Heart Murmur

What is a Heart Murmur?

A heart murmur is an extra or unusual sound heard during the heartbeat cycle, ranging from very faint to very loud. Through a stethoscope, a heart murmur sounds like whooshing or swishing.

Heart murmurs can be present at birth or develop throughout a person’s life. Often, heart murmurs are harmless, or innocent, but some may indicate an underlying heart condition. Heart murmur symptoms can vary and may be absent in the case of an innocent murmur.

Baptist Health is known for advanced, superior care for patients with heart disease and the diagnosis, management and treatment of heart murmur. You will appreciate timely appointments and respectful attention to your concerns, all in a positive and friendly atmosphere. Here, you have access to the region’s most comprehensive, multidisciplinary team of specialists and innovative therapies, including many available only through specialized clinical trials. In every way, we work to demonstrate the utmost in excellent care to those who trust us with their health.

Types

There are three main types of murmurs. All murmurs are graded on volume, pitch, duration, location, and frequency. Heart murmurs are either innocent or abnormal. Innocent heart murmurs do not indicate heart disease and require no treatment. Abnormal heart murmurs require further testing and treatment.

Three types of murmurs:

  • Diastolic murmur—A Diastolic murmur is a murmur that occurs during the relaxation phase of your heart. For example, when your heart wall relaxes in between each contraction.
  • Systolic murmur—A Systolic murmur is a murmur during a contraction of your heart. There are two subtypes of systolic murmurs: ejection murmurs and regurgitation murmurs. In ejection, blood flows through a constricted artery. In regurgitation murmurs, blood flows backward.
  • Continuous murmur—A continuous murmur occurs during both contraction and relaxation.

Heart Murmur Symptoms

Heart murmurs often present without any symptoms. When heart murmur symptoms are present, they may indicate an underlying heart problem and shouldn't be ignored. Heart murmur signs and symptoms may include:

  • Blue-tinged skin
  • Chest pain
  • Chronic cough
  • Dizziness
  • Enlarged liver
  • Enlarged neck veins
  • Fainting
  • Heavy sweating, not related to exercise
  • Poor appetite
  • Poor growth (in infants)
  • Shortness of breath
  • Swelling or sudden weight gain

Heart Murmur Diagnosis

To determine if a patient has a heart murmur, and identify the type, the physician will listen to the patient’s heart with a stethoscope during a physical examination. The physician will assess the murmur’s volume, pitch, location, timing, location and length and examine the patient for any other signs and symptoms of heart problems.

If the physician needs more information, or thinks the heart murmur may be abnormal, he or she may order diagnostic procedures including:

Chest X-ray: A common imaging test of the heart and aorta, which can identify enlargement.

Cardiac catheterization: A long, thin flexible tube is threaded through a blood vessel in the arm or groin and to the heart. Contrast material is injected through the tube and a type of X-ray movie is taken to show how the aortic valve functions and measure pressure in the heart chambers.

Echocardiogram: This ultrasound exam uses soundwaves to take moving pictures of the heart’s chambers and valves. It can identify abnormal heart valves, such as those that are hardened or leaking, and can detect most heart defects.

Electrocardiogram (EKG): This test measures the electrical activity of the heart and can help determine if parts of the heart are enlarged or overworked. The heart’s electrical currents are detected by 12 to 15 electrodes that are attached to the arms, legs and chest via sticky tape.

Heart Murmur Causes

Innocent heart murmurs can occur when blood flows rapidly through the heart. Heart murmurs can be caused by exercise, fever, phases of rapid growth (like adolescence), pregnancy, excessive thyroid hormones (hyperthyroidism) or inadequate red blood cells (anemia).

Abnormal heart murmurs can be caused by high blood pressure.

Risk Factors

Risk factors that could contribute to an abnormal heart murmur include:

Certain medical conditions: Hyperthyroidism (too much thyroid hormone), high blood pressure in the lungs (pulmonary hypertension), carcinoid syndrome (related to intestinal cancer), lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, and other conditions can increase the risk of an abnormal heart murmur.

