Innocent vs Organic Murmurs
1. Definition
- Innocent Murmur: Produced by normal blood flow through anatomically normal heart structures (occurs in up to 80% of children).
- Organic Murmur: Result of structural heart disease (e.g., VSD, Valvular Stenosis).
2. Clinical History
| Feature | Innocent Murmur | Organic Murmur |
|---|---|---|
| Symptoms | Asymptomatic | Dyspnea, feeding difficulty, FTT, syncope |
| Trigger | Fever, anemia, anxiety | Often constant; unrelated to high output |
| Family History | Negative | May have positive history of CHD or SCD |
3. Physical Examination: The "Seven S" Rule
Innocent murmurs typically follow the 7S characteristics:
- Sensitive: Changes with position (e.g., louder when supine, softer when standing).
- Short: Usually mid-systolic; never holosystolic or diastolic.
- Single: No associated clicks or gallops; normal S2 splitting.
- Small: Localized area; no wide radiation to back or neck.
- Soft: Low intensity (Grade 1-2/6).
- Sweet: Musical or vibratory quality (e.g., Stillβs murmur).
- Systolic: Occurs only during systole (except Venous Hum).
4. Comparison of Auscultatory Features
| Parameter | Innocent (Physiological) | Organic (Pathological) |
|---|---|---|
| Intensity | Grade β€ 2/6 | Grade β₯ 3/6 (with thrill) |
| Timing | Midsystolic (Crescendo-Decrescendo) | Pansystolic, Late Systolic, or Diastolic |
| Quality | Musical, vibratory, blowing | Harsh, blowing, or "machinery" |
| S2 Sound | Normal physiological splitting | Fixed split (ASD) or single S2 (TGA) |
| Clicks/Snaps | Absent | Ejection clicks or opening snaps present |
5. Red Flags for Organic Murmurs
Presence of any of the following mandates further investigation (ECHO):
- Diastolic or continuous murmurs (except venous hum).
- Cyanosis or clubbing.
- Weak or delayed femoral pulses (Coarctation of Aorta).
- Precordial bulge or hyperdynamic precordium.
- Hepatomegaly or signs of Congestive Cardiac Failure (CCF).