The authors studied systolic murmurs in 89 cases, 50 of aortic stenosis, 14 cases of obstructive cardiomyopathy and 20 cases of mitral incompetence. This systolic murmur is characterised by its exceptional intensity, its raspy character at the base, becoming softer at the apex and in the axilla, the presence of a thrill and irradiation into the neck in 50 to 75% of cases. The etiological diagnosis was ensured precisely by 1) pharmaco-dynamic tests: amyl nitrite accentuates the systolic ejection murmurs and attenuates murmurs due to mitral regurgitation. 2) careful analysis of diastole: a systolic murmur extending into early diastole, a third sound or an opening snap and a low-pitched diastolic murmur, suggest mitral incompetence. A high-pitched diastolic murmur is in favour of aortic stenosis. 3) the carotid arteriogram and catheterisation show the characteristic abnormalities of the carotid arteriogram found in aortic valve disease and the existence of a trans-aortic or intra-ventricular pressure gradient, when there is an obstruction to left ventricular jection. The F wave of the apex cardiogram or left atrial reflux of the contrast medium during cineangiocardiography, confirm mitral incompetence. The main phono-hemodynamic and phono-anatomical correlations have been emphasized: 1. The intensity of the systolic murmur is directly proportional to the degree of obstructive cardiomyopathy or mitral incompetence, but does not parallel the degree of the sub-valvular apparatus. 3. The maximum intensity of the murmur occurs all the later when the stenosis is tight, whilst it is earlier in severe obstructive cardio-myopathy. 4. The lozange shape of the murmur of mitral incompetence on phono-cardiography is, above all, due to those cases with lesions of the sub-valvular apparatus. Finally, a study of the sound recorded by the Allard-Laurens micromanometer permitted us to determine the mechanism of this irradiating systolic murmur.
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