Endocarditis: This infection of the heart’s inner lining typically occurs when bacteria from the mouth or elsewhere get into the bloodstream and lodge in the heart.

Family history of heart defects: Blood relatives often share heart defects that can cause heart murmurs.

Heart valve abnormalities: Congenital heart valve conditions, including valves that don’t allow enough blood flow (stenosis) or those that don’t close properly (regurgitation) – such as in mitral valve prolapse – can lead to a heart murmur.

Holes in the heart or cardiac shunts: Holes, or septal defects, can be present at birth and may or may not be serious. Cardiac shunts occur when there’s an abnormal blood flow between the heart chambers or blood vessels.

Illnesses during pregnancy: Some conditions affecting a mother, like uncontrolled diabetes or a rubella infection, can lead to defects and a heart murmur in her baby.

Maternal use of certain medications or drugs: Use of certain medications, alcohol or drugs can cause heart defects in a developing baby.

Rheumatic fever: Rare in the United States and other developed countries, this illness can occur without prompt or complete treatment of a strep throat infection – damaging the heart valves.

Valve calcification: This hardening of valves – like in mitral or aortic valve stenosis – can impede blood flow and occurs as a person ages.

Prevention

Other than avoiding high blood pressure, there’s not much you can do to prevent a heart murmur. Most of these murmurs are harmless. Children may outgrow them and adult murmurs may disappear with treatment of an underlying condition.

Heart Murmur Prognosis

Many heart murmurs are considered harmless and are left untreated. These are known as innocent heart murmurs.

Prognosis for abnormal heart murmurs depends on the type and severity of the heart problem causing them.

Heart Murmur Treatment and Recovery

An innocent heart murmur typically does not require treatment, though medications or supplements may be prescribed if an innocent heart murmur is due to hyperthyroidism or anemia.

Abnormal heart murmur treatment depends on its type, cause, the presence of heart disease and your overall health. It can include:

Medications

The heart murmur medication your doctor prescribes will depend on your specific heart problem. They may include:

  • Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, which lower blood pressure
  • Anticoagulants, which prevent blood clots from forming and causing a heart attack or stroke
  • Beta blockers, which lower the heart rate and blood pressure
  • Diuretics, which remove excess fluid from the body
  • Statins, which lower cholesterol, which can worsen some heart problems

Surgery

If you have a heart valve condition that can’t be treated with medication alone, your doctor may recommend one of these procedures:

  • Annuloplasty, in which a surgeon tightens tissue around the valve by implanting an artificial ring – closing abnormal openings
  • Balloon valvuloplasty, during which a small catheter containing an expandable balloon is threaded into your heart, placed into the valve and expanded to widen a narrowed valve
  • Structural support repair, during which a surgeon replaces or shortens cords that support the valves. With cords and muscles the right length, the valve leaflet edges meet, eliminating the leak.
  • Valve leaflet repair, during which the surgeon separates, cuts or pleats a valve flap

Valve Replacement

In some cases, a valve must be replaced. Options include:

  • Open-heart surgery: During this procedure, the surgeon removes a narrowed valve and replaces it with a mechanical or tissue valve. Mechanical valves, made from metal, are durable, but carry the risk of blood clots. Tissue valves – which come from a deceased human donor, pig or cow – need eventual replacement.
  • Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR): This less-invasive approach involves replacing the aortic valve with a prosthetic valve via an artery in the leg or a small incision in the chest.

Recovery from open-heart surgery can take four to eight weeks and include a one-to-three-day stay in the intensive care unit, rehabilitation and a gradual return to everyday activities.

Heart Murmur Complications

Innocent heart murmurs don’t cause complications.

Abnormal heart murmurs themselves don’t cause complications, but underlying conditions may cause serious complications such as heart attack or stroke, heart failure, poor growth (in infants and children) and other serious issues.

Next Steps with MyChart

Discover MyChart, a free patient portal that combines your Baptist Health medical records into one location. Schedule appointments, review lab results, financials, and more! If you have questions, give us a call.