TY - JOUR
T1 - Mechanical vibration transmission characteristics of the left ventricle
T2 - Implications with regard to auscultation and phonocardiography
AU - Smith, Damon
AU - Ishimitsu, Toshiyuki
AU - Craige, Ernest
N1 - Funding Information:
hom the Department of Medicine. of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. This study was supported by Grant 5-ROI-HL27459-03 ton. Medical Foundation. January 30, 1984; revised manuscript received March 28, 1984, accepted April 13, '\ddress University of North Carolina Medical School, 338 Burnett Womack Clinical Sciences Building 229H, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27514.
PY - 1984
Y1 - 1984
N2 - Systolic-diastolic phasic alteration of left ventricular mechanical vibration transmissibility was studied in an open chest canine preparation. A continuous vibratory tone was applied to the base of the heart, and a miniature heart surface vibration sensor applied to the epicardium near the ventricular apex. This allowed the detection of the percent of the vibration that was transmitted from source to sensor. These data were compared with those from intracardiac phonocardiograms obtained using a micromanometer-tipped catheter. It was found that in systole, the ventricle transmitted a vibratory tone from the cardiac base to the apex so that it was readily detected by the heart surface sensor. In marked contrast, during diastole the relaxed ventricle failed almost completely to transmit the vibration to the apical position. When the dog experienced heart failure during hypoxia, the ventricular diastolic vibration transmissibility was found to equal or exceed that of the systolic phase.
AB - Systolic-diastolic phasic alteration of left ventricular mechanical vibration transmissibility was studied in an open chest canine preparation. A continuous vibratory tone was applied to the base of the heart, and a miniature heart surface vibration sensor applied to the epicardium near the ventricular apex. This allowed the detection of the percent of the vibration that was transmitted from source to sensor. These data were compared with those from intracardiac phonocardiograms obtained using a micromanometer-tipped catheter. It was found that in systole, the ventricle transmitted a vibratory tone from the cardiac base to the apex so that it was readily detected by the heart surface sensor. In marked contrast, during diastole the relaxed ventricle failed almost completely to transmit the vibration to the apical position. When the dog experienced heart failure during hypoxia, the ventricular diastolic vibration transmissibility was found to equal or exceed that of the systolic phase.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0021144894
U2 - 10.1016/S0735-1097(84)80095-9
DO - 10.1016/S0735-1097(84)80095-9
M3 - Article
C2 - 6470331
AN - SCOPUS:0021144894
SN - 0735-1097
VL - 4
SP - 517
EP - 521
JO - Journal of the American College of Cardiology
JF - Journal of the American College of Cardiology
IS - 3
ER -