had a II SE in the past but it seems to have been replaced by the classic III. I am NOT looking for something a cardiologist needs. Just need something to identify basic murmurs, clearly hear breath sounds, and listen to bowel sounds. Any recommendations?

Whatever the med student/nurse/janitor is using?
 
The Electronic Littman stethoscope is useful for listening to murmurs and describing a phonocardiograph... you know... bar tricks.

Unclear if stethoscope is even that useful even in outpatient pulmonary clinic when lung U/S is a thing in outpatient offices.
Wheezing for obstructive airways disease perhaps..

Bowel sounds? peristalsis? Succussion splash? Bilateral BS for the ETT placement?

The isolation yellow stethoscope suffices.
 
So, I lost my trusty littmann cardiology iii a few months ago and am in the market for a new stethoscope. Turns out the III has been discontinued and replaced by the IV. I was all set to pick up a IV, but read the reviews for this and there appears to be a flaw in the design that makes the diaphragms prone to falling off. This makes me leary of picking it up. I also had a II SE in the past but it seems to have been replaced by the classic III. I am NOT looking for something a cardiologist needs. Just need something to identify basic murmurs, clearly hear breath sounds, and listen to bowel sounds. Any recommendations?

I am a little picky when it comes to stethoscopes.
I have a cardiology IV now, had a cardiology III before it walked away, have a DLX, have a master cardiology, used the 3100 electronic for a while. I am a cardiologist. You know what a cardiologist needs? An echo machine.

I have basically created the same post about 1000 times on SDN at this point but the long and short is:
- Littmann Cardiology III/IV has a better diaphragm than the Welch Allyn products (tycos/DLX).
- The DLX has a far superior bell.
- Most of the schmucks don't know what the bell is for and sure as sh8t can't hear a gallop to save their life anyway.
- I say go with the cardiology IV and call it a day. It says, "I care enough to listen to the organs but am not a pretentious douche enough to spend three or four hundred bucks on a stethoscope."

IMHO, the master cardiology isn't a very good scope. I used one for a while and then stopped b/c I just didn't find it's bell/low pitched very good or it's diaphragm. On skinny COPDers/End Stage HF patients you can't get addequate purchase to hear much.
 
If the auscultation portion of physical exam were a lab test we'd never order it.

I've often found it amusing stethoscope selection is usually based on what you (hope) you can hear over the heart. But I think that heartbsounds are low yield because they lack much specificity with your ears.

I like the DLX because I can just hear everything else louder and better. You can't beat the lung sounds from the DLX.
 
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