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Rev. argent. cardiol ; 83(3): 1-10, June 2015. ilus
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS | ID: biblio-957607

RESUMO

background: Physical examination is essential to detect aortic stenosis but there is scarce information currently available. Objectives: The goal of this study is to evaluate the diagnostic yield of physical examination, the interobserver agreement of clinical signs, and to establish a score to identify severe aortic stenosis. Methods: One-hundred patients were included in the study. Before echocardiographic evaluation, two cardiologists independently evaluated the clinical signs of the physical examination in aortic stenosis. Sensitivity, specificity, and inter-observer agreement were calculated, and the area under the curve was analyzed to develop a score for predicting severe aortic stenosis. results: The decreased intensity of the first heart sound and the crescendo-decrescendo shape of the murmur had sensitivity >90% and specificity <70%. The specificities of an absent second sound, a murmur that peaks later in systole and the presence of a parvus et tardus pulse were >95%, but the sensitivities were <50%. Inter-observer agreement was good for most criteria, except for murmur shape and intensity. The best area under the curve was achieved by the score composed of heart sounds of decreased or absent intensity, duration of the holosystolic murmur, parvus et tardus carotid pulse and a grade 3-4 systolic murmur. Conclusions: Physical examination findings have low sensitivity but good specificity. Inter-observer agreement of clinical signs of severity was moderately good. Correct identification of patients with severe aortic stenosis can be achieved using a simple score.

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