two heart sounds

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trgf

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given that atrial septal defects produce 2 major heart murmurs - through the atria and pulmonary valves -which one is systolic and which one is diastolic?
 
I'm not 100% sure but this is what I think happens. The passage of blood through the ASD occurs when the pressure in the L is greater than the R. This is constantly the case BUT the gradient isn't large enough to cause a murmur (if there was a murmur I would think it would be during both systole and diastole but greatest in diastole when the atria contracts). Thus you only hear one murmur during an ASD which is a flow murmur at the pulmonic valve during systole due to the increased blood in the right side of the heart.

Someone correct me if I am wrong though...hope this helps.
 
pulmonary flow murmur (cresc/decresc at LUSB). fixed split S2.

no diastolic murmur.
 
The question stem will usually give you more information about the murmur than just letting you hear it; otherwise it's tough to differentiate it from other murmurs (fixed splitting of S2, oxygen saturation increased in the right atrium, premature infant or something with IRDS - in this instance you can definitely differentiate it from PDA which could also happen since PDA is continuous and "machine like")
 
There's no way they would test you on ASD murmurs with audio. They'd probably give you a clinical scenario describing fixed splitting.
 
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